How Did Christianity Take Over the Roman World?

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  • Опубліковано 14 сер 2023
  • Visit www.bartehrman.com/courses/ to shop from Bart Ehrman’s online courses and get a special discount by using code: MJPODCAST on all courses.
    Christianity started out with a handful of followers in 30 CE - Jesus' remaining disciples and a few female supporters. But within 300 years there were some 2-3 million Christians in the world, including the Emperor of Rome. How did that happen? How did an offshoot of Judaism come to take over the world, to the extent that it eventually became the religion of the West for centuries, down to the modern age? The answers are not actually what most people would suspect, and in this episode we lay them out.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 521

  • @jflaugher
    @jflaugher 28 днів тому +6

    Dr. Gregory J Riley, in the book “One Jesus Many Christs” says that Christianity spread because of Christian bravery in the face of torture and execution. Riley points out that in ancient times people admired heroes who faced death bravely and died with dignity. But heroes like Heracles and Achilles were heroes because they were warriors. Jesus, because he was a peasant, made being a hero accessible to everyone - especially the poor and marginalized. And the Christian willingness to be martyred, according to Riley was a major point of conversion for on lookers. Riley quotes one early Christian writer as saying, “When we’re killed we conquer.”

  • @lkindr
    @lkindr 10 місяців тому +13

    The title is backwards. The Romans took over Christianity.

  • @spaceman081447
    @spaceman081447 10 місяців тому +10

    I love Dr. Erhmam's book The Triumph of Christianity and recommend it unequivocally.
    ADDENDUM:
    I have a friend who thinks of himself as a Christian who has "compassion and empathy" (which I don't have, according to him). Anyway he INSISTS to me that I became an atheist because "I want to be my own god." He has no idea how arrogant, condescending, and contradictory he's being.

  • @onisuryaman408
    @onisuryaman408 9 місяців тому +18

    This is very interesting, and I believe that even in the modern world, it still works.
    I am convinced that among the church, the general adherents do not really care about the theological intricacies, but mostly care about what work for them in the denomination. Maybe because one of their children was healed, or one church gave them emotional support during their loss, or maybe they get some charity, and so on.

    • @jayaplin1997
      @jayaplin1997 4 дні тому

      Agreed. This is one thing that drove me away from the Faith, nobody really cared about theology or actually believing Christianity. Just vaguely following their own version of God that lets them hate others but excuse themselves.

  • @richardshowers
    @richardshowers 10 місяців тому +22

    Bart doesn't mention the mass conversion of whole tribes by converting the chief, which certainly was the case in Britain. Also on Charlemagne's campaign in northern Europe, if anyone did not convert, they were killed, this tended to be quite successful.

    • @jeffmacdonald9863
      @jeffmacdonald9863 10 місяців тому +14

      All that, while true, comes later. Bart's talking here about how it through and took over the Roman Empire - reaching some 30 million by the end of the 4th century. Only by the very end of that was Christianity the official state religion.

    • @1bengrubb
      @1bengrubb 10 місяців тому +4

      @@jeffmacdonald9863 exactly --before Christianity was a tool it was a force

    • @frankiewally1891
      @frankiewally1891 9 місяців тому

      answer to richardshowers,this is not part of conversation on early christinity;you talking about much later periods...

    • @susanlewispaciga9227
      @susanlewispaciga9227 9 місяців тому +3

      It's why you find Jews in most countries in Europe, Asia and parts of Africa. The Legend of the Wandering Jew may well be based on a real person. We wandered all over, settling where we weren't hated, until we were and it was time to leave. As Tevya says in "Fiddler on the Roof," "Maybe that is why we always keep our hats on."

  • @altyrrell3088
    @altyrrell3088 10 місяців тому +35

    I would absolutely love to hear the two of you talk about the ancient pagan responses to Christian sects.

    • @james192599
      @james192599 26 днів тому

      Neoplatonism, hermeticism

  • @Pearsonally
    @Pearsonally 9 місяців тому +8

    I am learning Koine Greek because of Bart's work. And I look forward to Megan's upcoming works on Assyriology.

  • @darrylviljoen6227
    @darrylviljoen6227 9 місяців тому +3

    His rant about his experience with Christians after leaving Christianity is something that I really get.

  • @ElkoJohn
    @ElkoJohn 10 місяців тому +16

    I just now finished Bart's course on Mark - am still reeling from all the complexities to think about, and will now use Mark as the Gold Standard to study Paul and the other Gospels.
    Highly Recommended.

