I just finished reading God Against the Gods: The History of the War between Monotheism and Polytheism by Jonathan Kirsch.
Kirsch theorizes that if the Roman emperor Constantine had not favored Christianity, allowed the church to own property, and strongly urged the Christian Church to resolve several disputes (e.g., Arianism and Donatism) -- Christianity may well have remained a tiny sect that faded away like many other religious sects.
I put this in the History Forum instead of Religion because I'd like to discuss this from an evidenced based point of view and perhaps even entertain some conjectures based upon what is known about psychology and sociology. No arguments based upon because “God said so” please. If despite this, the mods in their wisdom decide to move this to the Religion Forum -- I won’t protest. (I’ll be slightly unhappy though.
)
Before I read this book I had assumed that the move to Christianity was grass-roots based; that it appealed to the mostly unempowered masses looking for a way of life that was less cruel. But after reading this book I found out that Roman culture was more complex than I had thought and while several of the rulers were extremely cruel, many of the schools of philosophy and pagan beliefs were not. And Kirsch does a good job showing how cruelly the early Christians treated each other and makes a good case that monotheism was the start of religious intolerance and that the roots of the Spanish Inquisition and 9/11 can be traced back to the actions of Constantine and the early leaders of the Christian Church. (This is the main point of his book, but not the one I‘d like to discuss in this thread.)
While I usually don’t believe that major turning points in history have only one or even two causes, I find Kirsch’s points persuasive. It may very well be that if Constantine had not favored the Christian Church, most of the world may have never practiced monotheism during the last two millennium.
What do you think?
Kirsch theorizes that if the Roman emperor Constantine had not favored Christianity, allowed the church to own property, and strongly urged the Christian Church to resolve several disputes (e.g., Arianism and Donatism) -- Christianity may well have remained a tiny sect that faded away like many other religious sects.
I put this in the History Forum instead of Religion because I'd like to discuss this from an evidenced based point of view and perhaps even entertain some conjectures based upon what is known about psychology and sociology. No arguments based upon because “God said so” please. If despite this, the mods in their wisdom decide to move this to the Religion Forum -- I won’t protest. (I’ll be slightly unhappy though.
Before I read this book I had assumed that the move to Christianity was grass-roots based; that it appealed to the mostly unempowered masses looking for a way of life that was less cruel. But after reading this book I found out that Roman culture was more complex than I had thought and while several of the rulers were extremely cruel, many of the schools of philosophy and pagan beliefs were not. And Kirsch does a good job showing how cruelly the early Christians treated each other and makes a good case that monotheism was the start of religious intolerance and that the roots of the Spanish Inquisition and 9/11 can be traced back to the actions of Constantine and the early leaders of the Christian Church. (This is the main point of his book, but not the one I‘d like to discuss in this thread.)
While I usually don’t believe that major turning points in history have only one or even two causes, I find Kirsch’s points persuasive. It may very well be that if Constantine had not favored the Christian Church, most of the world may have never practiced monotheism during the last two millennium.
What do you think?
Last edited: