Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-r5zm4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-30T13:49:34.992Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Justin’s Christian Philosophy: New Possibilities for Relations between Jews, Graeco-Romans and Christians

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

A. D. R. Hayes*
Affiliation:
King’s College, London

Extract

Identity is always a complicated and negotiated reality, whether personal or communal, and this is certainly true for Christian identity in the second century CE. This century was the setting for many complicated changes that gave birth to Christianity as it is commonly understood. Naming, and the use of the terms ‘outsiders’ and ‘followers of Christ’ to define those we would call ‘Christians’, were important parts of this process. Examining how early Christians presented themselves can help us to understand the development of both Christianity and Judaism, and also to appreciate better how the early Christians saw themselves. Justin Martyr (100-65) is a central figure in this task. This essay will analyse his presentation, at a crucial point in history, of what it meant to be a follower of Christ.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2015

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Justin’s grandfather, Bacchius, had a Greek name, while his father, Priscus, had a Latin name, as did Justin.

2 Indeed, the term ‘Christian’ must be used loosely with reference to this period, as representing something which is only beginning to become established as what modern readers would recognize by the term.

3 Sara Parvis,’Justin Martyr and the Apologetic Tradition’, in Minns, Denis and Foster, Paul, eds, Justin Martyr and his Worlds (Minneapolis, MN, 2007), 115—27, at 123Google Scholar.

4 Justin, Philosopher and Martyr: Apologies, ed. Minns, Denis and Parvis, Paul, Oxford Early Christian Texts (Oxford, 2009), 59 Google Scholar.

5 Daniel Boyarin has argued that the nature of heresy is not only emerging at this time but is being created dialectically by ‘Christians’ and ‘Jews’ ruling each other in and out and forming new standards of belonging in the process. Boyarin’s thesis is not that these two groups witness to one another’s existence; these are not two religions or obvious diametric poles of one, but rather they are differing strands, wide and varied with different points of overlap in different places, and in the course of their conversation they invent one another as new identities: Boyarin, Daniel, ‘Justin Martyr invents Judaism’, ChH 70 (2001), 427—61, at 438;Google Scholar idem, ’Rethinking Jewish Christianity: An Argument for dismantling a Dubious Category (to which is appended a Correction of my Border Lines)’, Jewish Quarterly Review 99 (2009), 7—36 Google Scholar.

6 Slusser, Michael, ‘Justin Scholarship: Trends and Trajectories’, in Minns, and Foster, , eds, Justin Martyr and his Worlds, 13—21.Google Scholar Trypho appears to have been a Hellenistic Jew.

7 Lyman, Rebecca, ‘Justin and Hellenism: Some Postcolonial Perspectives’, ibid. 160-8, at 163.Google Scholar

8 Ibid. 163-5.

9 Lyman, Rebecca, ‘The Politics of Passing: Justin Martyr’s Conversion as a Problem of “Hellenization“’, in Mills, Kenneth and Grafton, Anthony, eds, Conversion in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages; Seeing and Believing (Rochester, NY, 2003), 3660, at 45Google Scholar.

10 Hyldahl, Niels, Philosophic und Christentum. Eine Interpretation der Einleitung zum Dialog Justins (Copenhagen, 1966)Google Scholar; Joly, Robert, Christianisme et philosophie. Études sur Justin et les Apologistes grecs du deuxième siècle (Brussels, 1973).Google Scholar

11 Thus Leslie Barnard thought Justin evidenced Platonism as a ‘valid preparation for the Gospel’: Justin Martyr: His Life and Thought (Cambridge, 1967), 38 Google Scholar; see also Chadwick, Henry, Early Christian Thought in the Classical Tradition: Studies in Justin, Clement and Origen (Oxford, 1966).Google Scholar

12 Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 59 Google Scholar.

13 Lyman, , ‘Justin and Hellenism’, 167 Google Scholar.

14 Ibid. 168.

15 Christians ought also to be considered Graeco-Romans, just as people of many traditions who have grown up in Europe ought to be considered ‘Western’: sharing a transnational cultural history, even if they have strong roots in traditions that might present challenges to elements of Western culture. Being ‘westernized’, say a westernized Yemeni or Iranian, does not make that person only Western. There is a hybridity involved that allows the person to stand both within and at a distance from the ‘Western tradition’. This is how I am using the terms ‘Christian’ and ‘Jew’ in relation to ‘Graeco-Roman’; part of that world, deeply so, yet with alternative perspectives inherent in their position.

16 Justin, , First Apology [hereafter: 1 Apol.] 4; Second Apology[hereafter: 2 Apol.] 2. Google Scholar

17 1 Apol. 4.1, 6 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 87).Google Scholar

19 Justin, , Dialogue with Trypho 44.1 (The Writings of Saint Justin Martyr, transl. Thomas B. Falls, Fathers of the Church [Washington DC, 1977], 213).Google Scholar

21 Lieu, Judith M., ‘Accusations of Jewish Persecution in Early Christian Sources, with particular Reference to Justin Martyr and the Martyrdom of Polycarp ’, in Stanton, Graham and Stroumsa, Guy, eds, Tolerance and Intolerance in Early Judaism and Christianity (Cambridge, 1998), 279—95, at 281.Google Scholar

22 Boyarin, Daniel, ‘Justin Martyr invents Judaism’, ChH 70 (2001), 427—61, at 434-5.Google Scholar

23 Dial. 39.2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 206).

24 Dial. 96.2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 299).

25 Dial. 78.10, 110.2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 273, 317). .

26 Tomson, Peter J., ‘If this be from Heaven …’: Jesus and the New Testament Authors in their Relationship to Judaism, Biblical Seminar 76 (Sheffield, 2001), 110.Google Scholar

