Peter Brown, Emeritus Professor of History at Princeton University, USA, is the author of The Ransom of the Soul: Afterlife and Wealth in Early Western Christianity and Through the Eye of a Needle: Wealth, the Fall of Rome, and the Making of Christianity in the West, 350-550 AD.
One of the most familiar phrases in the New Testament is Jesus's
exhortation to forget about earthly riches and instead store up
'treasure in heaven.' Here, Peter Brown uses the phrase to pry open
ancient attitudes about the relationship between work, leisure, and
piety, and the way Christianity both reflected and threatened
long-standing tensions. Treasure in Heaven is wide-ranging,
accessible, and highly readable. Someday Brown will write a book
that does not stimulate new thinking. But this is not that day, nor
is this that book."" — H. A. Drake, University of California, Santa
Barbara, author of Constantine and the Bishops
""The poor were a special focus of early Christianity, but who were
they? And what made them so deserving? These questions have
preoccupied Peter Brown for more than a decade. After Poverty and
Leadership in the Later Roman Empire and Through the Eye of a
Needle, he turns here to the eastern edges of the Roman Empire and
to the ‘holy poor,’ those men and women who deliberately chose
poverty in order to be closer to God, and who must therefore be
supported by the rest of society. With his accustomed virtuosity
Brown reveals hitherto unsuspected tensions between the ‘real poor’
and the ‘holy poor,’ and the anxious questions asked about the
value of work, the impact of wealth, and the nature of the ‘angelic
life.’ Above all, what did ‘treasure in heaven’ really mean? In the
third book of his trilogy, Brown lays bare in vivid and arresting
detail the legacies of Syria and Egypt, the variety and
contradictions within Christianity, and the intense
self-questioning of Christians in the early centuries.""— Dame
Averil Cameron, University of Oxford
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