03123cam a22003974i 4500003000900000005001700009008004100026020001500067020001800082035002000100040003300120082001900153100004300172245006200215264004800277300005900325336002100384337002500405338002300430504003400453504003400487505199800521526001002519526001002529526001002539526001002549526000802559526000802567526000802575526000802583526000802591526000802599526000802607650007402615650003602689PE-LiUPU20250731172902.0170111s2010 nyua rb 001 0 spa d a0195138031 a9780195138030 a(Sirsi) a165996 aPE-LiUPUbspacPE-LiUPUerda04a270.1bL112231 aLynch, Joseph H.,d1943-2008.,eautor.10aEarly Christianity :ba brief history /cJoseph H. Lynch. 1aNew York :bOxford University Press,c2010. axxi, 266 páginas :bilustraciones ;c24 centimetros atext2rdacontent aunmediated2rdamedia avolume2rdacarrier aBibliografía:páginas 253. aÍndices: páginas 255-266.0 atJesus --tThe Jewish context of the Jesus movement --tThe Greek and Roman context of early Christianity --tThe Jesus movement in the first century --tChristian diversity in the second and third centuries --tThe emergence of a proto-orthodox Christian consensus: bishop, creed, and canon of scripture --tRoman society and the Christians --tChristian intellectuals --tProto-orthodox Christian communities in the third century --tDiocletian, the great persecution, and the conversion of Constantine --tThe Christian empire and the imperial church --tThe government of the church --tThe Trinitarian controversy --tJesus, the God/Man --tWorship and piety in the Christian empire --tThe ascetic movement --tFourth- and fifth-century Christian thinkers --tConversion and Christianization --tThe eastern and western churches go their separate ways --tEpilogue: Muhammad and Islam. =520 \\aThis concise and engaging introduction to the history of early Christianity examines the development of Christianity from its origins up through the year 620. Accessible to beginning students with no background in the subject, Early Christianity: A Brief History is also captivating reading for more advanced students. The book is organized chronologically into four parts: The Contexts of Early Christianity, Christianity in the Second and Third Centuries, The Creation of a Christian Empire, and Life in the Christian Empire. Each part begins with a timeline in order to guide students in the chronology of events. Opening with a look at the historical Jesus--which considers what we know and how we know it--the book continues on with coverage of the Jewish and Roman worlds in which Christianity arose. It then charts the extraordinary progress of Christianity, ranging from its status as a fringe sect in Judaism, to that of a dominant religion, up through the reign of Pope Gregory I. Chapters on society and culture and an epilogue on Muhammad and the rise of Islam are also included. aSEG42 aSEG41 aSEG40 aSEG39 aP94 aP87 aP86 aP85 aP77 aP76 aP3507aHistoria eclesiásticayLa iglesia primitiva y temprana, ca. 30-600. 7aEl cristianismo primitivo.2gtt