
Part I : How did the Christian Era
affect
humanity?
Part II: Neopaganism vs.
Wicca
How Did The Christian Era Effect
Humanity?
<snip>
Christianity and
Progress
BY VINCENT CARROLL AND DAVID SHIFLETT
Copyright © 2000 Encounter Books
Christians, we are often told,
are easy to locate. They are the people marooned on the wrong side of history.
Again and again, century after dispiriting century, they have dug in their heels
against progress. In politics, the critics charge, a Christian's instinctive
allegiance has been with despots and oppressors rather than democrats and
liberators, with inquisitors and book burners as opposed to probing minds and
pamphleteers. Christians have buttressed hierarchy against equality, patriarchy
against women's rights, absolutism against individualism, and small-minded
tradition against broad-minded tolerance. The most popular version of this
indictment sees the whole of Western history since the fall of Rome as a
difficult but increasingly successful struggle to wrest the human spirit from
the fetters of the Christian church.
"It's not hard to be hostile to the
church," Jane Fonda confided to Oprah. After all, "you can go through history,
the Crusades and the inquisitions, and the formal church has a lot to apologize
for." Fonda's view of the Christian past is not an uncommon one.
The indictment of Christianity as a
reactionary faith usually spares the message of Jesus himself, but turns on the
earliest church leaders including Paul, on the church fathers of Late Antiquity,
and on the clerics of the Middle Ages. Augustine, the most influential of the
patristic writers, is frequently seen as a grim prototype of Torquemada,
encouraging church absolutism and the persecution of heretical ideas. The
medieval church to which he contributed so much is portrayed as a kind of
institutional incubus, sucking liberty and creativity out of Europe for hundreds
of years. Every presumed sin of Christianity is seen in distilled form in the
medieval West.
This is the viewpoint adopted by high
school textbooks, as Paul Gagnon confirmed in his study of the five most-read
books. "The Middle Ages, when they are mentioned at all," he concludes, "are
dark and stagnant, their people without ideas or curiosity, and interested only
in life after the grave." Popular historians and critics echo this attitude. For
example, in his review of David Fromkin's sweeping survey of world history, The
Way of the World: From the Dawn of Civilization to the Eve of the Twenty-first
Century, Richard Bernstein of the New York Times praised the author for dealing
"in about half a page with Galileo, Francis Bacon, Rene Descartes and Michel de
Montaigne, saying that they were all men of 'skepticism in thought and
moderation in action' who helped draw Europe out of 'the long sleep of
feudalism.' That is correct, and to be correct is an achievement." The
implication is that moving forward required retreating from the medieval faith.
Yet there is a quite different
possibility: that the Middle Ages were the incubator for some of our most
cherished modern values and institutions, and that the origins of those values
and institutions may often be found in an earlier age of the church.
"Both slave and free must equally
philosophize, whether male or female in sex ... whether barbarian, Greek, slave,
whether an old man, or a boy, or a woman.... And we must admit that the same
nature exists in every race, and the same virtue." These remarks by Clement of
Alexandria (c. 200) cannot be confused with the views of most educated citizens
of the Roman Empire in the third century. The sentiments they express would have
been equally unusual, or more so, in the other great civilizations of the time:
the various empires stretching across Asia, as well as those in the Americas and
in Africa south of the Sahara. Clement spoke with the distinctively universalist
tone of a Christian. "I would ask you," he declared, "does it not seem monstrous
that you — human beings who are God's own handiwork — should be subjected to
another master, and, even worse, serve a tyrant instead of God, the true king?"
This was explosive stuff, and its
force rested in its premise: If human beings are all God's own handiwork — and
if, moreover, they are made in God's image, as Christians from the early days
believed — then it follows that they must be moral equals. And once they are
moral equals, the progress associated with Western civilization cannot be far
behind. Without belief in moral equality, there would have been little hope for
the rise of the Western legal tradition, with its distinctive feature of
equality before the law. The recognition of individual rights would scarcely
have been possible. Without moral equality, democracy in the modern sense is not
even a serf's fugitive dream.
Of course, it was many centuries
after the first appearance of Christian communities before practical political
philosophers would write, with self-conscious gravity — and a sense that they
were expressing the will of God — "we hold these truths to be self evident, that
all men are created equal," and then found a nation committed to that principle.
It took so long, in part, because it had to be made self-evident that all men
are created equal, and that was the work of centuries. Someone could write such
a statement in 1776 and expect his readers not to laugh out loud only because of
a common culture steeped in the belief that mankind was "endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable Rights." That culture was a legacy of Western
Christendom.
It is not that Christians were the
first or only people to insist on the fraternity of mankind and the intrinsic
value of each human being. Stoics such as Marcus Aurelius, the second-century
Roman emperor, also held that all individuals are equals. Yet there was a grim
and cheerless quality about the Stoics, who believed in the suppression of all
passions, not just the bad ones, and who touted virtue while denying it had any
positive effect. The Stoics never tapped the popular longing for a sense of
moral equality in the way Christians did.
Jews of the ancient world put unusual
value on human life, and as Elaine Pagels remarks, "Hebrew tradition sometimes
reveals a sense of universalism where one might least expect it. Even God's
election of Abraham and his progeny includes the promise of a blessing to extend
through them to all people, for that famous passage concludes with the words,
'in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed." (1) For a time, Judaism
appeared a candidate to become a world religion, as converts scurried toward its
impressive ethics and clear-headed monotheism. Yet in the end, the tribal legacy
of Judaism presented obstacles too great for many pagans to overcome —
circumcision being only the most obvious. It was Christianity that proved the
more powerful lure. Up and down the social ladder, the doctrine of moral
equality was to find an ever-expanding home.
How Christian Ethics Transformed the
Pagan World
More than two hundred years after the
death of Jesus, midway into the third century, Christians were still a small
minority in the Roman Empire — no more than 5 percent of the multiethnic throng
by the highest estimates, and probably less than half that much. "They were
mostly concentrated in the bigger cities, but they were prominent in towns of
varying rank and degree," Robin Lane Fox concludes in Pagans and Christians.
"Their center of gravity lay with the humbler free classes, not with the slaves,
whom they did little to evangelize.... Women of all ranks were conspicuous and
there was a notable presence in some churches of women of high
status.(2)
What was it that accounted for this
particular social profile, if not Christianity's insistence on the equal value
of every soul in God's sight? The apostle Paul had said, "there is neither Jew
nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female,
for you are all one in Christ Jesus," and his words still resonate two thousand
years later. How much more potent they must have seemed in an empire in which
social class — from emperor down to slave — was so much more confining, and in
which the portion of the population that could be bought and sold like oxen
seemed to swell with Rome's stupendous military reach.