    • @user-ru4iq3ss9m
      @user-ru4iq3ss9m 10 місяців тому

      Matthew was written before Mark

    • @marknagel8852
      @marknagel8852 10 місяців тому +4

      @@user-ru4iq3ss9m 99% of Bible scholars believe that Mark is the oldest gospel and John is the newest gospel. Mark was written in the year 70 or 71, right after the temple in Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans. Matthew and Luke were both written between 80 and 90. John was written around the year 95 to 100, the same time when the book of Revelation was written. (The book of Revelation was written by John of Patmos, but that is definitely not the same person who wrote the Gospel of John. The author of the Gospel of John is anonymous.)

    • @user-ru4iq3ss9m
      @user-ru4iq3ss9m 9 місяців тому

      @@marknagel8852 All of that is unsubstantiated. Biblical scholarship is a shoddy field. Our first testimony to the order they were written says Matthew was first - that’s our assumption then. And it turns out the Mark first theory is hatched to fit with nineteenth century evolutionary simple to complex models. Which is true in evolution and not necessarily true of texts

    • @user-ru4iq3ss9m
      @user-ru4iq3ss9m 9 місяців тому

      @vincentverona7773 it completely was

    • @ed7590
      @ed7590 3 місяці тому

      @@user-ru4iq3ss9m What is your evidence that Matthew was written first please?

  • @equipdoc
    @equipdoc 10 місяців тому +11

    So interesting and informative. I look forward to each weeks vlog. Megan and Bart are so good with their interactions. Thank you so much for taking the time to help in our quest to understand.

  • @lawrence5117
    @lawrence5117 10 місяців тому +18

    This is a great series of videos. They always leave something to think about. Thanks

  • @WorldEverett
    @WorldEverett 10 місяців тому +11

    Thank you Bart for a really great episode!!

  • @euistuti4567
    @euistuti4567 10 місяців тому +4

    This is one of amazing channels I have ever seen .

  • @altyrrell3088
    @altyrrell3088 10 місяців тому

    Great video, as always!

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.C 10 місяців тому +5

    Can I suggest the obvious?
    The reason that Christianity (and then Islam, later) was able to spread like no other religion before it was because of the simple reason that this was the first religion that WASN'T limited to your region/ tribal affiliation. What I mean by that is, before this, you worshipped the God/ Gods that your tribe had always worshipped. You would NEVER worship the Gods of some other region, or of some other tribe, because they would never accept you! Those Gods didn't care about you and wouldn't protect you/ care for you in any way! When the Christians (and muslims) came along, they were the first people to say "It doesn't matter what tribe you're from or what land you were born in, our God will love you and protect you!"

    • @Vivek10010
      @Vivek10010 10 місяців тому +3

      There were plenty of religions who did the same that came much before christianity. Buddhism, Jainism, Charvaka, Confuciunism, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, Vedanta, Ajivika, among a few of a lot of them

    • @jeffmacdonald9863
      @jeffmacdonald9863 10 місяців тому +2

      And the Romans spread their religions with their conquest. As a Roman subject, you added the worship of the Roman gods to your own - including the cult of the emperor.

    • @Raz.C
      @Raz.C 10 місяців тому

      @@jeffmacdonald9863
      The Romans didn't INSIST that you take up their religions, though. Most regions were allowed to keep their old religions, but were required to allow Roman religious practices, also. The Jews objected to this and specifically to the statue of the Emperor being placed in the Great Temple, given equal status as a God (as per the cult of the emperor). This was the cause of much of the strife that only ended with the diaspora.

    • @Raz.C
      @Raz.C 10 місяців тому

      @@Vivek10010
      Buddha wasn't a God. Buddha was a person who lived and then gained enlightenment. Buddha then provided a guide for other people who wished to follow this example and to also gain enlightenment.
      That's VERY different from worshipping a God and a God who gives you commandments, telling you what to do and what not to do, too! It's more of a philosophy, than a religion, in that respect. So too is Confucianism, so too is Taoism...
      I don't know much about the others, except for Zoroastrianism and I can confidently say about that "You're wrong." A Greek who wanted to worship the Zoroastrian Gods would need to join the tribes of Zoroastrians, if he wanted protection from their Gods. If he were to return to Greece, Ahuramazda would have no power to protect him from the ire of Zeus. These Gods were all the Gods of this tribe or that tribe... Even though the Titans created the world and Zeus (with Athena, using the handiwork of Prometheus) created humans, the Titans and the Olympian Gods weren't Gods of the whole world and everyone in it; They were the Gods of the Greeks. Their influence and power didn't extend very much farther than Mount Olympus. An Egyptian who worshipped Athena and paid homage to Zeus, but who lived (and then died) in Egypt, would still find that Horus and Anubis guided their souls through the Afterlife, rather than finding Hades claiming them from foreign lands.

