Lol, can you name one belief system without a plethora of books/words?No-one's going to find God in books. There's only words in books. But words may turn the soul to silence ...
Non-Christian, traditional Pagan Romans, with a sprinkling of Jews and other minority religions. Point being they were in control, and held the dominant social zeitgeist position...something you freely acknowledged earlier.If we accept that 5-10% of the empire was Christian, how would you define the 90-95%?
*In part.* How many times must I quote myself to drive this point home? Of course there were others in his army, and as any good general of the time he rewarded faithful service. I did say there was probably on the order of 5-10%, the same 5-10% you go on about, except that in his realm they were free to be open about who they were, and free to serve in the military...unlike in the armies of all of the other Emperors at that time. Brief refresher for those who may not know, Rome just prior to Constantine had 4 co-serving Emperors. Constantine managed to consolidate all of the sub-kingdoms back under his rule, reuniting the Empire.The army, in the first instance. I see no reason why he might particularly reward the Christian element, and risk pissing off the rest?
Already have, you don't like the answer.Stop blustering and answer the question.
So before you make *any* further demands, I demand you fulfill this.Thomas said:I think scholars generally agree that Christianity had tipped the balance before Constantine,
juan said:Can you point to three, and give full quotes and references, please? If "scholars generally agree" that shouldn't be a difficult task at all, and I would expect at least one non-Christian scholar in that group...you know, to represent the "general" part, so there is no clear bias in the sample.
I expected no less. Shell game.What actual evidence you have for a "Herculean effort" to distance Christianity from its Jewish roots, and what actual evidence "to disconnect... officially, legally, decidedly, permanently...from Judaism. Not just local attitudes and opinions...WRIT OF LAW legally binding across the Empire."?
So far ... nothing but Constantine's letter, which was not WRIT OF LAW nor doctrine and, in the light of the Council, probably ignored along with much else, as you say: ". Yeah yeah, problems still went on, Constantine didn't settle a damn thing... " which has been my point all along.
So until that issue is addressed, I am withdrawing from this discussion.
Is that not true of all of the great faiths of the world?No-one's going to find God in books. There's only words in books. But words may turn the soul to silence ...
If only that were true, people have been wrangling "god" for as long as civilization and organized religion have existed. It's called "Power."God knows what's going on with all the words and books . God isn't stained by human wrangling? Imo. How can it be expressed? By words. But it's the pure idea that lives, not the words. It's the kernel, not the dead wood of the nut?
Nothing new.
But God knows, cares for everyone.
Sorry ...
ShamanismLol, can you name one belief system without a plethora of books/words?
Precisely.To be fair, it appears Constantine had a lot to do with the spread of Christianity. But whether it would have happened anyway, without him, is impossible to answer?
<bows> Thank you, we'll be here all week. Be sure to generously tip your waitress!*Goes back to refill his popcorn bowl* I'm enjoying this thread![]()
Absolutely correct and proof it takes a book if you want to convince converts.Shamanism
Animism
some early forms of Sympathetic Magic
(Sorry, you only said one...)
Quite.Non-Christian, traditional Pagan Romans, with a sprinkling of Jews and other minority religions. Point being they were in control, and held the dominant social zeitgeist position...something you freely acknowledged earlier.
I'm still waiting on your reply to:
Thomas said: "I think scholars generally agree that Christianity had tipped the balance before Constantine."
Can you point to three, and give full quotes and references, please?"
There's three, each showing no dependency on Constantine.So before you make *any* further demands, I demand you fulfill this.
Ah, here you falling into an anachronism, an error because of your lack of knowledge of early Christianity.So it really is no wonder at all that pagan practices were incorporated into the early Church, it has been that way since the formal founding during Constantine's time ...
OK ... as this thread seems to be so entertaining, I'll continue ...
I asked, if Christians composed 5-10% of the population, what were the other 90-95%?
Quite.
Juantoo3, I'm not challenging, I'm asking you to explain on what grounds Constantine would have made such a concession to the Christians in his army, when they represent such a small proportion of the whole?
You asked somewhat rhetorically who promoted Constantine. It seems the normal path of patronage and politics. From the wiki biog of Constantine:
"Constantine had been placed in the court of Diocletian. Diocletian announced his resignation (304/5AD). Lactantius states that Galerius manipulated the weakened Diocletian into resigning, and forced him to accept Galerius' allies in the imperial succession. According to Lactantius, the crowd listening to Diocletian's resignation speech believed, until the very last moment, that Diocletian would choose Constantine as a successor. It was not to be: Constantius and Galerius were promoted to Augusti, while Severus and Maximinus Daia, Galerius' nephew, were appointed their Caesars respectively. Constantine and Maxentius were ignored.
Constantine recognized the implicit danger of remaining at Galerius's court, where he was held as a virtual hostage. Constantius requested leave for his son to help him campaign in Britain. Galerius granted the request. Constantine's later propaganda describes how he fled the court in the night, before Galerius could change his mind. Constantine joined his father in Gaul 305AD.
Father and son crossed the Channel and arrived at York. Constantine spent a year in northern Britain at his father's side. Constantius became ill and died 25 July 306. Before dying, he declared his support for raising Constantine to the rank of full Augustus. The Alamannic king Chrocus, a barbarian taken into service under Constantius, then proclaimed Constantine as Augustus. The troops loyal to Constantius' memory followed him in acclamation. Gaul and Britain quickly accepted his rule; Hispania, which had been in his father's domain for less than a year, rejected it."
So I can see Constantine owes something to his army as a whole, but not the Christians in particular. Given that he's gonna make a play for power, he has the option of a concession to 5-10%, or a concession to 90-95%, or to all, or to none ... I'm not disputing his army promoted him in a fait accompli against Galerius, but I am disputing the fact that Christians played a significant part, enough to deserve a particular acknowledgement?
If it were me, I'd do something for the army as a whole, not just a minority who belong to some far-out cult. A booze-up would suffice.
Choosing to change the army's standard before a battle is, in my view, a really, really, big thing. In the histories I've read, going back from today into Antiquity, soldiers fight for their comrades, for their unit, and for the flag/standard/banner ... they fight for their commanders when they're good ones, and we've no reason to assume Constantine wasn't a capable commander, his troops supported him, after all ... But the flag/standard holds an enduring place, it's really important. It's who we are. It's not something I would change lightly, and Constantine's decision seems really significant from that viewpoint, but I cannot being made to tip the wink to just 5% of his army, unless that 5% were super-super-special forces?
Thoughts?
Perhaps the rot that led to Cortez etc, indeed started with this Roman emperor?