The Christian World: A Global History
A National Book Award winner, Martin E. Marty is a University of Chicago Professor Emeritus, Lutheran minister, and prolific writer on history, culture, and theology. In his comprehensive yet concise The Christian World, Marty outlines the life and teachings of Christ and details how his followers spread the gospel to the world. "An effective combination of erudition and accessibility."-Kirkus Reviews
"1100627368"
The Christian World: A Global History
A National Book Award winner, Martin E. Marty is a University of Chicago Professor Emeritus, Lutheran minister, and prolific writer on history, culture, and theology. In his comprehensive yet concise The Christian World, Marty outlines the life and teachings of Christ and details how his followers spread the gospel to the world. "An effective combination of erudition and accessibility."-Kirkus Reviews
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The Christian World: A Global History

The Christian World: A Global History

by Martin Marty

Narrated by Nelson Runger

Unabridged — 11 hours, 45 minutes

The Christian World: A Global History

The Christian World: A Global History

by Martin Marty

Narrated by Nelson Runger

Unabridged — 11 hours, 45 minutes

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Overview

A National Book Award winner, Martin E. Marty is a University of Chicago Professor Emeritus, Lutheran minister, and prolific writer on history, culture, and theology. In his comprehensive yet concise The Christian World, Marty outlines the life and teachings of Christ and details how his followers spread the gospel to the world. "An effective combination of erudition and accessibility."-Kirkus Reviews

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

This is the sort of large-scale, global history that is not often pursued by academics anymore, for fear of oversimplifying narratives that fail to attend to local detail. This is a vitally important book: Christianity has never been a more global religion than it is today, yet here we can see how global it has always been. Before Marty, dean of American church historians, even turns his attention to European Christianity he spends long chapters on Asian and African episodes. The book concludes with second African and Asian episodes, suggesting the faith's future lies on those continents: "The European presence wanes and the promise of Christianity elsewhere rises," he writes. Few scholars other than Marty would have dared write a book such as this, with details on figures as diverse as Bar-Daisan in ancient Syria and present-day Pentecostal evangelists in Africa. Historians and theologians will naturally quibble over points of detail, which may not always be up-to-date on current scholarship. Yet Marty writes with whimsical accessibility, the passion of a believer and the critical eye of a hard-nosed skeptic. This is a book that offers a tentative yes to the ancient question of Jesus, "When the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?" (Jan. 15)

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Library Journal

Few scholars today could have attempted what Marty has done here; few combine Marty's broad scholarship and long experience with his accessible style: Swiss Roman Catholic theologian Hans Kung is Marty's match and more in intellectual reach, but he is too dense a writer for general readership; Paul Johnson's History of Christianityis comparable but tendentious and now dated. Marty's Christian Worldattempts, in fewer than 250 pages, to offer a worldwide history of Christianity from its beginnings to the present day, not overlooking, as many do, Africa, Latin America, and Asia. As a beginner's introduction, it can hardly be bettered, although some will feel the abbreviated discussion of theological change and cultural influence. Readers of a scholarly bent will grieve the lack of footnotes and a bibliography, but Marty's work will serve many church groups and classrooms well. Highly recommended.
—Graham Christian

Kirkus Reviews

Christian history within the context of continents as well as content. Eminent religion historian Marty (Emeritus/Univ. of Chicago; Martin Luther, 2004, etc.) copes with the limitations of a slim volume by focusing on Christianity's global character and its continued emphasis, however fractured, on Jesus Christ. He begins by tracing "The Jewish Beginnings," then follows Christians into Asia and Africa, as Roman persecution drove them east from Jerusalem. Constantine's conversion ushered in "The First European Episode"; the second came as the faith was stymied in Asia and Africa during the Middle Ages. Marty goes on to explore the spread of Christianity to Latin America and North America, closing with the faith's resurgence in Africa and Asia. His honest attempt to view Christianity from a truly global perspective and as a global religion is to be commended, especially since most church histories basically present the European perspective with only slight nods to other regions. Instead, Marty looks for evidence of the church "going global" across its history. Though he pointedly notes the many heroes the religion has spawned, he does not shy away from the controversial, often brutal role Christians have played in the faith's spread. Emphasizing the unique place held by Jesus among believers, he stresses that no matter how poorly some Christians have emulated Christ, the religion's defining mark is the belief that "the human Jesus is the exalted Lord." Marty's account has a slightly Protestant bent, but he employs an effective combination of erudition and accessibility. A helpful glossary is included. Sturdy church history, vivified by a fresh, though not always seamless approach.

