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Moment of Reckoning - Imagined Death and Its Consequences in Late Ancient Christianity (Hardcover)
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Moment of Reckoning - Imagined Death and Its Consequences in Late Ancient Christianity (Hardcover)
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Late antiquity saw a proliferation of Christian texts dwelling on
the emotions and physical sensations of dying, not as a heroic
martyr in a public square or a judge's court, but as an individual,
at home in a bed or in a private room. In sermons, letters, and
ascetic traditions, late ancient Christians imagined the last
minutes of life and the events that followed death in elaborate
detail. The majority of these imagined scenarios linked the quality
of the experience to the moral state of the person who died. Death
was no longer the "happy ending," in Judith Perkins's words, it had
been to Christians of the first three centuries, an escape from the
difficult and painful world. Instead, death was most often imagined
as a terrifying, desperate experience. This book is the first to
trace how, in late ancient Christianity, death came to be thought
of as a moment of reckoning: a physical ordeal whose pain is
followed by an immediate judgment of one's actions by angels and
demons and, after that, fitting punishment. Because late ancient
Christian culture valued the use of the imagination as a religious
tool and because Christian teachers encouraged Christians to
revisit the prospect of their deaths often, this novel description
of death was more than an abstract idea. Rather, its appearance
ushered in a new ethical sensibility among Christians, in which
one's death was to be imagined frequently and anticipated in
detail. This was, at first glance, meant as a tool for individuals:
preachers counted on the fact that becoming aware of a judgment
arriving at the end of one's life tends to sharpen one's scruples.
But, as this book argues, the change in Christian sensibility
toward death did not just affect individuals. Once established, it
shifted the ethics of Christianity as a tradition. This is because
death repeatedly and frequently imagined as the moment of reckoning
created a fund of images and ideas about what constituted a human
being and how variances in human morality should be treated. This
had significant effects on the Christian assumption of power in
late antiquity, especially in the case of the capacity to authorize
violence against others. The thinking about death traced here thus
contributed to the seemingly paradoxical situation in which
Christians proclaimed their identity with a crucified person, yet
were willing to use force against their ideological opponents.
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