E.A. Judge's third collection of essays moves on from Rome and the New
Testament to the interaction of the classical and biblical traditions,
to the cultural transformation of late antiquity, and to the contested
heritage of Athens and Jerusalem in the modern West. A lifelong interest
in Rome bridges this range. Christianity emerges as essentially a
movement of ideas, opposed at first to the cultic practice of ancient
religion which had been meant to secure the existing order of things.
The new message with its demanding morality laid the foundations for our
radically different sense of 'religion' as the quest for the ideal
life.The 'Judge method' tackles such momentous questions by starting
with textual detail, translated from Latin and Greek. Inspired by the
project of the Dolger-Institut in Bonn (the interaction of antiquity and
Christianity), he brings to it a particular focus on those documents of
the times retrieved from stone or papyrus. The collection reflects the
more holistic approach to history, starting with the ancient world, that
has been developed at Macquarie University in Sydney, where diverse
interests are now drawn together from as far back as ancient Egypt or
China in an attractive approach to the modern world.