    • @Vivek10010
      @Vivek10010 10 місяців тому

      @@Raz.C You dont even know what the ideologies I posted even talk about. There were at least two athiest in there too lol.
      The rest of your post is just redundancy and gibberish

  • @TheMarkTheory
    @TheMarkTheory 10 місяців тому +9

    You make a great podcasting team! Love listening to you! Thanks!!

  • @Ivashanko
    @Ivashanko 6 місяців тому +3

    One explanation that the good professor does not mention, but I have seen thrown around quite a lot, is that Christians were significantly less likely to kill their female offspring and were in general more supportive of women in roles of authority, which led to increased conversions amongst women in the ancient world. Stark, who Ehrman mentioned in this episode, talks about this in a few of his works.
    I'm not saying this is an argument I personally believe in, just that I hope Ehrman talks about it in a future episode.

    • @andrelegeant88
      @andrelegeant88 3 дні тому

      Treatment of women played a huge role. I'm not sure why Bart doesn't mention it.

  • @carolablue5293
    @carolablue5293 10 місяців тому +8

    Good episode. Megan's ever-changing hair color and glasses seem to be her trademark

  • @RaySawhill
    @RaySawhill 4 місяці тому

    Excellent discussion, thanks.

  • @jameskpolk9137
    @jameskpolk9137 10 місяців тому +4

    I may be at work right now but I’m sure my boss will understand that Dr. Ehrman just uploaded.

  • @albionicamerican8806
    @albionicamerican8806 10 місяців тому +5

    I'm more interested in thinking about the future where Christianity declines to just a relative handful of believers again. There was an article in _Harper's_ magazine a few years ago about the collapse of the Zoroastrian religion and its likely extinction in this century. At one time there were millions of Zoroastrians in Southwest Asia, and the religion influenced the beliefs of the later Abrahamic religions. Today there are only a few thousand Zoroastrians left, and they aren't reproducing enough or accepting converts. The last Zoroastrian could very well die by 2100, and the people living afterwards won't notice the religion's absence.
    The same thing is likely to happen to Christianity eventually. Religions come and go like everything else, after all.

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 9 місяців тому

      Sorry chief. But Bart's expertise is in the past, not the future.

  • @JRfromTN
    @JRfromTN 10 місяців тому +1

    Thanks again!

  • @alexconstable3155
    @alexconstable3155 10 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for the positive comments about Canada. 🍁

  • @narancauk
    @narancauk 10 місяців тому +1

    Brilliant analysis

  • @McbrideStudios
    @McbrideStudios 10 місяців тому +1

    Would love to see an episode or two on the popular reponse to early Christianity.

  • @Amazing_Mark
    @Amazing_Mark 9 місяців тому +1

    A Canadian 🇨🇦 conference on atheism? Intriguing!

  • @asynchronicity
    @asynchronicity 3 місяці тому +1

    I’ve had some good fortune worshipping Apollo. Highly recommended.

  • @trumanyoung1345
    @trumanyoung1345 10 місяців тому +2

    I seem to remember that Gibbon devoted an entire chapter to this question

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebalia 10 місяців тому

    Thank you.

  • @matthewhaynes7161
    @matthewhaynes7161 10 місяців тому +5

    This is a phenomenal one

  • @sarahsarah2534
    @sarahsarah2534 26 днів тому +1

    Amazing how the political factor wasn't mentioned at all.

  • @mwheezee
    @mwheezee 10 місяців тому +4

    i just cant take Megan seriously with these Minion glasses 🤣

    • @mageetu
      @mageetu 5 місяців тому +3

      Do you think she cares?

  • @MichaelYoder1961
    @MichaelYoder1961 10 місяців тому +17

    I think all the dropping of the OT laws re: circumcision, shellfish, pork, clothing, etc. probably made it easier. When in Rome... Another great episode - thanks Bart and Megan!

    • @charlesmclaughlin3578
      @charlesmclaughlin3578 10 місяців тому +2

      Going against sky buddy’s rules…nice religion

    • @youngknowledgeseeker
      @youngknowledgeseeker 9 місяців тому +1

      Dietary restrictions, Holy day observances, clothing, circumcision, removal of the importance of a geographically localized area and genetic racial priority.

  • @natashka8880
    @natashka8880 10 місяців тому +1

    WHERE in Ontario? I'm here...I want to attend!

  • @hippipdip
    @hippipdip 10 місяців тому +3

    Create the need then fill the need - I never thought of it like this before but seems Christianity spread same way the iPad did 😂

  • @fernandoelias3745
    @fernandoelias3745 26 днів тому +1

    What about praying for intersection. You just ask without the need of offerings, and the “miracle” is spread out after being granted.

