When Our World Became Christian, Paul Veyne

Similar documents
Comments for APA Panel: New Approaches to Political and Military History in the Later Roman Empire. Papers by Professors W. Kaegi and M. Kulikowski.

Trinity Presbyterian Church Church History Lesson 4 The Council of Nicea 325 A.D.

Name Date Period. Mr. Melia Social Studies Unit 9 Ancient Rome Chapter 7 Section 5

Constantine and the Council of Nicaea (pp )

The Edict of Milan St Mary s Byzantine Catholic Church Adult Education Series Ed. Deacon Mark Koscinski CPA D.Litt.

ST. CONSTANTINE THE GREAT, EQUAL TO THE APOSTLES: WARRIOR FOR CHRIST. Fr. Photios+ (W)

Understanding the Enlightenment Reading & Questions

Big Idea The Ottoman Empire Expands. Essential Question How did the Ottomans expand their empire?

Catch the Spirit GRADE EIGHT UNIT 2: LESSONS 1-2. This week, your child learned that: Family Talk Time. Meditation for This Week:

Unit 1: Collapse of the Western Roman Empire

SCHEME OF WORK: THE GERMAN REFORMATION

Epochs of Early Church History

The Byzantines

Bell Ringer: October 9(10), 2017

World History I. Robert Taggart

MWF 9:30-10:20 Office Hrs. M 2:30-3:30;

CHURCH HISTORY The Church Victorious (313 A.D.) by Dr. Jack L. Arnold. Early Church History, part 12

HISTORICAL TRIPOS PART I PAPER 13 EUROPEAN HISTORY 31 BC AD COURSE GUIDE

The Crusades. Summary. Contents. Rob Waring. Level Before Reading Think Ahead During Reading Comprehension... 5

*April Read for This Week s Study: 1 Pet. 2:13 23; 1 Pet. 3:1 7; 1 Cor. 7:12 16; Gal. 3:27, 28; Acts 5:27 32; Lev. 19:18.

HISTORICAL TRIPOS PART I PAPER 13 EUROPEAN HISTORY 31 BC AD COURSE GUIDE

History of Christianity

POLI 342: MODERN WESTERN POLITICAL THOUGHT

Ancient Rome and the Rise of Christianity (509 B.C. A.D. 476)

A. Remember (Things we have already learned)

3 The Problem of 'Whig History" in the History of Science

I. AUGUSTUS A. OCTAVIAN 1. CAESAR'S ADOPTED SON 2. FOUGHT FOR POWER. a. 17 YEARS OF CIVIL WAR IN ROME 3. MARC ANTONY

BIRTH OF CHRISTIANITY

A BRIEF HISTORY Of ANTI-SEMITISM

Review of: Jesus and the Constraints of History

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by:

MOTU PROPRIO: FIDES PER DOCTRINAM

Journal Look in textbook for answers Score your Vocab Cards ( /5 ) Journal A. Journal B

"El Mercurio" (p. D8-D9), 12 April 1981, Santiago de Chile

Napoleon was and still is a controversial figure. He rose to power following a period of Terror in

Constantine The Emperor

Is it true he isn t curving the test grade? OF COURSE HE S CURVING IT! WHAT S WRONG WITH YOU?

Let us look at this further

POLITICAL SCIENCE 3102 (B) Sascha Maicher (Fall 2014)

Charlemagne. Article Details: Author History.com Staff. Website Name History.com. Year Published Title Charlemagne

Review of Riccardo Saccenti, Debating Medieval Natural Law: A Survey, Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, pages.

Roman emperor Charlemagne. Name. Institution. 16 November 2014

Ancient Rome Part One: Early Kingdom and Republic

CRISIS AND REFORMS CRISIS AND REFORMS DIOCLETIAN ( )

The Roman Empire. The crowd broke into a roar It was he who brought all this wealth and glory to Rome. Rise of the Empire

Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description

Beginning of the Dark Ages SAHS

Chapter 8 Lesson Reviews

CONSTANTINE THE GREAT (280 A.D. 337 A.D.)

Persecutions. The Blood of the Martyrs is the Seed of the Church

TEAMSTERS AND THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT STREGNTH>FUTURE>FOUNDATION> SERIES

Announcements Friday, Feb. 24

Chapter 8: The Byzantine Empire & Emerging Europe, A.D Lesson 3: The Early Christian Church

Rome REORGANIZING HUMAN SOCIETIES (600 B.C.E. 600 C.E.)