How much more inspiring, in
particular, the early Christian message must have been to women. To put it
plainly, women enjoyed higher status and more autonomy among Christians than
among pagans, and could expect better treatment from their husbands. Pagan Roman
women were "three times as likely as Christians to have married before age 13,"
according to the sociologist Rodney Stark. (3) Christian women also exercised
far more choice in whom they wed, and were less likely to be forced into an
abortion (a frequent cause of death for women of the time). The church expected
men to remain faithful to their wives, a principle that enjoyed more freedom to
choose for themselves whether to remarry, secure in the knowledge that their
congregation would look after them if they elected to remain alone. "It is . . .
an established fact, taken from simple evidence, that everywhere progress in
free choice of a spouse accompanied progress in the spread of Christianity,"
declares Regine Pernoud. (4)
Women's status in the church itself
was unusually favorable for the times. Wayne Meeks notes that "Both in terms of
their position in the larger society and in terms of their participation in the
Christian communities ... a number of women broke through the expectations of
female roles." (5) Paul is often rebuked these days for his offhand acceptance
of the fact of slavery and for his allegedly regressive views on the status of
women. But in fact what distinguished Paul from his non-Christian contemporaries
was not the patriarchal views he sometimes expressed, especially in the
admonition "Wives, be subject to your husbands as to the Lord," but rather his
repeated emphasis on the obligations of husbands to wives. Thomas Cahill writes
that in Paul we find "the only clarion affirmation of sexual equality in the
whole of the Bible — and the first one ever to be made in any of the many
literatures of our planet." (6) A. N. Wilson makes the same point: "In those
days, you would have been hard put to find anyone who believed in 'sexual
equality' in the modern sense, and the person who comes closest to it is,
strangely enough, Paul." (7)
Paul also demanded that converts of
Gentile background enjoy the same status as their brethren of Jewish origin,
perhaps thereby sparing the Jesus movement a narrow future as another Jewish
sect. This accomplishment is more extraordinary than it might now seem. It meant
that the competition between paganism and Christianity, as Robert L. Wilken
explains in The Christians as the Romans Saw Them, was something quite unusual:
"a debate about a new concept of religion.... The ancients took for granted that
religion was indissolubly linked to a particular city or people. Indeed, there
was no term for religion in the sense we now use it to refer to ... a voluntary
association divorced from ethnic or national identity." (8) With Paul leading
the way, Christianity would shatter this insular outlook for all time.
The crucial difference between pagans
and Christians was not, as is commonly supposed, a belief in many gods versus a
belief in one. By the first and second centuries, many pagans had begun to
conceive of the major Roman gods as aspects of a unified divinity. This
"striving after monotheism," in Henry Chadwick's phrase, also took the form of
sun worship and an openness to spiritual imports from the East. But Chadwick
points out that "Even after the cults of Isis and the Oriental mystery religions
had spread from their original homes, there was curiously little sense of
universality about their worship." (9) It wasn't the number of their gods that
prevented the vast majority of pagans from developing an outlook that
transcended town, region, class and sometimes even gender. It was, at least in
part, the confining nature of the religious message itself.
To be sure, most early Christians did
not hope to transform society to mirror their belief in moral equality. It made
as much sense to advocate manned flight as to propose equality before the law in
an empire utterly dependent on slaves, with rulers who functioned as a law unto
themselves. How could there be moral equality when the emperor was believed to
possess something akin to divine powers? Yet even in those early centuries,
Christian morality worked like a great shock absorber on everyday life,
softening the blows of a frequently pitiless existence and gentling the private
realm.
For exhilarating cruelty, few
spectacles in human history have surpassed the gladiatorial games. Crowds that
included the very best citizens exulted as scores of men, and sometimes many
hundreds, slaughtered one another for fleeting fame and honor. Not that they
always had much choice in the matter. Elaine Pagels describes the action at the
Roman amphitheater in the second century: "The spectators cheered the men who
recklessly courted death, and thrilled to the moment of the death blow. The
crowd would go wild when a defeated gladiator defiantly thrust out his neck to
his antagonist's sword, and they jeered and hooted when a loser bolted in
panic." (10) Major imperial shows could deploy thousands of pairs of combatants,
not to mention all manner of animals and wild beasts — hounds, lions, bears,
bulls — battling one another, or humans, to the death.
Christians deplored this
entertainment, and not merely because there was always the chance that they
might themselves someday wind up as prey. Rather, they were repulsed by the way
this spectacle debased human life. When the Emperor Constantine outlawed
gladiator games in the fourth century (or attempted to; they flourished for
decades afterward), he did so as an affirmation of Christian values.
Even Edward Gibbon — the great
eighteenth-century historian whose Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire so
provoked pious Christians of his day — had to concede the impressive ethical
standards of early Christians. He listed their "pure and austere morals" as the
fourth of five reasons for Christianity's remarkable growth before Constantine."
(11) Yet this is grudging tribute. It hardly does justice to a morality that
rejected the casual practice of infanticide and the abandonment of unwanted
babies, opposed the exploitation of children for erotic pleasure, elevated the
status of women, accepted and broadened the Jewish tradition of concern for the
poor (as Ramsay MacMullen tartly observes, "who outside that tradition in the
ancient world would have been recorded on his tombstone as a `lover of the
poor'?"), (12) exalted humility, and tirelessly preached the gifts of charity
and love. "Austere" is scant praise indeed for such bedrock beliefs.
"Life-affirming" is more like it.
If the amphitheater was the gaudiest
manifestation of pagan cruelty the killing of infants, often by abandoning them
on the local dung heap, was the saddest. Boys were disposed of when they were
deformed; girls when they were inconvenient. The result was a society — not just
in Italy but in the eastern Mediterranean and North Africa — in which males
outnumbered females by 30 per cent or more. Most families simply refused to
raise a second girl. Consider the instructions written by a man named Hilarion
to his pregnant wife around the year Jesus was born: "If you are delivered of a
child, if it is a boy keep it, if a girl discard it." Such orders were so
ordinary, so unexceptional, that they didn't require a single word of
justification. Christians, on the other hand, had a starkly different attitude:
female infants were to be cherished equally with males as gifts from God.
True, there was great variety among
early Christians, such that it is sometimes difficult, in Wayne Meeks's words,
"to draw firm boundaries" around their moral beliefs. Yet there is little doubt
that within this diversity there existed "a family resemblance of moral traits."
(13) Moreover, the contrast between pagan and Christian ethics is not only
apparent retrospectively to historians; it was emphasized by early converts like
Justin Martyr, who rejoiced at the "innumerable multitude who have reformed
intemperate habits." And it was noted repeatedly by anti-Christian pagans of the
time.
The Emperor Julian ("the Apostate"),
whose last-ditch effort to reverse the Christian tide in 360-63 expired at the
point of a Persian arrow, admitted that "It is generosity toward non-members,
care for the graves of the dead, and pretended holiness of life that have
specially fostered the growth of atheism" (a common term for Christianity at the
time). Ammianus Marcellinus, the fourth century historian who attributed Roman
military setbacks to a failure to satisfy pagan gods, nevertheless described
Christianity as a "just and gentle" religion. The satirist Lucian of Samosata
(c. 170) knew "that the Christians were unbelievably generous with their money
and preferred to be open-handed rather than inquire too closely into the
recipients." Even the provincial governor Pliny the Younger, who executed
Christians for no reason other than their stubborn profession of faith,
acknowledged in a letter to the Emperor Trajan that their behavior appeared
above reproach, except of course for their regrettable "superstition." "During
the plague in Alexandria," writes Robin Lane Fox, Christians "tended their own
sufferers, while the pagans were said to abandon their sick at the first sign of
disease; during the siege of the same year, the two Christian leaders contrived
to save many old and weak people, Christians first, then pagans, too, later."
