Women of Early Christianity
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Alfred Brittain. Women of Early Christianity
Women of Early Christianity
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION
PREFACE
PART FIRST. WOMEN OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE
I. THE WOMEN OF THE GOSPEL NARRATIVE
II. THE WOMEN OF THE APOSTOLIC AGE
III. THE ERA OF PERSECUTION
IV. SAINT HELENA AND THE TIME OF CONSTANTINE
V. POST-NICENE MOTHERS
VI. THE NUNS OF THE PRIMITIVE CHURCH
VII. WOMEN WHO WITNESSED THE FALL OF ROME
VIII. WOMEN OF THE FRANKISH CHURCH
PART SECOND. WOMEN OF THE EASTERN EMPIRE
IX. THE EMPRESS EUDOXIA
X. THE RIVAL EMPRESSES--PULCHERIA AND EUDOCIA
XI. THE EMPRESS THEODORA
XII. OTHER SELF-ASSERTING AUGUSTÆ--VERINA, ARIADNE, SOPHIA, MARTINA, IRENE
XIII. BYZANTINE EMPRESSES--THEODORA II., THEOPHANO, ZOE, THEODORA III
XIV. THE PRINCESSES OF THE COMNENI
XV. WOMANHOOD OF THE BYZANTINE DECADENCE
Отрывок из книги
Mitchell Carroll, Alfred Brittain
Published by Good Press, 2021
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Our curiosity is greatly aroused, but in no degree satisfied, regarding another woman who dwelt at Jerusalem in the time of Christ. Pilate, the Roman procurator, had taken his wife with him to Judæa. Tradition has it that she there became a proselyte to the Jewish faith. This is by no means unlikely, for throughout the Roman world were found women who had become converts to the religion of Zion; Josephus, by his own experience, shows that at a later date even Poppæa, the wife of Nero, was extremely partial to the Jews. The Greek Church even goes further, and places Procla in its calendar of saints. Though there is no evidence extant of her having become a Christian, it need not be considered a thing impossible; indeed, it is extremely reasonable to suppose that, having endeavored to save the life of Jesus, the wonderful religious movement which succeeded His death could not have been unknown or without interest to Procla. At any rate, certain it is that she had some knowledge of Jesus, that she was to no small degree disposed in his favor, and that Pilate's wish to balk the priests in their designs on Christ's life was, in a large measure, the result of his wife's influence. But Pilate was caught with the argument that to save the Prisoner would be a sign of disloyalty to Cæsar. This incident is the most prominent instance that history affords of the unwisdom of opposing masculine ratiocinations to feminine moral intuitions.
We now turn to those women of the Gospels who were the acknowledged friends of Jesus and of the founders of Christianity. The central figure is, of course, the Blessed Mother--Mary, honored by Christians above all the daughters of the earth and adored by many millions as the Queen of Heaven; and yet how inadequate, how meagre is the veritable knowledge we possess of this immortal woman! Never has human imagination so magnificently triumphed as in the evolution of the concept of the Blessed Virgin; never has fond adoration built so marvellous an ideal upon so scanty a foundation of assured reality. A moderate-sized page would contain all that is vouchsafed regarding her in the Gospels, yet who ever disputed the claim for Mary that she is the highest representative of all that is purest and most beautiful in womanhood. This much is not a dogma of any church, but a universal feeling. This prevailing conception of the character of Mary has grown out of the conviction of what must have been the moral worth of the one fitted to bear and rear the Son of Man; and it has also resulted to a large degree from that strong human love for motherhood which seeks a perfect example on which to expend itself. The Blessed Virgin is womanhood idealized. She is the personification of all feminine beauty, both of soul and body; she is the perfect expression of the poet's highest inspiration and the artist's noblest dream. We cannot help wishing, however, that more were known of the home life of Mary; the desire to place the beautiful figure of the Representative Mother in the varied settings of common feminine life is irresistible, but this can only be done by means of what little we know of the manners and customs of her people and time.
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