Where's the comparative religion stuff about Christianity and other ancient religions?
Sign up for World Religion 101 at your nearest college, and you'll hear plenty about the similarities and differences between Christianity and other
modernreligions. To see what I mean, just surf to the course descriptions at your favorite university's classics or religion departments, say classics at
Harvard. Lots of comparisons there, right?
Christianity compared to Judaism, Christianity compared to
Islam, Christianity compared to
Hinduism, Christianity compared to
Buddhism—that we got plenty of.
Now, look for courses about
Christianity compared to Osiris-ism, or Christianity compared to
Mithras-ism, or
Eleusis-ism, or
Platonism, or
any ancient Pagan religion or philosophy. Find anything? Nope.
There's nothing there. Nothing! That is astounding.
After all, Christianity began in the middle of Pagan culture. Before they converted, many of the
early Christians were Pagans. Yet of any similarity between ancient Pagan ideas and ancient Christian ideas, our modern culture knows nothing. Nothing!
It's as if three thousand years of western religious history never happened.
Why?
Because no one thinks to ask. Preacher, lay Christian, conservative or liberal Christian scholar, or disinterested non-Christian, we all see Christianity as a watershed—there were primitive polytheistic pre-Christian religions, then there was Christianity. We see it that way because
our modern culture's ideas about Christian origins come from the Christian version of the story of Christian origins, the version written by early Christians, for Christians, retelling the story so the facts fit Roman Christian theology.
And Roman Christian theology imagined
Big Bang Christianity: miraculous, unique, discontinuous. There were primitive polytheistic pre-Christian religions, then Jesus brought radical new (Jewish-ish, but new) ideas about God and Man. That's the Christian history. That's how we see it.
How did the Christian version come to be the only one we know about? Here's how:
For starters, the only version of Christian origins that
survived antiquity was the version
written by the victorious Roman Christians.