(14) Moreover, "Whereas the corn doles of pagan cities had been confined to
citizens, usually to those who were quite well-off, the Christians' charity
claimed to be for those who were most in need." (15)
There is no doubt that Christian
charity (about which more later) exercised a powerful pull on converts, and that
Christian dedication to the poor, ill, disabled, imprisoned, elderly, widowed
and exploited was notable from the outset. Early bishops, for example, were
expected to eat one meal a day with the poor. In the larger cities, the church
founded orphanages and the forerunners of hospitals. As the Roman Empire
spiraled into chaos, the church expanded its philanthropic role until it was
virtually the sole recourse of the poor. "St. Gregory is said to have taken his
responsibilities so seriously," recounts Christopher Dawson, "that when a single
poor man was found dead of hunger in Rome, he abstained from saying Mass as
though he were guilty of his death." (16)
It is not that Christian ethics were
entirely original; they were substantially Jewish in derivation, although with
distinctive accents such as the command to love one's enemies. And it is
possible to exaggerate the moral differences between pagans and Christians; for
leading pagan citizens were capable of great acts of giving, if not often to the
direct benefit of the poor, then at least to the local community and to their
gods. Much of Christian ethics can be found articulated by pagan philosophers.
"Hence the paradox of the rise of
Christianity as a moral force in the pagan world," observes Peter Brown.
The rise of Christianity altered
profoundly the moral texture of the late Roman world. Yet in moral matters the
Christian leaders made almost no innovations. What they did was more crucial.
They created a new group, whose exceptional emphasis on solidarity in the face
of its own inner tensions ensured that its members would practice what pagan and
Jewish moralists had already begun to preach." (17)
The result was that the ethical
differences in practice between the pagan and Christian worlds could be stark.
The concepts of mercy and humility were not just unappreciated in pagan culture,
they were ridiculed by men of the highest learning. The idea that God put us on
earth to love one another — that the duty of charity demolished family and
community boundaries — was radically offensive to many wellborn pagans.
Gibbon believed that paganism had
lost its religious vigor by the time of Jesus, becoming little more than a
facade for vacant materialism. Some modern historians disagree. To Robert
Wilken, for example, "the debate between paganism and Christianity in antiquity
was at bottom a conflict between two religious visions. The Romans were not less
religious than the Christians." (18) Yet even if the pagan and Christian
outlooks overlapped at points, there was no reconciling the differences. "The
Christian principle, 'Love your enemies,' is good," quipped Bertrand Russell,
"but the Stoic principle, 'Be indifferent to your friends,' is bad. And the
Christian principle does not inculcate calm, but an ardent love even towards the
worst of men. There is nothing to be said against it except that it is too
difficult for most of us to practice sincerely." (19)
But beginning in the first century, a
swelling parade of men and women announced that they would try.
How Church/State Rivalry Prevented
the Total Domination of Either
When Theodosius the Great allowed the
Visigoths, in the year 382, to settle within the Roman Empire in return for
their promise to fight as allies, he committed one of those slow-moving blunders
that take years to ripen into full catastrophe. The emperor had chosen a policy
of coexistence rather than confrontation, believing that the barbarians could be
contained, neutralized, exploited. Instead, by slow degrees, they and future
invaders seized ever larger pieces of the empire, culminating first in the Sack
of Rome in 410 and finally in the collapse of the Western Empire in 476.
Yet much as he sought to avoid a
showdown with barbarians squatting on his territory, Theodosius was no pacifist.
Like his predecessors, he countered challenges to imperial authority with a
mailed fist. It was just such an incident that produced one of the defining
moments in all of Christian, and indeed Western, history.
The spark was lit in 390 by a mob in
Thessalonica that murdered an officer of the garrison. When Theodosius heard of
it, he reacted with fury, ordering a wholesale reprisal. Roman troops set upon a
large crowd assembled in the circus, and in a breathtaking massacre, slaughtered
upwards of seven thousand. In an earlier age, the incident would have ended
there. An emperor who wades through the blood of innocents need never glance
back unless, that is, he happens to be a nominal Christian and is called to
account by the likes of Bishop Ambrose of Milan.
Ambrose had counseled Theodosius
against his butchery, and now he threw down the gauntlet: The emperor must
repent or the Holy Eucharist would be withheld from him. In his letter of
condemnation, Ambrose declared, "There was that done in the city of the
Thessalonians of which no similar record exists, which I was not able to prevent
happening; which, indeed, I had before said would be most atrocious when I so
often petitioned against it." Pointedly noting the biblical example of David's
repentance, the bishop then wheeled out his heavy cannon: "I dare not offer the
sacrifice if you intend to be present. Is that which is not allowed after
shedding the blood of one innocent person, allowed after shedding the blood of
many? I do not think so."
It was an act of magnificent valor,
but even more memorable for the principle it enshrined: No ruler was above God's
law and no churchman might trample on that law in the service of his sovereign.
The church's moral authority flowed from God, not the state.
Of course there is no particular
reason why even a Christian emperor like Theodosius would necessarily flinch at
such a high handed challenge. There must have been a close moment or two as a
result. Yet in the end, Theodosius consented to public penance at the cathedral
in Milan. Ambrose had risked everything to assert ecclesiastical preeminence in
moral judgment. In so doing, he provided an example that would echo through the
centuries.
Ambrose and the other stiff-necked
clerics who followed would help to check secular authorities in the Christian
world from seizing the kind of suffocating, unimpeded power that rulers
elsewhere usually enjoyed. They didn't do this because they endorsed a
separation of powers in the modern sense. Medieval popes sometimes asserted not
only independence but even supremacy over secular lords, and were often willing
to exercise civil power when it fell their way. Yet the practical effect of
their confrontations with temporal powers would be deeply important for the
growth of freedom and the carving out of separate spheres of influence.
This was not Ambrose's first gamble
on behalf of church prerogatives. A few years before, during the ascendancy of
Valentinian II in the west, Ambrose had defied a direct order by the Empress
Justina that he turn over a church to those who professed the Arian creed; he
and throngs of supporters held out even after Gothic soldiers were dispatched to
seize the basilica. "The counts and tribunes came and urged me to cause the
basilica to be quickly surrendered, saying that the Emperor was exercising his
rights since everything was under his power," Ambrose explained in a letter. "I
answered that if he asked of me what was mine, that is, my land, my money, or
whatever of this kind was my own, I would not refuse it, although all that I
have belonged to the poor, but that those things which are God's are not subject
to the imperial power."
Fortunately for Ambrose, the Goths —
who might just as easily pillage as parley — were in no mood for a massacre. The
bishop prevailed. Even if he were not a father of the Christian church, he would
surely be remembered as one of very few unarmed men in all of Roman history to
succeed in forcing more than one emperor to blink.
Although Ambrose lived decades after
Constantine's Edict of Milan (A.D. 313), which ended the era of Christian
persecution, he proved that church leaders (at least in the west) were not about
to forget their past. Three hundred years of anxious, sometimes furtive,
existence had molded a psychology of defiance and even contempt for the lordly
pretensions of secular powers. This psychology was braced by what Richard
Fletcher describes as the "rich Judaic literature of exile which was developed
by early Christian writers, " (20) and by a Gospel that demanded Christians to
distinguish between what they owed Caesar and what they owed God. Church leaders
and philosophers who had risked martyrdom before the fourth century — and it was
they who mainly had been targeted, not average communicants — were followed by
men like Ambrose who maintained the same unchained spirit. "In matters of
faith," Ambrose declared, "bishops are wont to be the judges of Christian
emperors, not emperors of bishops."
