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Death and rebirth was of vital importance to early Christians in
late antiquity. In late antiquity, death was all encompassing.
Mortality rates were high, plague and disease in urban areas struck
at will, and one lived on the knife's edge regarding one's health.
Religion filled a crucial role in this environment, offering an
option for those who sought cure and comfort. Following death, the
inhumed were memorialized, providing solace to family members
through sculpture, painting, and epigraphy. This book offers a
sustained interdisciplinary treatment of death and rebirth, a theme
that early Christians (and scholars) found important. By analysing
the theme of death and rebirth through various lenses, the
contributors deepen our understanding of the early Christian
funerary and liturgical practices as well as their engagement with
other groups in the Empire.
Images and artistic representations were of significant value to
the early Christian communities. In Christ the Miracle Worker in
Early Christian Art, Lee Jefferson argues, in fact, that images
provided visual representations of vital religious and theological
truths crucial to the faithful, by which art possessed the power to
project concepts and claims beyond the limitations of the written
and spoken word. Images of Christ performing miracles or healings,
as demonstrated in this volume, functioned as advertisements for
Christianity and illustrated explications of the nature of Christ.
These images of Christ as worker of miracles and healing form the
nucleus of an extensive examination of this power of art, its role
in fostering devotion, and the deep connection between art and its
underwriting and elucidation of pivotal theological claims and
developments.
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