5. Can you group some of the documents together? Try to group similar documents together.

We as humans have a thing for authority, or rulers, or in light of today s reading, kings. We seek


Modern France: Society, Culture, Politics

AP EUROPEAN HISTORY 2013 SCORING GUIDELINES

THE HINTON ST. MARY AND FRAMPTON MOSAICS: PROBLEMATIC IDENTIFICATIONS OF CHRISTIAN-PAGAN HYBRID IMAGERY. Shelby Colling

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

The Muslim PR Game Called The Crusades by Armin Vamberian and Robert Sibley (Reprinted here by permission of Armin Vamberian)

HRS 126: HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY TO THE REFORMATION Professor Mary Doyno Summer 2016 On-Line

4/22/ :42:01 AM

The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire

THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE

History of the Sabbath Part 2

FOUNDATIONAL COURSE 2: RULERS AND RELIGION--TEXT AND CONTEXT

A theory of adjudication is a theory primarily about what judges do when they decide cases in courts of law.

Present Trend in O.T. Theology as Represented in the Albright Influence

Apostasy and Conversion Kishan Manocha

The Hijri and Gregorian Calendars: Comparison and Conversion

How to Answer the Document Based Question (DBQ) Kienast. DBQ Step-by-Step 1. Read the question. 2. Write down what you know about the topic.

Christianity Among Other Religions Book Review

TASK. Historical Background

REVIEW: Marc Lange, Laws and Lawmakers: Science, Metaphysics, and the Laws of Nature.

EUROPEAN MIDDLE AGES 476 AD 1500 AD

Chapter 11 Saints in our History The First 1000 Years

Scripture quotations from The New King James Bible, copyright 1982, Thomas Nelson Inc, Nashville TN

THE FOUNDATIONS OF CHRISTIANITY

The Agricola And The Germania (Penguin Classics) PDF

The Third Council Of Constantinople A.D. Summary 117 years after the Second Council of Constantinople, the Emperor Constantine IV decided

2 Main Points: 1) Foreign invasions and political/social/economic problems led to the collapse of the western 1/2 of the Roman Empire.

PROPHETIC CHURCH (PART 5)

Guided Reading Activity 5-1. The Rise of Rome. DIRECTIONS: Answer the following questions as you read the section. Name Date Class

Key Stage 3 Reform: How does Religion Change?

Text 3: The Roman Empire. Topic 6: Ancient Rome and the Origins of Christianity Lesson 2: The Roman Empire: Rise and Decline

HIST2300 INTRODUCTION TO EARLY MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY Fall 2014 Final Exam Study Guide

THE PRIESTHOOD OF BAPTIZED BELIEVERS 1Pet.2:5-9 Ed Dye

Welcome to AP World History!

NT LEADER S GUIDE REVELATION JOHN D. MORRISON, PHD

Rise and Fall. Ancient Rome - Lesson 5

GDI Anthology Envisioning a Global Ethic

The trouble caused by Christianity

Life More Abundant Bible Study Bible Prophecy: Daniel Chapter 8B

What Makes the Catholic Faith Catholic? Deacon Tracy Jamison, OCDS, PhD

European Middle Ages,

World History: Connection to Today. Chapter 8. The Rise of Europe ( )

Sentence Starters from They Say, I Say

CONSTANTINE S CONVERSION & THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY REFORMATION

Transcription:

When Our World Became Christian, 312-394 Paul Veyne Cambridge: Polity Press, 2010 (ISBN 9780745644998), 248 pp. Emanuela Ponti (University of Glasgow) Paul Veyne s When Our World Became Christian, originally published in France in 2007 as Quand notre monde est devenu chrétien and now translated into English by Janet Lloyd for Polity Press, takes its readers on a fascinating journey through the crucial events that took place in the Western world between 300 and 400 AD. Veyne, Honorary Professor at the Collège de France and author of important studies such as Did the Greeks Believe in Their Myths? (1988) and Bread and Circuses (1990), here investigates Emperor Constantine s conversion to Christianity in 312 AD and the subsequent Christianization of the West. Divided into eleven brief chapters, When Our World Became Christian principally focuses on Constantine s momentous religious change; on the behaviour he adopted towards the Church; and on the (perhaps surprising) cohabitation between pagan and Christian cults - a cohabitation that peacefully continued almost throughout the fourth century. Alongside considering the decline of paganism and the rise of Christianity, in his ninth chapter Veyne touches on the birth of anti-semitism and sees the Jews hybrid condition as 1