From the Publisher

A whirlwind tour of the history of Christianity . . . [Martin] Marty draws on his deep historical knowledge, and the quirky details he inserts paint a lively picture of Christianity’s spread.”
The Christian Science Monitor

“Only Martin Marty, with his extraordinary range of historical understanding, could have written this masterful account of the Christian world.”
Elaine Pagels, author of The Gnostic Gospels

“A vitally important book: Christianity has never been a more global religion than it is today, yet here we can see how global it has always been. . . . Marty writes with whimsical accessibility, the passion of a believer and the critical eye of a hard-nosed skeptic.”
–Publishers Weekly

“An effective combination of erudition and accessibility.”
–Kirkus Reviews

“A real achievement . . . a rich, multilayered narrative.”
–The Globe and Mail

MAY 2009 - AudioFile

As a one-volume history of Christianity, this book can't go into great depth, but it offers a solid introduction to non-Christians and casual Christians who wish to know more about the faith. The author pays particular attention to the global reach of the religion, noting how its roots are in Asia and Africa, and it only later spread to Europe. The book is clearly written. Nelson Runger is an excellent choice as narrator. With his mellow, easy-on-the-ears voice, passages just glide along. He doesn't rush the pace, and he pauses effectively after particularly intense passages or difficult concepts, in the style of a good teacher letting students catch up. R.C.G. © AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171282202
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 09/12/2008
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

1.
 
The Jewish
 
Beginnings
 
Yeshuanity” or “Jesusanity” would be a natural name for a global community and culture devoted to Yeshua, or Jesus of Nazareth, depending on whether the namers favored his Hebrew or his Latinized name. “Christianity” is instead the designation, and its communal form is not the Jesus Church but the Christian Church. Nor is Christ the last name of this Jesus, but a translation of the Hebrew or Aramaic word messias, which means “anointed,” and refers to someone appointed to a specific role. To neglect or to obscure the meaning of the title Christ when applied to Jesus, the rabbi from Nazareth, is to miss the point of the earliest writings about him and to skew the story line ever after.
 
Another World to Live in, and Its Stories
 
The Christian World is an invitation for readers to enter and appraise a global scene, “the world,” through twenty centuries. At the same time the Christian “world” also means all the contexts to which Christian believers related and relate. “Christianity” may imply institutions and can be expressed through doctrines and ways of life, but at its core it is a story. Philosopher George Santayana connected “world” and “story” precisely, as will we. In Reason in Religion he remarked that “every living and healthy religion has a marked idiosyncrasy.” Ask atheists, Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Jews, or others to listen to Christians and they will soon discern the main “marked idiosyncrasy”: the devotion to Jesus Christ.
 
As these listeners observe the effects of what they have heard they will note what Santayana told readers to look for, in this case it would mean that Christianity’s “power consists in its special and surprising message,” rooted in the story of Jesus Christ, “and in the bias which that revelation gives to life.” Billions of people have let that revelation “bias” them, so that they could experience joy and peace or, conversely and often at the same time, face persecution, hardship, or even death in its light. Santayana spoke of “the vistas” a religion like Christianity opens, “and the mysteries it propounds,” and these will be obvious to all who follow the story. Now: taken together they make up “another world to live in, and another world to live in—whether we expect ever to pass wholly over into it or no—is what we mean by having a religion.”
 
Beginning with the Story of Jesus Christ
 
The “special and surprising message” of Christianity begins with Jesus Christ, so if we wish to go back to beginnings, we begin with his story. The earliest Christians were, like Jesus, Jews. This means that they were schooled in Hebrew Scriptures, which Christians later called “the Old Testament.” They reread those Scriptures and gave them a “special and surprising” twist. Believers took words of the prophets and claimed that they foretold Jesus, or they told stories of scriptural figures like Moses and Elijah, Noah and Jonah, and saw them as “types” of Jesus Christ and his story.
 