  • @rationalpear1816
    @rationalpear1816 10 місяців тому +5

    I always wondered about a “potluck” theory of conversion. Not so much a direct charity theory, but private dinners as a way for building a community that no other religion at the time offered. Someone talks to a christian and there is some interest, the christian invites the family over for dinner. Maybe it was an holderover from the Jewish sadder dinner. If most of the social safety net was based on a large extended family, this would be a way to build a sort of artificial extended family.
    It would also be a way to improve your business. Weekly meetings with people you would not meet otherwise is something that the infrequent public celebrations of the pagan gods didn’t offer.

    • @kacabingkaikaca_bingkai5332
      @kacabingkaikaca_bingkai5332 10 місяців тому +3

      Oh this is why Amway is so.succesfull

    • @paulreader1777
      @paulreader1777 10 місяців тому +4

      @@kacabingkaikaca_bingkai5332 Yes - modern American evangelicalism is multi-level marketing at its most successful, especially if you have a religious licence to start the process.

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 9 місяців тому

      That only makes sense if you think that the Pagans didn't have dinner parties. For some reason I don't find that very likely.

  • @cochetah4339
    @cochetah4339 10 місяців тому

    Timing is perfect. Thank you so much. Once have funds will like to join discussion as really set-apart of which God wants for all of us but once you ask for Truth and open the door to Bart and Megan, one must be courageous as mkultraed-christianese does not resemble the Scriptural teachings but scapegoat "getoutofjail" card from personal responsibility.

  • @666izzy
    @666izzy 10 місяців тому +2

    Basic maths will give you the numbers you want. If you talk to 10 people in one month and convert one then, in the second month, there's 2 of you each talking to 10 people and converting 1. So, in the third month, there's 4 of you... If each person manages to talk to 10 people and convert one every month then by the end of the year your community has grown from just you to over 2,000 people.

  • @mrdgenerate
    @mrdgenerate 10 місяців тому

    All i could think was the movie "o brother where arr thou"
    "Im the god damn Pater Familias!"
    AMC Story Notes taught me that definition lol

  • @Volleyball_Chess_and_Geoguessr
    @Volleyball_Chess_and_Geoguessr 9 місяців тому +2

    So if people converted because of miracles and you don't believe any miracles happened, what do you think really happened?

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 8 місяців тому

      That is the real question. Does Bart think that Christians were just better at sleight of hand? I don't think that that is true.

  • @meteor1237
    @meteor1237 10 місяців тому +5

    Where does she get those glasses? Great! Super scholarship Dr. Bart! Thx!

    • @cochetah4339
      @cochetah4339 10 місяців тому

      Really like her spectacles and just the platinum is fine with me...dynamic duo with their spouses would be an interesting roundtable

  • @JCResDoc94
    @JCResDoc94 8 місяців тому +1

    22:43 the episode "how insane was christianity at the time" will be a gr8 episode. _JC

  • @johnhumberstone9674
    @johnhumberstone9674 10 місяців тому

    The glasses are the star of the show . . .

  • @ericdaniello5659
    @ericdaniello5659 10 місяців тому

    I enjoy these conversations but there is SOOO much fluff
    I end up tapping thru about half of the videos
    I wish they were longer

  • @dadkingcoffey8333
    @dadkingcoffey8333 10 місяців тому +2

    IM FULLY PERSUADED IN THE GOSPEL. but love to listen to Bart .there are so much knowledge of historical value in his content ❤

    • @user-ru4iq3ss9m
      @user-ru4iq3ss9m 10 місяців тому +3

      Bart secretly wants to return to Christ

    • @SaurianSavior
      @SaurianSavior 10 місяців тому +3

      @@user-ru4iq3ss9m You know, I do think I'd want to return to Christ if he existed. Bart makes this clear, and I share his opinion that the problem of evil is the reason we cannot believe, therefore return to Christ.
      However, both Bart and I have described ourselves as cultural Christians, so in terms of his teachings, we were never skeptical. Jesus' example is a great model to live by, just as we should follow in the steps of Buddha or Guan Yu. We can recognize the good of any religion or work of fiction, for that matter.

    • @user-ru4iq3ss9m
      @user-ru4iq3ss9m 10 місяців тому

      @@SaurianSavior Problem of evil is only a problem if you’re prideful and think you can understand everything

    • @TheRealDyscyples
      @TheRealDyscyples 9 місяців тому

      @@SaurianSavior Bart and yourself? Who are you?

