Throughout the Passion, there are several remarkable emphases: the Holy Spirits activity, prophecies and visions, womens leadership, eschatological expectation, zeal for martyrdom, and prerogatives awarded to confessors. These emphases bring to mind the tenets of Montanism, a Spirit-based movement that began in Asia Minor in the second century and spread rapidly to the west, where it found its greatest advocate in Tertullian of Carthage. The relationship of the Passion to Montanism, important as a forerunner of modern-day Pentecostalism and the charismatic movement, has been debated since the document was rediscovered in the seventeenth century.
In this book, Rex D. Butler examines the Passion for evidence of Montanism and proposes that its three authorsPerpetua, Saturus, and the unnamed editorwere Montanists. Although many scholars have discussed both sides of this issue, this work is the most extensive investigation to date.