Ambrose was not the most impudent of
fourth-century churchmen. Christopher Dawson recounts how when the Emperor
Constantius II attempted to meddle in ecclesiastical issues, he was "met with
vehement opposition from two quarters: from Athanasius, the great bishop of
Alexandria, and from the West, where the doctrine of the independence of the
Church was uncompromisingly maintained, above all by St. Hilary and Hosius, the
famous bishop of Cordova." (21) Hosius let Constantius have it without a speck
of reserve:
Remember that you are a mortal man.
Fear the day of judgment.... Do not interfere in ecclesiastical affairs, or
dictate anything about them to us, but rather learn from us what you ought to
believe concerning them. God has given to you the government of the Empire and
to us that of the Church. Whosoever dares to impugn your authority, sets himself
against the order of God. Take care lest you likewise render yourself guilty of
a great crime by usurping the authority of the Church. We are commanded to give
unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are God's.
It is not lawful for us to arrogate to ourselves the imperial authority. You
also have no power in the ministry of holy things.
As bold as such language
was, it lacked a certain intellectual heft. That would be supplied in due course
by Augustine (354-429), the great North African bishop of Hippo and, after Paul,
the most important Christian philosopher of the first millennium. He wrote The
City of God after the Sack of Rome in 410 had staggered the empire's
self-confidence, and pagans were interpreting it as the vengeance of their
now-neglected gods. Augustine countered with the long view: Empires rise and
fall in the natural order of things, but the church's mission stands apart from
any passing secular institution. Because the true church endures, it is
government's duty to take instruction from religion, not the other way around.
This view could reinforce arrogance and absolutism in the church, and eventually
it did. Yet Augustine's political theory also provided a basis for ideals of
human freedom and individual rights.
Augustine saw that the state often
became a ravenous predator, in need of restraint. "Without justice, what then
are kingdoms but great robberies?" he asked. "For what are robberies themselves
but little kingdoms?" Still, he was not propounding an antigovernment theory.
Because of man's fallen nature, he regarded the state as a necessary instrument
for maintaining order. "Sinful man hates the equality of all men under God," he
explained, "and, as though he were God, loves to impose his own sovereignty upon
his fellow men." The state could at least keep these predators at bay — an
essential but hardly exalted function.
In effect, Fletcher writes, Augustine
"detached the state — any state, but in particular, of course, the Roman state —
from the Christian community. Under his hands the Roman empire became
theologically neutral." (22) By clearly delimiting the role of secular powers,
Augustine helped set Western Christendom on a course in which the believer's
duties to God (however interpreted) might trump his obligations to the state. It
is impossible to understand the West's unique tradition of the dissenting
conscience without granting Augustine his due.
The ancients tended to equate an
individual's well-being with that of society. It is no wonder that "there seems
to be scarcely any discussion of individual liberty as a conscious political
ideal (as opposed to its actual existence) in the ancient world," as Isaiah
Berlin once noted .(23) Yet the concept of the individual is embedded in the
biblical emphasis on the sanctity of each life, which reaches its summit in
Jesus' final commandment to his apostles that they "love one another as I have
loved you." Augustine helped develop the concept of the individual by
introducing to Western thought what Charles Taylor calls the "first person
standpoint."
Indeed, in his Confessions, a highly
personal memoir, Augustine became "the first to make the first-person standpoint
fundamental to our search for the truth." (24) It is no accident that when the
discussion of individual liberty finally breaks into view, it is a gift of
Christendom — in no small part because of the bishop of Hippo.
To be sure, Augustine is often
burdened with precisely the opposite legacy. As Elaine Pagels observes, "Later
in his life Augustine came to endorse, for the church as well as the state, the
whole arsenal of secular government that [John] Chrysostom had
repudiated-commands, threats, coercion, penalties, and even physical force. "
(25) Thomas Cahill goes so far as to dub Augustine the "father of the
Inquisition" for applauding the persecution of the Donatist heresy in North
Africa and then writing "the first Catholic justification for state persecution
of those in error: error has no rights; to disbelieve in forced conversions is
to deny the power of God; and God must whip the son he receives.... Augustine,
the last great man of Roman antiquity, is going over the edge."(26)
Hardly. There is no doubt that
Augustine sowed a number of minefields for later Christians to pick their way
through: his somewhat sour attitude toward sex (which in fact was not uncommon
among pagan intellectuals of late antiquity), his belief in every individual's
predestined fate, his doctrine of original sin with its unnerving implications
for those who remained unbaptized through no fault of their own — and his
eventual enthusiasm for coercion. But critics who dress him in jack boots do so
only by plucking him from his time. While the Roman Empire did tolerate, within
limits, a variety of religions, it never embraced religious liberty in the
modern sense. The imperial state was, Chadwick remarks, a place "where personal
freedom counted for little ... where the secret police ... seemed ubiquitous,
and where the screams of those under judicial torture and the gibbets of
arbitrary executions were common sounds and sights. (27) Christians who lived
under pagan emperors had meanwhile nurtured a remarkable commitment to
nonviolence. There is apparently no record of their initiating attacks against
pagan neighbors. A few, such as Tertullian, actually seemed to have broken
through to a deeper conception of religious freedom. "It should be considered
absurd," he concluded, "for one person to compel another to honor the gods."
By comparison, Augustine may sound
brutal — but he also sounds like a man of his time. "There was religious
intolerance all around," Garry Wills notes in his biography of the bishop. "It
was not an aberration but the norm. Augustine, however, supplied something that
was new — a theory of suppression. It is a sign of the general acceptance of
religious intolerance that no one had felt the need to justify it." What is
more, Augustine "formed his theory as a matter of conscience, trying to
reconcile his own acts with his own values. In the process he mitigated what
were harsher measures, gave a didactic restriction to repression, and opposed
torture or execution."(28)
When the Vandals burst into North
Africa from Spain in 429, they did not require lessons from Augustine or anyone
else in the fine art of repression. Catholic and Donatist alike was tortured and
put to the sword. Augustine might have fled, but stayed instead with his flock
to face the siege and the inevitable slaughter. He died before Hippo fell, a
firsthand witness to the uncertain prospects for the City of Man.
Thanks in part to Augustine, neither
church nor state in the West would ever have an easy time absorbing the other.
"It is not that the church or the state directly advocated religious freedom or
any other freedom," writes Paul Marshall, a professor of philosophy and a senior
fellow at Freedom House.
They did not, and often inquisitions
were defended. But people in both realms always believed that there should be
boundaries, and they struggled over centuries to define them. This meant that
the church, whatever its lust for civil control, had always to acknowledge that
there were forms of political power which it could and should not exercise. And
the state, whatever its drive to dominate, had to acknowledge that there were
areas of human life that were beyond its reach.(29)
David Landes spells out
the implications: "Earthly rulers were not free to do as they pleased, and even
the Church, God's surrogate on earth, could not flout rights and take at
will.... All of this made Europe very different from [other] civilizations
around. "(30)
How Christianity Preserved
Civilization and Then Extended It
What does a man contemplate on the
road up from Rome to parley with Attila, king of the Huns? Does he dwell on the
fate of Milan, Verona or Pavia, all of which were brutalized by the Hun army to
the point of civic and economic collapse? Or does he ponder the obliteration of
Aquileia, which could hardly be found when Attila was through with it? Aquileia
had virtually disappeared — razed, burnt, eliminated.
