
The Donatist Church In An Apocalyptic Age Examines An Apocalypse That Never Happened, Seen Through The Eyes Of A Dissident Church That No Longer Exists. Jesse A. Hoover Considers Donatists, Members Of An Ecclesiastical Communion That For A Brief Moment Formed The Majority Church In Roman North Africa—modern Tunisia, Algeria, And Libya—before Fading Away Sometime Between The Fifth And Seventh Centuries. Hoover Studies How Donatists Perceived The End Of The World To Offer A Glimpse Into The Inner Life Of The Dissident Communion: What It Valued, Whom It Feared, And How It Defined Its Place In History While On The Cusp Of History's End. By Recovering These Appeals To Apocalyptic Themes In Surviving Donatist Writings, This Study Uncovers A Significant Element Within The Dissident Movement's Self-perception That Has So Far Gone Unexamined. In Contrast To Previous Assessments, It Argues That Such Eschatological Expectations Are Not Out Of Sync With The Wider World Of Latin Christianity In Late Antiquity, And That They Functioned As An Effective Polemical Strategy Designed To Counter Their Opponents' Claim To Be The True Church In North Africa.
This study investigates how the Donatist church in Roman North Africa utilized apocalyptic expectations to define its identity and polemical stance against rival Christian factions. Jesse A. Hoover, a scholar of late antique Christianity, analyzes surviving Donatist texts to reconstruct the movement's eschatological worldview. He argues that these apocalyptic themes were not marginal or eccentric, but rather central to the Donatists' self-perception and their efforts to claim legitimacy as the true church in a contested religious landscape.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of North African religious history and the nuances of late antique eschatology. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for specialists in patristics and church history.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192559400
ISBN-13:
9780192559401
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