    • @frankiewally1891
      @frankiewally1891 9 місяців тому

      @@user-ru4iq3ss9m why do you feel you have to inject this bullshit ?

  • @swindswinds3387
    @swindswinds3387 10 місяців тому

    I hope you would include the Jewish law and Christianity controversies in one of your discussions. I wonder why everyone less concerned about an issue that was very controversial in early centuries of Christianity

  • @hectorromero5593
    @hectorromero5593 10 місяців тому +4

    I was circumcised in my early teens for sanitary reasons and 55 years later I still have the scars on it because I had an involuntary nocturnal erection the night after the surgery. I was scared to death when the following morning the nurse that was in charge waked me up to change the sheets because there was an hemorrhage due to the tearing of the foreskin around the stitches. But I think the main reason for not circumcising in those times was that in the greco-roman culture circumcising was seen as mutilation.

  • @progidy7
    @progidy7 10 місяців тому +2

    This episode seems to focus on before the "conversion" of Constantine (ironic that the famous convert or "changer" was named after being a constant). In Bart's previous video "Did Constantine Really Convert", at the 30:40 mark, he talks about many good reasons for converting after he did: it was the emperor's religion, Constantine favored it and showered it with money, suddenly huge construction was devoted to it which led to mass employment, and bishops (rich community leaders) got huge tax breaks.

    • @progidy7
      @progidy7 10 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/video/0V_2VwBNHas/v-deo.html#t=30m40s

    • @jeffmacdonald9863
      @jeffmacdonald9863 10 місяців тому +1

      He does, but I think he also argues that the growth rate of Christianity didn't really change with Constantine's conversion.

    • @progidy7
      @progidy7 10 місяців тому

      @@jeffmacdonald9863 do you recall where he said that? I'd doesn't seem to reconcile with his list of ways that it impacted Romans after the conversion

    • @TheRealDyscyples
      @TheRealDyscyples 9 місяців тому

      @@progidy7listen to it again. He explains it shortly after.

    • @jdaze1
      @jdaze1 9 місяців тому

      Because it was advantageous for him to bring his dividing kingdom together. He wasn't a true believer in the one true God. He was a Roman trinitarian. A false pagan doctrine he carried into this new faith.

  • @eliesalaun7940
    @eliesalaun7940 10 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating as always, thank you so much. Still, there remains one major question for me, which is how big was the believe in Christ at the very beginning, and is there anything which made it special in a first place? I mean, I am under the (maybe false or exagerated?) impression that 1st cent judaïsm was extremely diverse with quite a few prophet around preaching the soon coming apocalypse or things like that, and Jesus was just one among many (or just some?) others, which we do have trace of because it starts becoming big pretty fast and we got the accounts we now call the new testament writen couple of decades afterward. So my main interrogation here would be : is there anything with jesus which made it/him special in a first place, did those would brought it to the cross had any idea it was more than just one more dissident to kill, did his ministry, which according to the gospel didn't last more than 2 or 3 years made his teaching real nascent cult with more believers than other prophet from his time we may have any idea about? It seems to me that this podcast provides very good ideas about how it did spread througt the roman empire, but my question here would be how it did even became a particular thing in the very first place? Last but not least, I've red somewhere that in some hellenistic hight middle class of the time (like the appostles), there were some kind of a fascination for judaïsm for it had some kind of aura of ancient exotic mysticism, which we could compare the modern fascination in occident or Bouddhism, and that explains why chritianity did work in these middles, because it gave the opportunity to embrace judaïsme without all the Judaïc code around (circumsision, not eating pork...). How much of that is true. I know that's a lot of questions, maybe for a next episode ??

    • @donnaritch9704
      @donnaritch9704 10 місяців тому

      When someone tells you what you think and believe that is the height of arrogance

  • @1bengrubb
    @1bengrubb 10 місяців тому

    31:38 "looked up EVERY ancient conversion account" wow...

  • @sharkmedia5969
    @sharkmedia5969 9 місяців тому +1

    We got some serious optical fashion going on here!

  • @fatbottombracket
    @fatbottombracket 10 місяців тому +4

    I’m not an intellectual but have been accused of never having faith. It’s so bizarre. Thank you for that.

  • @a.t.6322
    @a.t.6322 10 місяців тому +9

    Christianity offered upward mobility for those in the lower caste communities. It offered patronage to them and a wider familial connection. It offered social services like medical care and schooling, and inspired the arts. Always fascinating to watch people in our modern western society lambaste the very system that got them there in the first place. Always a dumb idea to kick the chair from under you.