the source of the repugnance felt by Christians and pagans alike towards them; furthermore, in his Appendix he explores both the establishment of monotheism and the concurrent subsistence of polytheism among the ancient Jewish tribes. Together with providing a very helpful summary of Constantine s actions before and after 312 AD, the first chapter highlights the exceptionality of the emperor s conduct and portrays his revolution as one of the most daring acts ever performed by a sovereign. According to Veyne, Constantine genuinely appreciated the spiritual superiority of Christianity over paganism and believed that he could be a great emperor only with the help of a great God - an almighty and compassionate God who rewarded the faithful with everlasting salvation (p. 15). Developing the argument of the opening chapter, the second and the third chapter define Christianity and the Church as masterpieces ; by fleshing out their uniqueness, Veyne makes the reader appreciate the qualities which most likely appealed to Constantine and to many of his contemporaries. Christianity was original because it was a religion of love; because its god was both gigantic and kind; and because its morality taught one to worship God through obedience, not through offerings or bloody sacrifices. Likewise, the Church was novel because its members professed their faith; because it was a proselytizing organism; and because its message addressed all social classes. In particular, as Veyne effectively puts it, Christianity offered the poor something that should have remained a privilege of the elite and thus managed to win over the Western people in a slow but relentless manner (p. 43). In addition to a very accessible prose, the chief merit of Veyne s volume is its construction of evidence through the persistent 2

employment of factual examples. Indeed, by divulging interesting (and perhaps little known) details concerning the hero of this great story and his epoch, the central chapters corroborate the author s consideration of Constantine as a sincere and disinterested new believer, and of Christianity as an avant-garde movement (p. 1). Chapter 4 recounts the dream Constantine had the night before his victory at the battle of the Milvian Bridge: in his sleep the Emperor saw the Christogram (a symbol made of the first two letters of Christ s name, the Greek X and P) and heard God saying: By this sign, you will conquer. As the reader learns in chapter 6, Constantine was baptized some 25 years after his conversion and therefore he became a Christian all on his own (p. 78). His public actions, however, would clearly show his new faith to his people: for example, after the battle of the Milvian Bridge, Constantine (and his troops) entered Rome bearing the Christogram on his shield and hence stated that Christ himself had secured the military triumph. The wealth of intriguing particulars Veyne provides continues in the seventh chapter, where the accent is on the fact that the Christian Constantine still remained the High Pontiff of the pagan rituals. On the one hand, Veyne explains, the Emperor helped the Christian Church to establish itself as freely and widely as possible: in conjunction with other decrees, in 321 Constantine legally introduced the day of Sunday rest. On the other hand, Constantine tolerated paganism and did not attempt to impose religious uniformity throughout his empire: an illustration of his commendable attitude are the reverse sides of his kingdom s coins which, at least until 322, would combine images of pagan gods with other martial or symbolic figures. Rejecting Friedrich Vittinghoff s 3

and other historians contention that Constantine was a calculating politician who saw in Christianity the ideal metaphysical basis for the stability of his empire, Veyne underlines how the emperor, in his numerous writings, repeatedly calls himself God s servant and proposes to free his people from the superstitions of paganism. Furthermore, Veyne draws the enlightening comparison between Constantine and a modern minister of culture who would favour avant-garde artists over the conventional academicism usually preferred by the majority. Modernity mattered to Constantine (and to his successors), and Christianity s energy and fresh comprehension of power could significantly improve the image of the monarchy (p. 62). When Our World Became Christian will certainly attract readers interested in historical and religious studies as well as in the emergence of Western civilization. Yet Veyne s work does not restrict itself to providing an analysis of purely past events; in fact, its last two chapters tackle the crucial question of Christianity s significance for Europe and the Western world and are, in my view, the most thought-provoking ones. In chapter 10 Veyne persuasively opposes the somewhat widespread belief that ideological grounds were behind Constantine s conversion: indeed, Veyne shows that the monarchy did not necessarily need the heavenly God/earthly King equivalence in order to ensure its subjects deference. Rather, it was the Christian Church that made use of the emperor and of his charisma to proselytize (p. 131). The last chapter joins in very contemporary debates concerning Europe s Christian roots, debates which have recently involved Pope Benedict XVI and the European MPs working on Europe s Constitution. Though Veyne regards 4

Europe (and all other civilizations) as an entity too multifaceted and heterogeneous to have roots, he considers the Enlightenment as the actual father of modern Europe s faith in democracy and humanitarianism. Challenging the perhaps automatic assumption that Christianity was the natural choice for the Western world in its early stages, Veyne concludes by saying that religion is but one of the multiple factors that constitute a society. As Veyne s book has vividly made clear throughout, without Constantine s conversion Christianity could have been a mere historical parenthesis (p. 99). The Kelvingrove Review http://www.gla.ac.uk/departments/esharp/thekelvingrovereview/ 5