The road to Rome was open to Attila.
What humanitarian arguments could one marshal to persuade a great and pitiless
warrior that he should spare an ancient city from fire and sword? We don't know
precisely what Pope Leo said to Attila when he appeared before him at Mantua in
452, but whatever the plea was, it seemed to work. Attila pulled back. Or
perhaps his timely change of heart had something to do with the plague racing
through his army, his imperiled supply lines, or the shortage of food. Whatever
the cause of Attila's retreat, he and Pope Leo had set a pattern that would
endure for more than five hundred years. Time after time, on their own
initiative, the best and bravest of Christian clerics would gamble their lives
in attempts to tame the barbarian heart.
Leo himself tried again three years
later, when he met the Van dal Gaiseric at the gates of Rome in the hope of
deflecting him from wanton destruction. Gaiseric complied, in a manner of
speaking. He pillaged Rome with the artful control of a second-story man, while
leaving the looted city more or less intact.
In the centuries to come, the
contrast between Christian peace maker and barbarian brute would not always be
so stark, of course. Sometimes the peacemaker and the brute were kinsmen, even
brothers, nominally of the same faith, living side by side in the same kingdom.
And sometimes the brute was the Christian leader himself, particularly when
coercion offered a shortcut to the otherwise painstaking labor of conversion.
In the waning years of the fourth
century, mobs of Christian enthusiasts, aided by recent laws or simply indulged
by imperial troops, smashed pagan shrines and closed their temples — as if
determined to pay back three hundred years of intermittent repression in the
space of a lifetime or two. Long after Constantine, vast reaches of countryside
were Christian in little more than name, and the tenacity of primitive folk
cults was a recurring scandal. The measures employed by some church messengers,
like Martin of Tours in the later fourth century, were hardly more sophisticated
than the cults they opposed. Realizing that abstract argument had no chance to
win the day, ancient evangelists often resorted to raw proofs of the power of
their God. "Miracles, wonders, exorcism, temple-torching and shrine-smashing
were in themselves acts of evangelization," explains Fletcher.(31)
Christian heroism took new forms as
the empire collapsed, to be parceled out among various hordes of barbarians,
some of the Asian creed (like the Visigoths) and others heathen (Huns, Franks,
Angles, Saxons and others who poured into northern and central Europe). As
Chadwick recounts, "the task of organizing local resistance often fell in the
main to the bishops. One Hun attack on a town in Thrace was resisted only by the
energy of the local bishop who placed a huge ballista [a catapult for hurling
stones] under the patronage of St. Thomas and then fired it himself to such
purpose that he scored a direct hit on the barbarian chief." (32) Not every
bishop remained at his post, but enough did to ensure that the fate of classical
culture in the West soon rested solely in the church's hands, where it would
remain for hundreds of years.
In the ninth and tenth centuries,
Western Christendom was pounded from all sides, with Vikings slamming from the
north and west, Muslims from the south, and Magyars from the east. Even during
this turmoil, lives of peaceful example were never in short supply. It is
difficult to exaggerate the significance of ascetic monks, an import from
Asian/African Christianity, on the course of European history. Thomas Cahill has
told the best-selling tale of how Irish monks "saved civilization" — a grand
claim, yet one surely merited by the facts. Not only did these monks salvage
Latin literature from impending oblivion, they scattered across Europe scores of
monasteries that restored learning and books to their rightful place. They also
reinvigorated the literary spirit and offered to pagan peasants a compelling
example of the power of the Christian message.
Cahill disdains the rival Benedictine
tradition as "a monasticism of disciplined uniformity, enforced — through
floggings, if necessary — by an autocratic abbot." (33) This is like scorning a
Marine because he failed to enroll at Julliard. What the Benedictines may have
lacked in playful irreverence and intellectual audacity (but only in comparison
with the Irish monks) they more than made up for in sheer dedication and patient
scholarship. "St. Benedict found the world, physical and social, in ruins," John
Henry Newman wrote memorably more than a hundred years ago,
and his mission was to restore it in
the way not of science, but of nature, not as if setting about to do it, not
professing to do it by any set time, or by any rare specific, or by any series
of strokes, but so quietly, patiently, gradually, that often till the work was
done, it was not known to be doing. It was a restoration rather than visitation,
correction or conversion. The new work which he helped to create was a growth
rather than a structure. Silent men were observed about the country, or
discovered in the forest, digging, clearing and building; and other silent men,
not seen, were sitting in the cold cloister, tiring their eyes and keeping their
attention on the stretch, while they painfully copied and recopied the
manuscripts which they had saved. There was no one who contended or cried out,
or drew attention to what was going on, but by degrees the woody swamp became a
hermitage, a religious house, a farm, an abbey, a village, a seminary, a school
of learning and a city.(34)
These painstaking efforts of
draining, clearing, planting and building came to be — at least in west, north
and central Europe — "the prime economic facts of the entire Dark Ages," writes
Paul Johnson. "In a sense they determined the whole future history of Europe:
they were the foundation of its world primacy. The operation was so huge, and
took place over so long a period — nearly a millennium — that no one element in
society can claim exclusive credit: it was a collective effort. But it was the
monasteries that led the movement and long sustained it."(35) It was
monasteries, too, that helped give birth to Europe's unrivaled tradition of
mechanical and technical invention, from clocks to brewing, from mining to
waterpower. Books were only one of many legacies of the monastic movement, if no
doubt the most consequential.
Even in early times, to be sure, a
few monasteries resembled privileged fraternities more than barracks for the
devout. Some bishops, for that matter, luxuriated in feasting, fine clothes and
the hunt. "The gap between precept and practice is as old as human moral
teaching," Fletcher observes. "It is not, therefore, a difficult matter to
assemble evidence for clerical behavior which fell short of the ideal enunciated
by rigorists."(36) But an ideal may still be important even where it is widely
flouted. If nothing else, Christian ideals and ethics functioned like a
gravitational force, slowly pulling into their orbit those who repeatedly heard
them.
The virtues of charity, patience,
humility and love for those outside one's immediate circle are difficult enough
to practice even after they have been absorbed into the cultural lifeblood
through generations of ethical teaching. Their chances are slimmer still in a
world dominated by the warrior spirit and memories of heroic combat, as was
still the case throughout the Dark Ages. Indeed, on the northern fringes of what
had been the Roman Empire, the religions displaced by Christianity sometimes
still involved human sacrifice, and almost always paid homage to a god of war.
"Throughout the heathen period in northern Europe there was clear need of a god
of war," explains H. R. Ellis Davidson in Gods and Myths of Northern Europe.
"The story of the Germanic peoples and the Vikings is one in which local
battles, feuds, invasions, and wars on a national scale are the order of the
day."(37) This is the world, so alien to us today, that Christianity gradually
absorbed and transformed.