    • @sureshnair9427
      @sureshnair9427 10 місяців тому

      - sure -
      - like the upward mobility that the good hapless pagan Africans had when they were forced to convert to Christianity by European Christians after enslaving and brutalising them

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 8 місяців тому +1

      @@therion5458 "There wasn't significant progress in art and science until the Renaissance when people in Europe started to "wake up" and find inspiration from pre-Christian culture." That is a myth. Science and art continued to progress in the middle ages same as they always have. The Romans didn't know how to do double entry book keeping, or how to make a long sword.

  • @michaelm6863
    @michaelm6863 10 місяців тому +2

    I'd like to hear Bart's take on why Christianity failed to grow in the "eastern world" as it did the western world.

    • @jameswright...
      @jameswright... 10 місяців тому

      It did, Rome wasn't as strong though the further east you go and arabs were nomadic then the collapse of Rome happened and muslims stormed in filling the void under threats of death.
      Christianity still exist in these parts all be it largely under ground or a tiny persecuted group.

    • @jeffmacdonald9863
      @jeffmacdonald9863 10 місяців тому +1

      @@jameswright... Yeah, that's basically it. Christianity spread throughout the Roman world and then when it became the state religion of Rome that consolidated it there - both in the western and eastern parts of the Empire. Including North Africa. It also spread along the Silk Road towards China, but without Imperial support wasn't nearly as dominant.
      Then the Western Empire fell and then Islam exploded out of Arabia - conquering the Near/Middle East, North Africa, Spain and much of the Silk Road region, replacing Christianity with Islam as the religion backed by Imperial power.
      Christianity continued to spread through northern and eastern Europe through the Middle Ages, but couldn't make headway eastwards through the various Islamic Empires.

  • @EberHampton
    @EberHampton 10 місяців тому +1

    Does anyone seriously address the extent ro which the Roman Empire "took over" christianity? Does Dr. Ermine address this in any of his publications?

  • @zipperpillow
    @zipperpillow 2 місяці тому +1

    The funny thing is, Jesus wasn't a "Christian", he was a Jew. Why does everybody miss this point?

  • @jeffmacdonald9863
    @jeffmacdonald9863 10 місяців тому +1

    Interesting comment about philosophies at the time being exclusive in a way that religions weren't. Exclusive and evangelist, in the sense of wanting to convert others for their own good.
    It's almost like Christianity merged philosophy and religion into a single thing

    • @jeffmacdonald9863
      @jeffmacdonald9863 10 місяців тому +1

      Thinking a little further about this - Buddhism kind of did the same thing, as did later (and even some contemporary) middle-eastern religions. Islam, Zoroastrianism, etc.
      In China maybe that doesn't happen? And we see philosophies like Taoism and Confucianism continue to play the same kind of role we're talking about for Hellenistic era philosophies.

  • @jg90049
    @jg90049 10 місяців тому +2

    What did conversion actually mean in terms of altered behavior and belief for most new converts?

    • @michaelsbeverly
      @michaelsbeverly 10 місяців тому

      Probably the same as it does today, they follow the 80-20 rule.
      Most modern Christians don't actually believe the stuff they say they believe if belief is defined by actions and not words (not saying they're not Christians, just saying they behave like sports fans on a Sunday cheering for their team at church. "Go Jesus!"
      There are always a percent of people who really believe (in terms of actions not just words) and they follow the path set out as they see it, doing good works, etc., etc.
      This is most evident in big mega-churches today, where obviously the vast majority of people are there for the music and fun.
      It's less evident (or there's more serious followers) in tight-knit smaller churches, well, at least this was my experience when I was a believer.
      It takes a real commitment to "pick up your cross" and actually do the things commanded in the New Testament.

    • @jdaze1
      @jdaze1 9 місяців тому

      Keep the commandments and stop the sins that are attributed to the them.

  • @thuscomeguerriero
    @thuscomeguerriero 10 місяців тому +2

    Bart's explanation for how Christianity gained the Empire was convincing people that miracles occurred?

    • @TheMargarita1948
      @TheMargarita1948 10 місяців тому +5

      People of the time did not have to be convinced that “miracles” happen. Miracles were taken for granted as a part of everyday life.

    • @thuscomeguerriero
      @thuscomeguerriero 10 місяців тому

      @@TheMargarita1948 But Bart E. is using miracles, or the convincing of people that a miracle occured as explanatory for the rise of Christianity.
      So..what you're saying doesn't really work there

  • @tookie36
    @tookie36 10 місяців тому

    Where are the time stamps my loved ones???

