Abstract
This paper explores the political background to Early Christian baptism, as
it pertains to the symbolic meanings of urban topography and ceremonial
practice. It argues that the changing relationship between imperium and
sacerdotium in Early Christianity took on a particular political dimension
that played an important role in the shaping of baptismal symbolism. This
initially finds expression in the new political landscape of Rome under
Constantine, where conversion constituted as much an entry into a new
“legal religion” as a recognition, formalised in ritual, of the legitimacy
of Christian imperial rulership. Accordingly, the paper examines the impact
of the imperial cult on baptism from Constantine to Byzantine rule,
highlighting the way in which the increasing political emphasis on
monotheism and concordance between imperium and sacerdotium gave credence
in the Eastern Empire to the principle of “caesaro-papal” symbolism. This
was to culminate in the ritual practices of the Byzantine emperors, in
particular the quasi-baptismal ablution of the emperor that took place
annually at Blachernae. In the West, on the other hand, the dissenting
voice of St. Ambrose, against the increasingly politicised monotheism of
Theodosius I, emphasised the specifically personal redemptive meaning of
baptism, rather than any allusion to collective imperial alliance. Hence,
the changing symbolic meanings of baptism in Early Christianity will
provide a framework for redefining wider cultural and political divisions
between the Eastern and Western empires.
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