How Christianity Set the Stage for
the Rule of Law
The Middle Ages have become an
embarrassment to many Christians, in no small part because of descriptions like
this one by Cambridge professor Patrick Collinson:
It is with the twelfth century that
we come to the greatest challenge confronting the historically naive Christian
who may fondly suppose that his religion has been consistently faithful to the
boundless philanthropy of its founder. For it is at this point in history ...
that the Christian West, that is to say the Church itself, became what Professor
Robert Moore has called a "persecuting society," the exact inversion of a martyr
society. That society, often regarded in retrospect as Christianity in a state
of religious and social perfection, now became a gross and habitual violator of
human rights .(38)
It is difficult to say who, in this age of apology, might
be those naive Christians who still have no inkling of the depressing
persecutions of Jews and heretics during the Middle Ages, or the monstrous
bloodletting of the Crusades. After all, there are regular reminders of these in
mainstream news stories. In 1999, for example, on the 900th anniversary of the
crusaders' conquest of Jerusalem, hundreds of Christians were on hand in that
ancient city, fresh from a Reconciliation Walk begun in Germany, to apologize to
one and all for their ancestors' frightful behavior. If there is ignorance among
the faithful, it pertains to dark episodes from other eras, like Charlemagne's
merciless conversion of the Saxons in the eighth century, a campaign so brutal
that the Nazis would resurrect its memory twelve centuries later in order to
justify their anti-Christian policies. But what historically naive Christians
mainly fail to appreciate about medieval Christendom are not its moral lapses,
but its extraordinary achievements.
They are unlikely to know, for
example, that the Middle Ages were the incubator for representative and
constitutional government, based on the principle that power must have clearly
defined limits. They would perhaps be surprised to discover in this era the
growth of enforceable property rights and taxation by consent. They are unlikely
to have learned that the diffusion of the Bible's skeptical view of secular
power — I Samuel 8 was an especially popular citation — helped to check the
ambitions of would-be tyrants. They are probably unaware that the same popes
who, to their ever lasting shame, introduced the Inquisition also helped
throttle feudal lawlessness and humbled more than one monarch angling for
absolute power.
The church's resistance to secular
bullies was not merely a means of protecting its own power. Its humanitarian and
civilizing mission was meant to benefit directly the mass of peasants as well.
The barbarian challenge had largely been thrown back by the end of the tenth
century, but habits of lawless pillage and private warfare endured. As David
Landes writes, "The tenth and eleventh centuries were filled with baronial
brigandage, eventually mitigated by popular, Church supported revulsion and
outrage that found expression in mass `peace' assemblies; and from the top down,
subdued by stronger central government allied with urban
interests."(39)
These peace assemblies, which in some
respects resembled modern mass demonstrations, were instigated in south and
central France by local bishops, and they quickly spread. In every locale they
were led by clergy. Bishop Fulbert of Chartres declared in his lyrical verses:
"The spear is made into a pruning hook and the sword into a plowshare; peace
enriches the lowly and impoverishes the proud. Hail, Holy Father, and grant
salvation to all who love the quiet of peace."
The church's efforts to rein in the
lingering warrior spirit even helped create the code of chivalry. Christopher
Dawson explains, "The ancient barbarian motive of personal loyalty to the war
leader was reinforced by higher religious motives, so that the knight finally
becomes a consecrated person, pledged not only to be faithful to his lord, but
to be the defender of the Church, the widow and the orphan.... In this way the
knight was detached from his barbarian and pagan background and integrated into
the social structure of Christian culture." (40)
The church also put checks on the
greater powers. Medieval popes and bishops of a reformist bent, beginning with
Gregory VII in 1073, never stopped badgering princely rulers with reminders of
their duties to those who served them. Medieval kings did not usually possess
the absolute powers that later monarchs would seize. And since kings were
consecrated, it was believed, by God, they were expected to keep their oaths,
meet their legal obligations, and recognize the prerogatives of the church.
Gregory VII was adamant about this, and his hectoring was vital to what Paul
Johnson describes as "the most important political development of the second
millennium," the rule of law.(41)
The church had long been carrying the
Roman tradition of law into barbarian backwaters, at first simply by writing
down and organizing the customary rules of these illiterate tribes. But even the
legalistic civilization of Rome, which guarded private property more
successfully than most rival nations, fell far short of the rule of law in the
modern sense. For one thing, not everyone was equally subject to the law. The
emperor answered to no one. Most residents of the empire were not even citizens,
and a huge number were slaves. Although descending from Roman tradition, church
canon law under Gregory operated with a different purpose. As Johnson describes
it, canon law provided a "refuge for the physically weak and oppressed — not
just the clergy themselves but women, children, the poor and the sick — against
the rule of force and fear in an age when the armored knight dispensed what law
there was. Gregory won some battles, lost others.... But his successors carried
on the struggle until churches and monasteries, nunneries and all consecrated
ground, at least, were free from arbitrary sword." (42)
Thomas a Becket (1118-70) for a time
even persuaded his fellow English bishops to qualify their traditional oath of
obedience to the "ancient customs" of the kingdom. His murder in Canterbury
Cathedral so shocked the Christian world that Henry 11, in a replay of
Theodosius' humiliation, was forced into public penance. Unlike ancient and
modern despots, medieval monarchs lacked either a divine or a legal right to do
whatever they pleased.
And while this was by no means solely
the church's doing — diffusion of power in western Europe resulted from many
factors, including a tough and militant nobility who resisted royal
encroachments with their swords — the church clearly played a leading role.
Roots of Capitalism and Popular
Consent
The medieval groping toward legal
equality was far from complete, but its ultimate significance extended well
beyond the treatment of the individual to the shape of the economy itself.
Market economies depend upon the secure ownership of property, and property is
secure only when the law treats everyone alike. In The Noblest Triumph, Tom
Bethell's history of property rights, the author contends that the medieval
world was still too highly regulated — thanks in part to the church — to nurture
a thriving market economy. But he acknowledges that "something about the
Christian teaching was essential to the emergence of the market order; in
particular, belief in the underlying equality of human nature. (43)
Bethell explains, "Just as all were
equal in the eyes of God, so it began to be recognized that all should be equal
before the law. . . . The feature of law that is most conducive to the modern
market system is equality before the law."(44)
In fact, a great deal more of
Christian teaching undoubtedly came into play. A market economy thrives in a
culture of invention and creativity. This too was a distinctive gift of the
Christian West, which flowered in its first full glory during the medieval era.
The Judeo-Christian belief in the dignity of manual labor also played a role.
And although Christian culture has had its share of sybarites and showoffs,
Christianity itself has always honored humility and modesty — something that
cannot be said for either the pagan culture of imperial Rome or the barbarians
who engulfed it. Finally, the "emergence of the market order" required a belief
in progress and a sense of linear time, both of which achieved their fullest
expression in a Christian context. At its core, the idea of progress is an
expression of optimism, an embrace of human possibility.
