Travel Among Early Christians approaches trans-local movement between churches as a valuable source of insights regarding social and theological aspects of early Christianity. Incorporating theories from mobility studies and ancient institutions that facilitated travel, Borges traces how travel performed early Christians' group identities and signified a new cosmic reality regarding their unity in Christ. Borges investigates six specific travel events in Pauline and Ignatian churches, noting how trans-local movement became a distinctive and revealing aspect of early Christianity.