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What little we know about the Latin author Commodian comes directly from his own poems – the Instructions and the Apologetic Poem (also known as the Poem about Two Peoples). Gennadius (On Illustrious Men 15) mentions him but relies on Commodian’s poems just as we do. Commodian was most likely writing in North Africa, probably Carthage, in the third quarter of the third century. He has a deep affinity for and familiarity with Cyprian, and was likely a direct contemporary, though it appears he himself never held ecclesial office. Commodian seems to have been a layperson whose own journey from “frequenting the [pagan] temples” (1, 1.5) to becoming a “Law-inspired” – that is, “scripture-inspired” – Christian (1, 1.6) prompted him to make his own efforts to influence his various communities in Carthage. It seems likely that he identified as ethnically Syrian (hence the final poem’s title, where the author of the Instructions identifies himself as “the man from Gaza”), and that, prior to his time in Carthage, he spent substantial formative years in Aquileia.
Literary evidence for Christianity in North Africa in the first three centuries comes from Tertullian, Minucius Felix, Cyprian, Commodian, Pseudo-Cyprian, and various homilies and stories of martyrdom. It illustrates the beliefs of the Christian communities, their structures and practices. African social organisation was primarily tribal until the arrival of the Phoenicians, whose culture centred on cities. In general, Africans used Romanisation when it was to their own advantage. The Semitic roots of Punic religion raise the question of the origins of Christianity in Rome. There was great respect for Christians at Rome, but no tradition of a foundation from that city. The intransigence of African Christianity manifests itself from the very beginning through martyrdom and apology. Christians in Africa were persecuted intermittently from 180 until 305. True heirs of African Christianity, they maintained literal and strict interpretations of scripture and a culture of martyrdom. They fostered unity and collegiality among those who continued to oppose the Roman state.
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