It is no wonder that the first true
renaissance in western Europe occurred not in the sixteenth century but in the
twelfth, soon after the consolidation of Christian civilization. It was then
that scholastic philosophers began their wholesale effort to retrieve and
reinterpret the treasures of ancient learning, culminating in the brilliant work
of Thomas Aquinas in the thirteenth century. "One of the curious things about
the Middle Ages is that they were original and creative without knowing it,"
Bertrand Russell once noted. "The scholastics, however they might revere
Aristotle, showed more originality than any of the Arabs — more, indeed, than
any one since Plotinus, or at any rate since Augustine. In politics as in
thought, there was the same distinguished originality." (45)
In the thirteenth century,
representative assemblies became a common feature of civil government. "This
probably owed something to the example of the church," concludes Professor
Antony Black, "since representative church councils were the obvious and,
indeed, the only precedent. "(46) Any association between Christianity and early
republicanism may seem surprising, given the church's history of alliances with
various monarchical thrones. But early Christianity had embraced election of
bishops and participatory decision making on a wide scale, even generating "the
entirely new idea of a general consensus achievable by representatives of all
peoples in an ecumenical council of bishops." If these republican habits had
withered during the early Middle Ages, they had not been discarded. The medieval
church continued to rely upon representative councils, while religious orders
such as the Franciscans held elections and practiced a form of self-governance
that required cooperative consent. Thomas Aquinas himself was no friend of
either absolute secular power or papal theocracy, actually arguing, according to
Black, that "divine law prescribed election." (47)
Far from being a dead or stagnant
time, the Middle Ages must go down as an unusually fertile, creative and even
liberating era, on a variety of fronts. And despite periods of almost stupefying
turmoil, and leaders of sometimes stunning greed and cynicism, the Middle Ages
could and did produce Christians of such unequaled moral example as St. Francis
of Assisi, whose boundless love and high spirits made sure that even pigeons
were not excluded from his sermons.
ENDNOTES
Elaine Pagels, The Origin of Satan (New
York: Vintage Books, 1995), 37.
Robin Lane Fox, Pagans and Christians (New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1987), 311.
Rodney Stark, The Rise o f
Christianity (San Francisco: Harper San Francisco, 1997), 106.
Regine
Pernoud, Those Terrible Middle Ages! Debunking the Myths (San Francisco:
Ignatius Press, 2000), 103.
Wayne A. Meeks, The First Urban Christians: The
Social World of the Apostle Paul (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983),
71.
Thomas Cahill, Desire of the Everlasting Hills: The World Before and
After Jesus (New York: Doubleday, 1999), 141.
A. N. Wilson, Paul: The Mind of
the Apostle (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1997), 140.
Robert L. Wilken,
The Christians as the Romans Saw Them (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1984),
124.
Henry Chadwick, The Early Church (London: Penguin, 1993), 72.
Pagels,
The Origin o f Satan, 115.
Quoted in Bertrand Russell, History of Western
Philosophy (London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1948), 350.
Ramsay
MacMullen, Christianizing the Roman Empire, A.D. 100-400 (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1984), 54.
Wayne Meeks, The Origins of Christian Morality
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993), 2-3.
Fox, Pagans and Christians,
591.
Ibid., 668.
Christopher Dawson, The Making of Europe: An Introduction
to the History o f European Unity (London: Sheed & Ward, 1932), 36.
Peter
Brown, Late Antiquity (Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press, 1998), 24.
Wilken, The Christians as the Romans Saw Them,
201.
Russell, History of Western Philosophy, 602.
Richard Fletcher, The
Barbarian Conversion: From Paganism to Christianity (New York: H. Holt &
Co., 1998), 30.
Dawson, The Making of Europe, 42.
Fletcher, The Barbarian
Conversion, 29.
Isaiah Berlin, Four Essays on Liberty (London: Oxford
University Press, 1969), 129.
Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self: The
Makings of the Modern Identity (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
1989), 131-33.
Elaine Pagels, Adam, Eve and the Serpent (New York: Random
House, 1988), 117.
Thomas Cahill, How the Irish Saved Civilization (New York:
Doubleday, 1995), 65.
Chadwick, The Early Church, 222.
Garry Wills, Saint
Augustine (New York: Viking, 1999), 102.
Paul Marshall, "Keeping the Faith:
Religion, Freedom, and International Affairs," Imprimis, March 1999, 4.
David
S. Landes, The Wealth and Poverty o f Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So
Poor (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1998), 35.
Fletcher, The Barbarian
Conversion, 45.
Chadwick, The Early Church, 248-49.
Cahill, How the Irish
Saved Civilization, 181.
Quoted in Christopher Dawson, Religion and the Rise
of Western Culture (New York: Sheed & Ward, 1950), 57.
Paul Johnson, A
History of Christianity (New York: Atheneum, 1987), 149.
Fletcher, The
Barbarian Conversion, 191.
H. R. Ellis Davidson, Gods and Myths of Northern
Europe (London: Penguin Books, 1990), 71.
Patrick Collinson, "Religion and
Human Rights: The Case of and for Protestantism," in Historical Change and Human
Rights: The Oxford Amnesty Lectures, 1994 (New York: Basic Books, 1995),
34.
Landes, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations, 40.
Dawson, Religion and
the Rise of Western Culture, 175.
Paul Johnson, "Laying Down the Law," Wall
Street Journal, 10 March 1999.
Ibid.
Tom Bethell, The Noblest Triumph:
Property and Prosperity through the Ages (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1998),
85.
Ibid., 80.
Russell, History of Western Philosophy, 450.
Antony
Black, "Christianity and Republicanism: From St. Cyprian to Rousseau," American
Political Science Review, September 1997, 650.
Ibid.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Vincent Carroll and David Shiflett.
"Christianity and the Foundation of the West." From Christianity on Trial:
Arguments Against Anti-Religious Bigotry (San Francisco, CA: Encounter Books,
2000), 1-23.
Excerpted with permission from the publisher
from Christianity on Trial: Arguments Against Anti-Religious Bigotry, by Vincent
Carroll and David Shiflett, Encounter Books, San Francisco, California (©
2000).
THE AUTHORS
Vincent Carroll is editor of the editorial
pages at the Rocky Mountain News. He lives in Denver. David C. Shiflett is a
freelance writer living in Midlothian, Virginia. He is also author of The
America We Deserve (with Donald Trump).
Copyright © 2000 Encounter Books
"But wait, you
ignorant xtian...I'm a Neopagan!
You can't lump me together with those
idiotic Wiccans!"
Some Neopagans are quick to point out that they "aren't Wiccans". Some
actually seem to get down right offended for being called Wiccans! I really
don't think this is fair of Neopagans to do so. Wether "non-Wiccan Neopagans"
like to admit it or not, they have a lot in common with Wiccans. Most Neopagans
are in fact indistinguishable from Wiccans.
In fact, until Wicca
came along, nobody had ever heard of a "Neopagan". Some Wiccans were bothered by the fact
that their religion wasn't really an ancient Celtic religion. Some were bothered
by being called "witches". So, to bypass the things they didn't like, some
would-be Wiccans simply dropped the name "Wicca" and kept the basic concept. If
you're a Neopagan, you probably share a lot in common with Wiccans, rather you
realize it or not. See if you don't have one or more of these basic concepts as
part of your system.
Do you call the
quarters?
That's a "Wicca thing" taken from Golden Dawn
rituals.
Do you utilize the
"four elements" in your rituals?
Another Wicca thing,
plagarized from European Ceremonial Magic.
Does your worship focus on "the god" and "the
goddess"?
Another Wicca thing. Pagans did not simply worship
a "god and goddess". they had pantheons with hundreds of deities. Local village
worship usually focused on idols peculiar to their tribe. The universal white
goddess is another "Wicca thing", and is actually a modern concept rather than
an actual ancient goddess.
Do
your rituals utilize a chalice, dagger, sword, cords, or
wands?