  • @russellmiles2861
    @russellmiles2861 10 місяців тому +1

    How exactly did anyone "count" the number of Christians in the Roman Empire. This is just a supposition based on estimated population size. How about: we don't really know. We don't even know much of what early Christians believed or how they practiced their faith, the variations and difference and how much traditional faiths and Christianity were amalgamated or diverged? We mostly have texts citing earlier texts of the elite of society who may not have known or cared what the rural underclass great majority felt or believed

  • @AlexandruVoda
    @AlexandruVoda 10 місяців тому +2

    I do not think claiming at 32:25 that pagans (assuming ancient greek and romans) had no concept of afterlife is corect. Was the underworld governed by Hades and Pluto not effectively the afterlife? I think that argument is wrong.

    • @darksaurian6410
      @darksaurian6410 9 місяців тому

      I'm not taking a side, I haven't read enough, but, "pagans, by and large, didn't believe in an afterlife," really shocked me. Is this true? The norse had valhalla. The ancient Egyptians sure as hell believed in an afterlife. I know the Zoroastrians believed in one. The greeks and romans didn't believe in one? Or did they officially believe in it but regular roman Joe 6 pack didn't really believe in it? I really wanted to interrupt there and ask for elaboration.

  • @Nite395
    @Nite395 10 місяців тому +1

    Christianity didn’t end paganism, rather, coalesced it into one pagan system.

  • @kevincameron174
    @kevincameron174 10 місяців тому

    In the description it does not mention Megan Lewis at all, and no link to her channel.
    I was curious because I recognized her voice from other videos, but not her face (that Clark Kent thing I guess, where changing glasses is a great disguise)
    It took some googling, but found it.
    Just a note that you should include at least her hame and channel in your description (unless she asked you not to)
    www.youtube.com/@DigitalHammurabi

  • @sparrowthesissy2186
    @sparrowthesissy2186 8 місяців тому

    That's interesting, perhaps Acts itself reflects a tradition of using conversion stories as a tactic for converting people. Reading about 500 people converting at once might create a kind of peer-pressure where people want to be part of the consensus of these crowds which may or may not have existed.

  • @TheMargarita1948
    @TheMargarita1948 10 місяців тому +2

    Many people fear death. Christianity promised immortality. That’s the story.

    • @TheMargarita1948
      @TheMargarita1948 10 місяців тому +1

      The best part about immortality in the Abrahamic belief system: you get to watch your philosophical and political enemies condemned to eternal torture while you yourself bask in the light of righteousness.
      Given an ambient culture where political figures frequently become gods within their own lifetime and a populace steeped in miracles and cosmic wars, the probability of Constantine making this choice seems very high.

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 9 місяців тому +1

      Paganism had that as well. Per Charles King, When you died, your descendants would worship you as a household god. I don't know where Bart got this idea that the ancient Romans didn't have an afterlife. What does he think that Hades was in charge of in the myths?

  • @belialord
    @belialord 8 місяців тому

    26:22 Second century*

  • @moncaman1
    @moncaman1 10 місяців тому +1

    These two are awesome together!!!...🤔👍🌄...

  • @tonyprost5575
    @tonyprost5575 19 днів тому +1

    Christianity offered the democratization of the mystery cults.

  • @1bengrubb
    @1bengrubb 10 місяців тому

    14:45 "mechanics of evangelism" personal connection in conversation.. but why? 27:30 "first you have to ask...why do you need a god?"...so today why do you need a god? or how is it that today we don't need a god and then they did?

  • @NSBarnett
    @NSBarnett 10 місяців тому

    26:25 Marcus Aurelius's dates are: born 121; succeeded 161; died 180, so not really "at the end of the third century", although many of his successors had names which included Marcus Aurelius, seven of them from 268 to 305. I don't buy the "Our god is more powerful." theory because (a) he isn't, and (b) it's only an argument for Henotheism. I think the "turn the other cheek" component of its theology is key: for the lower classes and women, they get pie in the sky (meek...shall inherit the earth, etc.) and for the ruling classes, they get a pliant workforce.

  • @daniell.dingeldein9717
    @daniell.dingeldein9717 10 місяців тому +5

    love meg's eye glasses🙂

    • @coosoorlog
      @coosoorlog 10 місяців тому +4

      the elton john of biblical scholarship!

  • @JCResDoc94
    @JCResDoc94 8 місяців тому +1

    *6:06** one Gxd to rule them all.* (& he is my precious) _JC

  • @lesbendo6363
    @lesbendo6363 10 місяців тому

    The first network marketing company. Wow! Now worth Trillions today! 🇨🇦

  • @TupacMakaveli1996
    @TupacMakaveli1996 10 місяців тому

    5:00: off the bats, historically religion was more practices and less theology. And our god is this but no force conversion which began with Christianity and Islam. I like how the Jews don't make people join them in their way of worship.
    Thanks for the video. This was amazing.