Jesus was a Jew: that theme needs reinforcing, especially because so much of Christian history is a wrestling with the meanings of Jews and Judaism. The two faiths should have been supportive of each other, as spiritual next of kin. Anthropologists stress what is obvious about kin: “aggression, like charity, begins at home.” As the upstart believers in Jesus Christ as the long-promised deliverer of Israel, the Messiah, the Christ, expressed that startling claim, some Jews who did not see him that way and who thought his claims blasphemous ejected the believers in Jesus Christ from their synagogues and persecuted them. For twenty centuries the once ejected Christians exacted revenge or, on any number of grounds, set out on their own to be separate, to define themselves over against those in their parent faith community, as they turned murderous in patterns for which there was little formal and corporate repentance until the late twentieth century.
 
Getting the story of Jesus right is difficult, and no single interpretation can be satisfying to all 2.2 billion Christians, since they are divided into 38,000 denominations, many of them fashioned to protect and project separate tellings of the story. Yet certain elements of the story stand out. To begin with, the narratives about Jesus Christ were all written by followers, called disciples or evangelists, which means spreaders of the evangel, the “good news.” In these stories, he chose twelve followers to stand out, no doubt to mirror the twelve tribes of Israel. Four books in the Christian New Testament called gospels were named after three authors or editors who pursued parallel tracks, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, while a fourth, identified with John, displays different nuances and intentions. Not exactly biographies or histories, the gospels are narrative testimonies to what the early communities cherished and wanted preserved. Luke tells how he went about his work interviewing eyewitnesses, reading documentary collections, and giving them coherence in his own edited narrative. These gospels stress different aspects of the life and work of Jesus. Luke, for instance, was especially attentive to the marginalized, among them women and children. His Jesus was always at table with outcasts, and he showed special favor to lepers and the physically handicapped—and thus despised—people around him.
 
In recent times some of the texts which had not been incorporated into what became the shared collection or canon have been discovered as far from Jerusalem as Egypt, where some communities which identified themselves with Jesus long struggled. Other such writings, long known but neglected, receive new attention. To overstate the case slightly, most of these gospels display difficulty with either the human Jesus the Jew or Jesus the exalted being they called Lord. Some pose the whole questions of God and Jesus in arcane, hard to interpret terms. No matter what the claims any of these made and whatever appeal they have now to scholars and seekers especially in the affluent West, for most Christians around the globe it is the four gospel accounts that have provided the focus for their faith, the enchantment of their stories, and the impulse for their ministries and service.
 
From these gospels the later believing communities have learned how Christians, originally all of them Jews, related to Judaism itself. In the period in which the gospels were being written, the Romans put down a revolt by oppressed Jews. They besieged the city and destroyed the Second Temple, the center of Jewish worship. Most scholars see these traumatic events as elements in the shaping of the gospels. They are reflected in words of Jesus about persecution, death, destruction, and the foreseen end-time. Mainly, however, the gospels have been revered because they provided the story of Jesus’ birth, the account of what is called his Passion or suffering and dying, and most of all his Resurrection. Framed by those events is the story of his life
 
Since Christians make so much of the figure of Jesus, it is impressive and, to many, confounding, that there is so much that they can never know. Archaeology may turn up artifacts that can be studied to color the understandings of the time, but “the historical Jesus,” as some scholars call him while pursuing his trail, will always remain a subject of controversy and confusion, always finally elusive. If he was “the exalted Lord,” did he claim to be the Son of God or even, clearly, the Anointed of God, the Messiah? Why did the gospels report that he on occasion called himself the Son of Man, a figure vivid in the imagination of some apocalyptic Jews who thrived before his time? How did he become such a cherished figure among those who value the family, while his own family had trouble believing in him and while he so often dismissed and rejected family ties for the sake of the “Kingdom of God” that he was announcing? What did he do from age twelve to approximately age thirty, years about which the gospels are silent and pseudo-gospels tell fanciful tales?

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