Paula of Bethlehem: Blending the Ascetic and Aristocrat Worlds
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.60061/fths.2024.1.7-24Keywords:
Patristics, Ascetics, Monasticism, Holy Lands, Early Christianity, Late Antiquity, Patristic ProsopographyAbstract
In late antique Rome, a unique lady formed a hybrid of the virtues expected for aristocrats and ascetics. Paula, a "daughter of Cornelia" was a Christian who joined two paths in a life that spanned the splendor of imperial Rome and Christian reforms of the fourth century ascetic movement. Spiritual and moral disparities divided the values of church and society, yet singular virtues overlapped in the two ways of life. Paula faced a rupture in her life and overcame harsh conundrums. This elite lady was a student, patron and friend, to Jerome of Stridon for she blended the values of aristocrat and ascetic, causing two worlds to unite in her.Downloads
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2025-09-09
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Copyright (c) 2024 Rebecca Ruth Faber

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
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Paula of Bethlehem: Blending the Ascetic and Aristocrat Worlds. (2025). Forum Theologicum Sardicense, 1, 7-24. https://doi.org/10.60061/fths.2024.1.7-24