Paul, the Way, Pompeii #3: A Gathering of Believers
Author: Bobby Valentine | Filed under: Church, Exegesis, Paul, RomansI. Preliminary Thoughts
Members of the early Way gathered in many places. They gathered for worship in the Temple in Jerusalem through the recorded history of Acts. They met in synagogues (James simply calls it “the synagogue” James 2.2). It is possible the Way gathered at the School of Tyrannus where Paul lectured but this is not certain. From Paul’s letters we know that his converts often gathered in homes. This would have carried on the Jewish tradition itself that Jews in the Diaspora would gather for prayer, hearing the Torah and even eat shabbat meals wherever they could.
Older Protestant scholarship frequently attempted to drive a wedge between the Temple and synagogue largely because of their “distaste” for what they perceived as “ritual.” The synagogue was just one step closer to what they viewed as “spiritual” than the Temple (though the Temple was straight out of the Bible itself!). This division has fallen by the wayside in contemporary scholarship as nothing but ignorance and anti-Jewish (and at times anti-semitic) prejudice. Archeology has steadily chipped away at this prejudice and revealed the synagogue was typically viewed as an extension of the Temple itself and was considered “sacred space” (cf. Mordechai Aviam’s “Reverence for Jerusalem and the Temple in Galilean Society,” in Jesus and the Temple: Textual and Archeological Explorations, ed. James H. Charlesworth, pp. 123-144, many other studies could be cited).
Jews met in homes when they did not have the resources to have a “building.” Contrary to the stereotypes foisted upon many, Jews were more often than not poor and just as frequently slaves in the Roman Empire.
The Gatherings were in essence thought to be “little temples.” Paul clearly buys into this theology as temple imagery pervades his writings. Often unknown, or ignored, is Jews had temples outside of Jerusalem. For example the Jewish temple in Leontopolis, Egypt was fully recognized and legitimate as a place for pilgrimage and even non-animal sacrifices (my point here is that Zion was sacred space but sacred space was not limited to the physical temple in Jerusalem by Jews).
II. How Archeology of Pompeii and Ostia Sheds Light on Gatherings of the Way

The size of a house gathering of the Way was dependent upon at least three factors: 1) the number of believers/curious outsiders; 2) social make up of the community; 3) and, importantly, available space. These are not the only variables but they are crucial.
Pompeii was about the size of Philippi where Paul’s Macedonian converts lived. But Pompeii was considerably smaller than Corinth, Ephesus or Rome itself. Pompeii had an estimated population of less than twenty thousand (again like Philippi). What we learn from the physical remains of Pompeii is that wherever King Jesu’s Pharisee apostle went it was:
- Crowded
- Noisy
- Filthy
- Stinky
- Shot thru with paganism
- Filled with slaves and the destitute
A full third of the population was slaves. Slavery in the Roman Empire had zilch to do with skin color or racism and was not rooted in either. A freed slave could become not only rich but also powerful in the Empire. Slavery was largely economic or the result of war.
The rich elite made up about .04 percent of the population. A very tiny fraction. Villas were the places of living for the elite and tended to be outside the city walls (as at Pompeii). It is unlikely that the Way gathered in any villas of the elite. The famous House of Mysteries at Pompeii would be an example of an elite domicile.
The equally famous House of Menander (so named for the Greek poet featured in one of the frescos in the house), located about halfway between the Forum and the amphitheater, is quite large but much smaller than a villa. It takes up almost a whole insula (i.e. city block). It measures 18,000 square feet. The residence is of wealthy town person no doubt but not the elite. They still are in the top 1 percent.
The insula is like a large apartment complex all joined together. Next to the House of Menander is a craft worker’s home. It is thought, based on tools unearthed in the home, it was sort of a well to do cabinet makers home. The person’s home and means of production (making a living) is shared space.
New Testament scholar and archeologist, Peter Oakes has argued this craft workers house would be the sort of place people like Priscilla and Aquila, idendified as craftworkers (Acts18.2-3; Rom 16.3-4) would occupy. It is “House 7” in the attached image, the House of Menander I have outlined in red. It is much larger than the bartender’s home on the other side (listed as #’s 2&3). It is one house with a bar/cafe sort of place for making a living.
The craftworker’s home (it has no famous name, it is just House 7) is still a large home with 3220 square feet. Someone like Phoebe, the deacon from Cenchrea and letter carrier of Paul’s letter to the Romans, might own a place like House 7. Paul calls her a “patron” or “benefactor” in addition to her being a deacon indicating she is a person of means but not among the cultural elite (cf. Romans 16.1-2, the NIV renders “benefactor”).
III. The Gathering

Oakes provides numbers from various Pompeiian sources on available space, population, economic data from a mass array of archeological studies and arrives at a Pompeii House Gathering for the Way in the craftworker’s home. The demographics might look like this
- a craftworkers house with a husband, wife, children, half a dozen slaves
- several other householders with dependents from a lower economic strata
- a few family members whose household is not part of the house church
- a couple slaves whose owner is not part of the house church
- a couple free or freed dependents
- a homeless couple
Oakes arrives at an estimated size of thirty to be representative of the kind of house churches of the Way in a place like Pompeii or Rome.
For my part, I do not think Paul would be opposed to a specific place for gathering … purpose built. If the economics were there. The tradition of the synagogue paved the way for buildings of the Way. But when reading Romans, 1-2 Corinthians, Philippians and 1-2 Thessalonians (and even Philemon) this kind of data is helpful. Paul’s letters are not addressed to nothingness but to concrete historical realities of people living and working in specific circumstances.
Oakes takes this carefully crafted data and turns it into a historical framework to exegete Romans 12. He asks the question: How might the actual people we encounter in Pompeii/Rome hear this great text in THEIR social location?
Paul’s JEWISH Messianic ethic is quite radical. Paul completely subverts standard gentile ways of thinking and living. And he delivers a rather distinctive – and many ignore it – JEWISH view of salvation, though justice is the big issue in Romans. How does the King of Israel’s “justice” transform gatherings of the Way throughout the Empire of Caesar?
Think of Maria, a named Jewish slave trapped in sex slavery the brothel. She has no say over her body and what it does and does not do. She is forced to do the very thing she does not want to do and doesn’t do the things she aches to do. She loves the God’s law but sees ANOTHER law at work in her life. She might cry out in agony, “What a wretched person I am! Who will rescue me from this BODY that is subject to death?” Is such a woman, an enslaved believer, guilty … as in culpable? Here is a real live person, not an abstraction, justice is a major issue in her life. Think of “there is no condemnation” for those “in King Jesus.” Paul’s messianic and JEWSIH promise of her body being redeemed is shockingly good news to this Jewess named Maria (Romans 7-8).
Think of “you shouldn’t think more highly of yourself” (12.3), Paul guts the honor system which was foundational to Roman society. The “gifts” cut across social boundaries, the Way may meet in a craftworker’s house whose wealth is more than the rest of the group combined but now that person is a “servant of all!”
Family, egalitarianism, love fills Paul’s messianic Jewish ethics. I might return to these in number 4. At any rate Pompeii helps contextualize in extremely concrete ways the flesh and blood realities of Paul and the Way. Peter Oakes Reading Romans in Pompeii, Paul’s Letter at the Ground Level is excellent. Photographs, except the map, are by Bobby Valentine.
See also
Paul, Pompeii & the Way #1: Did God Destroy Pompeii??
Paul, Pompeii & the Way #2: Idols vs the True and Living God
Phoebe and Bobby V: Why those who Insist that She was NOT a Deacon, I Insist are Mistaken














