Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice

The essay investigates if and how Greco-Roman theorists attempted to motivate altruistic behaviour and devise a social-welfare ethics. In comparison, it studies actual social-welfare practices on both the private and the state level. Various social-welfare tasks are touched upon – health care; care...

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Main Author: P. Lampe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2016-06-01
Series:Acta Theologica
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/2767
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author P. Lampe
author_facet P. Lampe
author_sort P. Lampe
collection DOAJ
description The essay investigates if and how Greco-Roman theorists attempted to motivate altruistic behaviour and devise a social-welfare ethics. In comparison, it studies actual social-welfare practices on both the private and the state level. Various social-welfare tasks are touched upon – health care; care for the elderly, widows, orphans and invalids; the patron-client system as countermeasure to unemployment; distribution of land, grain, meals and money; alms, donations, foundations as well as education – with hardly any one of them being especially tailored to the poor. The enormous role of civil society – private persons, their households and associations – in holding up social-welfare functions is shown. By contrast, the state was comparatively less involved, the commonwealth of the Romans, especially in Republican times, even less than the Greek city-states. The Greek poleis often invested income such as wealthy citizens’ donations in social welfare, thus brokering between wealthy private donors and less well-to-do persons. The church, living in private household structures during the first centuries, took over the social-welfare tasks of the Greco-Roman household and reviewed them in the light of Hebrew and Hellenistic-Jewish moral traditions.
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spelling doaj-art-478c406c25274f9684608cc0bbc5ce232025-02-11T09:53:02ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Theologica1015-87582309-90892016-06-012310.38140/at.v0i23.2767Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practiceP. Lampe0University of Heidelberg, Germany & University of the Free State, South Africa The essay investigates if and how Greco-Roman theorists attempted to motivate altruistic behaviour and devise a social-welfare ethics. In comparison, it studies actual social-welfare practices on both the private and the state level. Various social-welfare tasks are touched upon – health care; care for the elderly, widows, orphans and invalids; the patron-client system as countermeasure to unemployment; distribution of land, grain, meals and money; alms, donations, foundations as well as education – with hardly any one of them being especially tailored to the poor. The enormous role of civil society – private persons, their households and associations – in holding up social-welfare functions is shown. By contrast, the state was comparatively less involved, the commonwealth of the Romans, especially in Republican times, even less than the Greek city-states. The Greek poleis often invested income such as wealthy citizens’ donations in social welfare, thus brokering between wealthy private donors and less well-to-do persons. The church, living in private household structures during the first centuries, took over the social-welfare tasks of the Greco-Roman household and reviewed them in the light of Hebrew and Hellenistic-Jewish moral traditions. https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/2767
spellingShingle P. Lampe
Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice
Acta Theologica
title Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice
title_full Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice
title_fullStr Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice
title_full_unstemmed Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice
title_short Social welfare in the Greco-Roman world as a background for early Christian practice
title_sort social welfare in the greco roman world as a background for early christian practice
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/at/article/view/2767
work_keys_str_mv AT plampe socialwelfareinthegrecoromanworldasabackgroundforearlychristianpractice