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Leadership Patterns and the Development of Ideology in Early Christianity

. Sociology of Religion, 58 (4): 323--341 (December 1997)ArticleType: research-article / Full publication date: Winter, 1997 / Copyright © 1997 Association for the Sociology of Religion, Inc..
DOI: 10.2307/3711919

Abstract

Gerd Theissen opened up important questions concerning the conflict in earliest Christianity between "charismatic" and "community organizer" forms of itinerant leadership. This paper focuses upon the equally significant distinction between itinerant leadership and leadership from resident members of the community, examining evidence for the development from the former to the latter in early Christianity and evidence of the conflicts and difficulties caused by this transformation. It is also suggested that this change may be closely related to the development of more socially conservative patterns of instruction, such as those found in the "household codes." These forms of instruction are increasingly ideological insofar as they provide (often theological) legitimation and naturalization of the dominant social order. In this particular trajectory - dominant at least within the New Testament itself - the transformation of leadership patterns and the development of increasingly ideological forms of instruction are inextricably interconnected.

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