Christological Hellenism: A Melancholy Proposal
English
By (author): Lewis Ayres
The author notes The idea that Christianity underwent a Hellenization in its first few centuries is an idea long espoused, and equally long questioned, most astutely on the grounds that the term is used with great imprecision. We can justify use of the term, but only if we define it with some care. Here we take the term Hellenization to refer to the spread of Greek culture which began long before, but significantly accelerated after the rise of Alexander the Great's empire. This process involved the spread of language, educational and economic practices, structures of societal organization, religion, philosophy and art. We can give no clear terminus to this process, simply because it was a process that occurred in different ways in different places, reached different ends, and then intersected with a process that we might term Romanization which occurred through much of the near east as Roman influence came to be felt. The late Roman Empire in East and West, even in the many centuries where only the Eastern Empire survived, shows the complex interrelationship between the processes of Hellenization and Romanization. The tentative manner in which we use the term Hellenization does not mean that it is useless or can be simply ignored; but we should be both attentive to how we are using it in different contexts (temporal and geographical), and particularly attentive to the complex and confused history of the term among theologians. See more