Cultural Christians in the Early Chur..., Nadya Williams
Cultural Christians in the Early Chur..., Nadya Williams
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Cultural Christians in the Early Church
A Historical and Practical Introduction to Christians in the Greco-Roman World

Author: Nadya Williams

Narrator: Marni Penning

Unabridged: 9 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/14/2023


Synopsis

In the middle of the third century CE, one North African bishop wrote a treatise for the women of his church, exhorting them to resist such culturally normalized yet immodest behaviors in their cosmopolitan Roman city as mixed public bathing in the nude, and wearing excessive amounts of jewelry and makeup. The treatise appears even more striking, once we realize that the scandalous virgins to whom it was addressed were single women who had dedicated their virginity to Christ.Stories like this one challenge the general assumption among Christians today that the earliest Christians were zealous converts who were much more counterculturally devoted to their faith than typical church-goers today. Too often Christians today think of cultural Christianity as a modern concept, and one most likely to occur in areas where Christianity is the majority culture, such as the American "Bible Belt." The story that this book presents, refutes both of these assumptions.Cultural Christians in the Early Church, which aims to be both historical and practical, argues that cultural Christians were the rule, rather than the exception, in the early church. Using different categories of sins as its organizing principle, the book considers the challenge of culture to the earliest converts to Christianity, as they struggled to live on mission in the Greco-Roman cultural milieu of the Roman Empire. These believers blurred and pushed the boundaries of what it meant to be a saint or sinner from the first to the fifth centuries CE, and their stories provide the opportunity to get to know the regular people in the early churches. At the same time, their stories provide a fresh perspective for considering the difficult timeless questions that stubbornly persist in our own world and churches: when is it a sin to eat or not eat a particular food? Are women inherently more sinful than men? And why is Christian nationalism a problem and, at times, a sin? Ultimately, recognizing that cultural sins were always a part of the story of the church and its people is a message that is both a source of comfort and a call to action in our pursuit of sanctification today.

About Nadya Williams

Nadya Williams received her Ph.D. in Classics from Princeton University and is a military historian of the Greco-Roman world. After fifteen years as a Professor of Ancient History and Classics, she left academia to focus on homeschooling her children and writing for the church. She is the author of Cultural Christians in the Early Church (Zondervan Academic, 2023), Mothers, Children, and the Body Politic (IVP Academic, 2024), Christians Reading Classics (Zondervan Academic, 2025), and the co-editor (with Nicola Foote) of Civilians and Warfare in World History (Routledge, 2017). She is books editor for Mere Orthodoxy. She is also a regular contributor to Christianity Today, contributing editor for Providence Magazine and Front Porch Republic, and featured author at Fairer Disputations. Her essays and reviews have also appeared in Current, Plough, Law and Liberty, Religion and Liberty, The Dispatch, The Gospel Coalition, Comment, Common Good Magazine, and more.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Matthew on April 14, 2024

(4.5) Loved this book and highly recommend it. Williams lays out history marvelously and seamlessly. 98% of the book is proving the thesis: there have always been cultural temptations for Christians. The record shows many sub-coming to those temptations and also some pushing against it. Nothing is n......more

Goodreads review by Bfleegs on June 23, 2024

The central tenet of this book is that "cultural Christianity" has always existed as a potential ditch into which believers can fall, being defined as simply accepting culture instead of examining it in light of scripture. Nadya does an excellent job of demonstrating this fact through church history......more

Goodreads review by Leah on June 09, 2024

My pastor lent me this book and I'm so glad he did! There's something profoundly reassuring about the fact that there truly is "nothing new under the sun." Knowing that the early church dealt with the same cultural forces we do now and has weathered it before accomplishes two goals. Firstly, it keep......more

Goodreads review by Matthijs on August 02, 2024

Over hoe christenen in het Vroege Christendom zich soms meer door de cultuur dan door het evangelie lieten leiden. Historische beschrijving vanuit een bepaalde norm. (Nadya Williams is een van een seculiere tot evangelicaal geworden christen).......more

Goodreads review by Adam on November 30, 2023

Summary: A look at the ways that early Christians were "cultural Christians."  One of the ongoing discussions within the guild of historians (which I have observed from the outside since I have no academic training in history) is the role and method of writing history for contemporary use. Some belie......more