Again, Wiccan things borowed from European Ceremonial
magick.
Do you have a lot of
anti-Christian bias (whether you admit it or not)?
So do Wiccans
(whether they admit it or not). Does mention of "The Burning Times" send your blood
boiling? Why? No Pagans died in it, just unfortunate
Christians (and perhaps a few Satanists) killed by other misguided Christians.
By the time the witch hunts started the people of Europe had long abandoned
Paganism. If you're a Pagan, you should feel bad about all the Christians who
were thrown to the lions, and should feel like a total hypocrite for ranting
about anything misguided Christians might have done. Getting mad about the
"Burning Times" (a phrase coined by Gerald Gardner) is another "Wiccan
thing".
Does your religion condemn
animal sacrifices?
The Pagan religions of ancient times
didn't, they often sacrificed animals, in fact! Some even offered human
sacrifices! The horror movie The Wicker Man, is based on actual
practices of Celtic Pagans in Britain. If your religion doesn't (and please
don't start), then it's fairly new.
Do your rituals take place in a
circle?
Yet another "Wicca thing", borrowed from European
Ceremonial magic.
Do your
religious studies focus on magic and occult subjects?
Sounds
like you're more interested in being a sorcerer than anything else! Another
"Wicca thing". Pagans weren't necessarily sorcerers. (A few Wiccans
have started to drop the magical aspects of their religion after realizing it
doesn't actually work, btw).
Do you spend a lot of time bashing
"xtians"?
Again, another "Wicca thing"! For a religion
that supposedly not Satanism, Wiccans spend a great deal of time bashing
Christians. If you were really a Pagan, you'd feel bad about the whole
"Lion Times" thing and be figuring out a way to pay reparations to Christians.
[Ah, but that's where the whole "Neo" part of "Neopaganism" comes into play.
They want to distance themselves from the things Pagans of ancient times did,
but still shake their fingers at the evil "xtians" for the Crusades.
]
Do You deny
the idea of the Devil or demons as evil creatures and claim such
things are "xtian propaganda"? Do you also deny there is a
Hell?
Pagans of old believed in them! Pagan religions of
today (Hinduim, Shintoism, African tribal,Native American) believe in
demons too. The pagans of ancient times certainly believed in the existance
of Hell-like places in the afterlife. The hells of Europe Pagan religions
included Briton “Anaon”, Celtic “Uffern”, the hell of Lapps and Ugarian
“Manala” that lead to annihilation. In Greco-Roman Paganism, below Heaven,
Earth, and Pontus was Tartarus; either a deep, gloomy place, a pit or abyss used
as a dungeon of torment and suffering that resides within Hades. The hells in
the Middle East include Pagan Sumerian “Aralu”; the hells of Canaanite Pagans,
Hittite Paganism and Mithraism had their own versions of Hell; the weighing of
the heart in Egyptian Mythology could lead to annihilation. The hells of Asian
Paganism included Bagobo Mythology's “Gimokodan” and Ancient Indian Mythology's
“Kalichi". African Pagan hells include Haida “Hetgwauge” and the hell of Swahili
Paganism. The hells of the Americas include Pagan Aztec “Mictlan”, Pagan Inuit
“Adlivun” and Yanomamo “Shobari Waka”. In Maya Paganism ,Xibalbá was the
dangerous underworld of nine levels ruled by the demons Vucub Caquix and Hun
Came. The Oceanic Pagan hells include Samoan “O le nu'u-o-nonoa” and the hells
of Bangka Paganism and Caroline Islands Mythology. The idea of there not being a
Hell is another Wicca thing.
Do you celebrate the "Eight
Sabbats"?
Ronald Hutton has debunked the universal eight Pagan
holidays myth. Some Pagan societies celebrated some of them, none seem to have
celebrated all of them. The Eight festivals were an invention of Crowley's
O.T.O. that was later plagarized by Gardner (also a member of the O.T.O.) into
Wicca.
Do you use the Tarot?
It came along
during the Christian era. It's not really an "ancient Pagan thing." Wiccans love
it too.
Do you wear a
petagram necklace?
Another Wicca thing,
invented by Gerald Gardner. There was no European or Celt Pagan cult that was
identified by the pentagram.
Do you believe in reincarnation (and you're not a
Hindu or member of another Eastern religion?)
European Pagans
didn't believe in reincarnation. Most believed the afterlife was a dreadful
place at best (remember the river Styx?). Some believed in the "transmigration
of Souls" which isn't the same thing as reincarnation. It's the belief
that a dead person's soul goes into the body of another living person. Many
Eurpean Paagns believd in an afterlife with Heaven and Hell like places. Wiccans
believe in reincarnation due to to Gerlad Gardner, who spent a lot of time in
the far East.
Do You borrow
from any source that can't get out of the way fast
enough?
There are Neopagans with altars with Bhudda and Kwin
Yan statues on them, with participants who chant "Om", recite Cabalistic
formulas, while burning Native American smudge sticks...all the while saying
they were practicing a Celtic religion! This kind of "ecclectic Paganism" is
exactly the same thing Wiccans do.
Think about it...how old is your
religion...really?
Unless your a Hindu or Shinto, you don't
belong to a religion with an unbroken line to real Pagan religions of old. Is
it? Didn't think so. So your religion isn't thousands of years old either,
just like the Wiccans (their religion is about as old as rock and Roll). So,
your religion is really not older than Wicca, right? If Wicca hadn't come along,
no one would have gotten the idea for "Neopaganism" in the first place.
[Oh, and just because your Grandmother may have done something like tell
fortunes with cards, for instance, that doesn't make you part of a family of
generational Neopagans. It means your grandmother told fortunes with cards.
]
SO THERE YOU HAVE IT...
I've read some Neopagan
webpages that bash Wiccans saying things like "Why don't you Wiccans realize
your religion is a bunch of mindless [bleep!]!" ...and then they promote EXACTLY
the same kinds of things Wiccans do (i.e., magic rituals, superstition, archaic
words and terms, anti-christian bias, etc.)! Talk about the pot calling the
cauldron black!
Look at the rest of the website, and on
these webpages you'll find a lot of things that apply to you
too!
DOWNLOAD THESE FREE EBOOKS!
C.S. Lewis was an intellectual who was a professor
at both Cambridge and Oxford. He was a true scholar, not someone who merely
invented fake degrees for himself and lied about his accomplishments. When
you're tired of "junkyard philosphy" and ready to move on to true intellectual
fare, read this book:
MERE CHRISTIANITY BY C.S.LEWIS You're probably familiar with C.S. Lewis. He's best
remembered for the Chronicles of Narnia, which was inspired by the Gospel of
Christ. Unlike LaVey, Lewis really did have a doctorate, and was a college
professor to boot! Lewis lost his faith early in life and became an atheist, and
later rediscovered Christianity through his friend J.R.Tolkien (of Lord of The
Rings fame). Mere Christianity is perhaps is best non-fiction work. In it he
presents a thinking person's Christianity, showing you don't have to ditch
your brain to be a Christian!
YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE BOOK "136 BIBLE
CONTRADICITIONS...EXPLAINED" AS A ZIPPED .pdf FILE RIGHT NOW BY CLICKING
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You'll need Adobe Acrobat Reader to Read them
if you don't have installed already. It's also free.