
- 168 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Sacrifice in Pagan and Christian Antiquity
About this book
Robert J. Daly S.J. examines the concept of sacrifice in the ancient Mediterranean world, and discusses how the rise of bloodless Christian sacrifice, and the use of sacrificial language in reference to highly spiritualized Christian lives, would have seemed unsettling and radically challenging to the pagan mind. Acknowledging the difficulties posed by an overwhelmingly Christian scholarly narrative around the topic of sacrifice, Daly specifically sets out to tell the non-Christian side of this story. He first outlines the pagan trajectory, and then the Jewish-Christian trajectory, before concluding with a representative series of comparisons and contrasts. Covering the concept of sacrifice in relation to prayer, ethics and morality, the rhetoric and economics of sacrificial ceremonies, and heroes and saints, Daly finishes with an estimation of how this study might inform further study of sacrifice.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half title
- Title
- Copyrights
- Contents
- Foreword
- Part One Introduction, Methodological and Hermeneutical Issues
- Part Two The Greco-Roman Trajectory
- Part Three The Jewish-Christian Trajectory
- Part Four Select Points of Comparison and Contrast
- Part Five Concluding Summary and Looking Ahead
- Index of Names
- Subject Index