27 Williams, Margaret H., Jews in a Graeco-Roman Environment, Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament I 312 (Tübingen, 2013), 267—79.Google Scholar

28 2 Apol. 12.1 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 317).Google Scholar

29 1 Apol.7.3; 26.6 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 93, 151).Google Scholar

31 Thorsteinsson, Runar M., ‘The Literary Genre and Purpose of Justin’s Second Apology: A Critical Review with Insights from Ancient Epistolography’, Harvard Theo-logical Review 105 (2012), 91114, at 108.Google Scholar

32 Ibid. 96.

33 Sebastian Moll, ‘Justin and the Politic Wolf’, in Parvis, and Foster, , eds, Justin Martyr and his Worlds, 145—51, at 149.Google Scholar

34 Dial. 8.1 (Writings, transl. Falls, 160).

35 Winden, J. C. M. van, ed., An Early Christian Philosopher: Justin Martyr’s Dialogue vith Trypho Chapters One to Nine, Philosophia Patrum 1 (Leiden, 1971), 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

36 Ibid.

37 Tomson, , ‘If this be from Heaven’, 37.Google Scholar

38 Williams, , Jews in a Graeco-Roman Environment, 42.Google Scholar

39 Barnard, , Justin Martyr, 35 Google Scholar; Croix, G. E.M. de Sainte, Christian Persecution, Martyrdom and Orthodoxy, ed. Whitby, Michael and Streeter, Joseph (Oxford, 2006).Google Scholar

40 1 Apol. 4.8-9; 7.3-4; 26.6 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 89, 93, 151).Google Scholar

41 Winden, Van, ed., Early Christian Philosopher, 17.Google Scholar

42 1 Apol.2.2; 3.2; 12.5; 2 Apol.15.4 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 81, 85, 105, 269).Google Scholar

43 2 Apol.15.3 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 269).Google Scholar

44 Smith, Shawn C., ’Was Justin Martyr an Inclusivist?’, Stone-Campbell Journal 10 (2007), 193212, at 199-200.Google Scholar

45 Barnard, , Justin Martyr, 28.Google Scholar

46 Dial. 2.1-2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 149).

47 Dial. 8.1; 139.4 (Writings, transl. Falls, 160, 361).

48 Dial.8.2; 44.4 (Writings, transl. Falls, 160, 214).

49 Dial. 35.2; 39.2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 201, 206); 1 Apol. 15.6 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 115).Google Scholar

50 50 Dial.18.1; 32.5; 48.4; 49.3; 53.1; 76.3; 96.3; 105.5; 107; 108.2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 160, 195, 220, 221, 228, 269, 300, 312, 314, 315); 1 Apol.4.7; 6.2; 8.3; 12.9; 13.3; 14.4; 15.9; 16.4; 19.6; 21.1; 23.2; 32.2; 33.5; 46.1; 67.8 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 89, 91, 95, 107, 111, 113, 115, 119, 129, 131, 139, 169, 173, 199, 261); 2 Apol.2.2; 3.1; 8.5; 10.8 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 273, 281, 301, 313).Google Scholar

51 Lyman, , ‘Politics of Passing’, 41.Google Scholar

52 2 Apol.2.2 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 273).Google Scholar

53 Graham Stanton, ‘Justin Martyr’s Dialogue with Trypho: Group Boundaries, “Proselytes” and “God-fearers’”, in idem and Stroumsa, , eds, Tolerance and Intolerance, 263—78, at 265.Google Scholar

54 Ibid. Stanton sees much of the discussion as reflecting degrees of adherence by Christians to Judaism and understands Justin to be attempting to work within that perspective to win over those who are undecided.

55 Croix, De Sainte, Christian Persecution, 8.Google Scholar

56 1 Apol.11.1-2 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 101).Google Scholar

57 Croix, De Sainte, Christian Persecution, 135.Google Scholar

58 Ibid.

59 1 Apol. 4.8—9 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 89).Google Scholar

60 Thorsceinsson, , ‘Justin’s Second Apology’, 111.Google Scholar

61 1 Apol.5.3; 46.3 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 91, 201).Google Scholar

62 1 Apol.18.6 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 125).Google Scholar

63 Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 60.Google Scholar

64 1 Apol. 3.3 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 85); cf. Plato, Republic5.473c—d.Google Scholar

65 Croix, De Sainte, Christian Persecution, 136—7.Google Scholar

66 Dial.1.2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 147).

67 Dial. 38.1 (Writings, transl. Falls, 204).

68 Dial. 10.1 (Writings, transl. Falls, 162).

69 Chilton, Bruce D., ‘Justin and Israelite Prophecy’, in Parvis, and Foster, , eds, Justin Martyr and his Worlds, 7787, at 82.Google Scholar

70 Dial.11.1 (Writings, transl. Falls, 160).

71 Dial.140.1, 2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 363).

72 Chilton, , ‘Justin’, 77.Google Scholar

73 2 Apol. 12.5 (Apologies, ed. Minns, and Parvis, , 319).Google Scholar

71 Dial. 140.1, 2 (Writings, transl. Falls, 363).

72 Chilton, , ‘Justin’, 77.Google Scholar

73 2 Apol. 12.5 (Apologies, ed. Minns and Parvis, 319).