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Jonathan Kirsch

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Jonathan Kirsch is a book columnist for the Los Angeles Times and author of the bestselling and critically acclaimed King David, Moses, The Harlot by the Side of the Road, and The Woman Who Laughed at God. He lectures and consults widely on biblical, literary, and legal topics and is a past president of PEN Center USA West.

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“Whilst all nations and kingdoms honor their respective gods, the Romans respect the gods of all the others, just as their power and authority have reached the compass of the whole world,” boasts the pagan orator Caecilius. “They search out everywhere these foreign gods, and adopt them for their own; nay, they have even erected altars to the unknown gods.”
No historian, pious or secular, can dispute the simple and compelling fact that Constantine was not formally admitted to the Christian church until he fell ill in 327 and called a priest to his sickbed to baptize him only hours before his death.
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Constantine adopts the chi-rho , not the cross, as the emblem of the Christian god. Intriguingly, the chi-rho was not yet a Christian symbol when Constantine first uses it to decorate his labarum —it was more commonly employed by pagan scribes as an abbreviation for the Greek word chreston (“good”) in the margins of manuscripts to mark passages that they regarded as noteworthy or memorable. “Did the Emperor’s advisers suggest this clever abbreviation for ‘Christ’ (‘Chrestos’)?” muses historian Robin Lane Fox. “Like other symbols in the years after the conversion, it had a double meaning, one for pagans, one for Christians."
Even Yahweh, regarded by the strict monotheists who wrote the Bible as the one and only god, was made over into the deity called Iao and given a place among the many gods and goddesses of paganism. The Romans who sought the blessings of the God of Israel meant only to pay their respects to yet another deity whom they had encountered among the colorful and diverse peoples they ruled. Isis of the Egyptians, the Great Mother of Syria, and Yahweh of the Jews were all regarded with both curiosity and a certain measure of awe and fear, and they wanted to make sure that they did not forfeit the blessing of the right god by making sure to worship to all gods.
The ruling power, of course, was pagan Rome, which had just inflicted upon Judaism its cruelest defeat and greatest humiliation. The land of the Jews was reduced to the status of an occupied territory, and its name was changed from Judea to Palaestina, a reference to one of the traditional enemies of the Jewish people, the Philistines. Jerusalem was renamed Aelia Capitolina, a tribute to the family name of the reigning emperor, and a shrine to Jupiter was erected on the site where the altar of Yahweh once stood.
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GOD AGAINST THE GODS
Tek tanrıcılık ve çok tanrıcılığın batıdaki tarihsel mücadelesini anlatan bir kitap. Akhenaten(MÖ 1300ler) ve Dönme Julianus'un ölümü(363) arasında kalan dönemi konu alıyor. Kitabın ilk yarısı, Akhenaten ve ilk tek tanrıcılık girişimini, İsrail topraklarında yüzyıllarca süren tek tanrıcılık ve çok tanrıcılık savaşını, ve Klasik Antik Çağ çok tanrıcılığına genel bir bakışı içeriyor. İkinci yarısı ise tamamen Hristiyanlık ve Roma üzerine odaklanmış. Roma'daki dini durumu, Hristiyanlığın yayılışını ve Roma otoriteleri ile sürtüşmesini anlatarak başlıyor. Sonrasında ise detaylı bir şekilde, ilk Hristiyan imparator I. Constantine ile başlayıp paganizmi geri getirmeye çalışan Julianus'un ölümüyle biten süreci işliyor. 300 sayfalık, görece kısa ve bilgilendirici bir kitap.
God Against The Gods
God Against The GodsJonathan Kirsch · Penguin Books · 20051 okunma