When Jesus Became God: The Controversy That Split Christianity During the Last Days of Rome

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Richard E. Rubenstein

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Pages: 288 (Paperback)

Editor: Michelle Brook

ISBN: 0156013150

Pub: Harvest/HBJ Book

Pub date: 2000-08

Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 18272

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Reader Reviews:


5/5 stars

Exciting history (1/4 people found this helpful)

If you have ever asked if religous history can be exciting then suggest this book "When Jesus Became God: The Controversy That Split Christianity During the Last Days of Rome."

It has everything a good thriller should have - but happens to be true.

A super addition to my collection of books!

5/5 stars

Fascinating insight into the construction of Christianity (39/41 people found this helpful)

This is an excellent and scholarly introduction to the ideological debates of the fourth century. After Diocletian had revived Roman power, almost every Emperor decided that the Empire needed an an offical ideology the only problem being few could agree what it was to be. Diocletian himself preferred a revived paganism focused on the cult of Sol Invictus, the unconquered sun. He chose to persecute Christianity yet to no real effect. Constantine reversed his policy, adopting Christianity and shunning paganism, however he himself had little idea of the divisions within Christianity. To his annoyance, the ascent to power of Christian Bishops only caused schisms between the followers of Arius and those of the Nicene creed that was eventually to emerge triumphant, not before Constantine's successor Constius had backed Arius and his successor Julian willed a return to paganism.
At first the differences between the Arian and Nicene creed can appear trivial but Rubenstein does a terrific job of explaining the real issues that lay beneath them and how people use interpretations of mythology to engage in important philosophical debates. The extreme Arian position was that Christ was divine but he had become divine. It was dangerous philosphy to many of the Bishops that espoused the Nicine creed as it suggested that other ordinary people could become divine. They prefered the image of Christ as a perfect example that ordinary people could never live up to as it was an icon they could wield to justify their own power. It helps to explain Christianity as human construct and how it developed such self hating ideologies as the original sin.
It also helps explain the European penchant for constructing strict ideologies that they insist on inflicting onto other people. The 4th century deabtes in Christianity were reamrkable similar to the 19th and 20th century debates in Communism complete with splits and denouncements of the opposition. Eventually in the 4th century it was the threat of barbarian invasions that forced the Romans into unity. Its interesting that the decline and fall of the Empire in the West created Christianity, the creed that defined European civilization for another 1500 years.

5/5 stars

Excellent study of Christian doctrine and conflict (67/70 people found this helpful)

I can't think of many other books about religious history that would justify 5 stars. What is different about this one is that it is written by a sociologist (specifically an expert in conflict resolution) who combines a very readable journalistic style with occasional penetrating insights into the psychology of the parties to the Arian-vs-Athananasian (ie. Unitarian-vs-Trinitarian) dispute of the 4th Century. The book starts off in pot-boiler style with a lynch mob of Athanasian Christians breaking into a jail to murder the bishop of Alexandria but quickly settles down into more scholarly mode.

It helps that the writer is Jewish, and therefore above the inevitable bias that (albeit unconciously) affects most other accounts of early church history. Nor is he squeamish about showing Christians poisoning and murdering each other - events which some historians seem to think insignificant relative to the doctrinal debate. It is particularly interesting to read Rubenstein's comments in the concluding chapters on how changes in the social (and military) situation of the Empire after the death of Constantine led to changing emotional needs among Christians - and this as much as the bully boy tactics of the Athanasians was an major reason why Jesus went from being "Son of God" ante-Nicaea to "God the Son" a generation later.

Rubenstein does not of course offer an overview of the development of Christian doctrine per se (for which see the standard work: The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God by R.P.C. Hanson) nor any analysis of the influence of pagan Egyptian theology on the development of the Trinity (see Triads and Trinity by J. Gwyn Griffiths).

4/5 stars

scholarly and readable (34/38 people found this helpful)

For a long time, there has been a need for book like this - giving the unholy facts about the early era of turmoil in Christian belief. Unfortunately, it seems to be past as well as current educational policy in the Christian Churches to sweep the Arian controversy under the carpet - to the extent that one side in the great debate rarely gets a fair hearing. Mr. Rubenstein goes a long way to restore the balance.

I do wonder, however, why the author, who quotes liberally from the Gospels, stays well clear of the Epistles of St. Paul where the doctrine of the Divinity of Jesus is more clearly proclaimed.

All in all, students of Christian History will find in Richard Rubenstein's book a well researched and easy to read resourse material.

5/5 stars

what would jesus do? (18/24 people found this helpful)

I have read much on this subject, but this book is an excellent synthesis of the events in their historical context. It has always amazed me how Jehovah, "God the Father" could essentially disappear in peoples lives...I never understood what all the "fuss" was about Mary...I never understood the sociopolitical motivations behind the two positions. How did Islam get so popular so fast? This book makes these things clear.

Thanks Mr Rubenstein

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Books -> Subjects -> Religion & Spirituality -> Christianity -> Church History
Books -> Subjects -> Religion & Spirituality -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Religion & Spirituality -> Religious Studies -> History
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Religious History -> Christianity
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