The Cult Of The Saints: Its Rise And Function In Latin Christianity

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In the book The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity, Peter Brown discusses in detail the role of “dead human beings” in Christian life in the time between the third and six centuries AD (p.1). These departed human beings were a direct connection between heaven and earth in the minds of early Christians. Brown also discusses the existence of a theoretical “two-tiered model” of religious practice between the elites and the vulgar throughout the book. By minimizing this theory and showing their changes as a whole society, readers have a better understanding how the rise of the cult of the saints evolved in the post-Roman Empire world.
In each chapter, Brown demonstrates a clear and vivid narrative on the evolution

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