Digital Logos Edition
Are Christians meant to experience suffering? This question has long been a contentious one within the church. Christ is risen, the kingdom of heaven is at hand, yet sickness, poverty, and persecution continue to be daily realities for Christians around the world.
In this study of martyrdom and persecution in the early church, Rev. Dr. Kwaku Boamah reminds us that there is no Christianity without a cross and that suffering has played a prominent role in church theology and tradition since the time of Christ. Examining second- and third-century apologetic texts and martyr narratives, he utilizes a systematic comparative approach to create a holistic picture of the extreme challenges facing Christians under the Roman Empire. Drawing parallels to the history of persecution and martyrdom in his homeland of Ghana, Boamah locates the experience of African Christianity firmly within the larger narrative of church history, reminding Christians that they are not alone in their suffering but are members of a global, unified whole.
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Kwaku Boamah’s well-researched and careful study of texts and the history of martyrdom in the African context breaks new ground in bringing home to those interested in African Christianity a dimension of the life of the church that we have often overlooked. This is educative, illuminating, and engaging in the same breath!
--J. Kwabena Asamoah-Gyadu, PhD. Trinity Theological Seminary, Legon, Ghana
At the present time it is of vital importance to emphasize and reemphasize the impact of North African Christianity during the first five hundred years of Christian history. The period produced a munificence of great theologians and churchmen from Tertullian to Augustine. This masterly work is a must read for both those interested in the history of persecution during the period of the early Church and of the contemporary progress of Christianity on the African continent.
--James C. Thomas, PhD. University of Ghana, Legon