Imperial Cults and the Apocalypse of John
Reading Revelation in the Ruins
Friesen, Steven J.,
Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Religious Studies,
University of Missouri
Print publication date: 2001
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-513153-6 doi:10.1093/0195131533.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Examines the relationship between imperial cults and the Book of Revelation, focusing especially on the Roman province of Asia during the early Empire. The main argument is that Revelation and imperial cult institutions were in direct contradiction regarding cosmology and eschatology. The exaggerated cosmology of imperial cult institutions resulted in an absurd eschatology – their emphasis on Roman imperial order was so strong that they could not envision an end to Roman rule. Revelation, on the other hand, denigrated all temporal authority and focused attention on the throne of God in heaven and the eschatological inauguration of the New Jerusalem. In this way, the author of Revelation produced one of humanity's great religious critiques of hegemony, a critique that attempted to establish and maintain a just community in the face of imperial oppression.
Keywords: Asia, cosmology, empire, eschatology, imperial cults, imperialism, New Jerusalem, province, Revelation, Roman Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
Religious Criticism
2.
Provincial Imperial Cults of Asia Under Augustus and Tiberius
3.
Provincial Cults from Gaius to Domitian
4.
Municipal Imperial Cults
5.
Municipal Imperial Cults
6.
Groups and Individuals
7.
Imperial Cults as Religion
8.
Revelation in Space and Time
9.
Centering Reality
10.
Working With Myth
11.
Communities Worshipping Humans
12.
Worship and Authority
13.
Revelation in This World
Bibliography
Index
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