  • @clearskybluewaters
    @clearskybluewaters 10 місяців тому

    read Louise Anthony essay on the problem of evil

  • @dimitrisraptopoulos1158
    @dimitrisraptopoulos1158 10 місяців тому

    Living without the concept of a deity around the Bronze Age was unimaginable…the difference with Christianity is that, unlike the majority of other religions, it did not require you to make sacrifices to cleanse you from your sins (which could be quite expensive) but rather believe in the only sacrifice already happened in the face of Jesus…quite an economic, empathetic and emotional solution fit for most people without means (making up the vast majority then and now) found quite inviting. To own a goat back then was an expensive capital good that you would never waste to sacrifice for the high priests to eat on their own, while all you get is (maybe) partial absolution and the intestines for some soup…

    • @Sewblon
      @Sewblon 9 місяців тому

      I have seen that theory before. But that was never the reason that converts gave. The reason that they gave was always Miracles.

  • @erink3289
    @erink3289 10 місяців тому

    I have heard that Christianity grew at roughly the same rate in its early years that the Mormon church has grown since its founding in 1830. Does anyone know if that’s true, or direct me to a source on the topic?

  • @booooo-urns
    @booooo-urns 9 місяців тому

    Megan’s frames super intense they remind me of the Nazi archaeologist in raiders of the lost ark

  • @MCarrington01
    @MCarrington01 10 місяців тому

    Bart makes the argument clear that university is NOT for undergraduates. The professors at universities are focused on research to the detriment of ‘general studies’. Go to a city or state college for the AA. And then transfer to a university. Everyone is happier.

  • @grumpyparsnip
    @grumpyparsnip 9 місяців тому

    AT about the 14 minute mark, Bart is describing Christianity's viral (or memetic) quality. Because as a belief system it is better equipped to reproduce itself in the minds of others, it naturally grows and wipes out other ideas. It's pretty sad that it wipes out all that rich variety, but it's seemingly inevitable also just based on the evolution of thought complexes in human brains..

  • @kencreten7308
    @kencreten7308 10 місяців тому +4

    It's amazing to me how many express views here that apparently are strongly held. I don't have a view about this subject that I would believe from my own thinking. I listen to people like Megan and Bart because I know almost nothing about Assyrian culture and language. Maybe I know a little more about the history of early Christianity - because of Dr. Ehrman. I notice when people post what appear to be strong opinions here, they do not start with their credentials. I'm listening to Megan and Bart - because of their credentials. If someone does not have credentials, then their argument should be very well formed and evidenced, and they would not state it here on UA-cam. I'm guessing academics So why do people come here, some not being pros at ancient Christian history, and claim to know very specific things - providing no evidence. What is the purpose of that?

    • @loganleatherman7647
      @loganleatherman7647 10 місяців тому +1

      To make them feel better about their strongly-held position. Christianity is more palatable the less you know/think about it.

  • @rsnc23
    @rsnc23 10 місяців тому

    I wonder if Paganism lacked the sensations of Spiritual Uplifting common to Christianity and was more a ' Quid Pro Quo ' exchange of sacrifices and performance of outward but unfulfilling rituals in exchange for perceived better harvests, protection from disease etc and what people felt during some practices of Christianity that was lacking in Paganism convinced the curious Jesus was a superior entity to Pagan deities.

  • @alst4817
    @alst4817 9 місяців тому

    I’m struck by how in the spread of Islam, the “umma” was a political and military power as well as a religious community. Could something similar have happened in the Christian case? Were Christians likely to band into political groups like Muslims did?

  • @gazzas123
    @gazzas123 10 місяців тому +1

    I was wondering which disciple was present at the trial of Jesus by Pontius Pilate? If none of them were there who recorded the conversation or wast the whole this a fabrication?

  • @Gabriel-pt6tq
    @Gabriel-pt6tq 9 місяців тому +1

    Do you two go to the same optometrist?

  • @andrelegeant88
    @andrelegeant88 3 дні тому

    I don't ascribe to the zero sum proposition. While true that winning a devotee to Serapis did not exclude that person from worshiping Apollo, too, it did exclude the person from worshipping Christ. Thus, any convert to any non-Christian belief was a loss to Christianity. Similarly, a Christian had to convince a pagan to abandon every god. A pagan might agree Jupiter/Zeus can't be the highest god, but if he still believed in Serapis, then he couldn't be a Christian.
    I think the key to Christianity's growth is in the Second Century and it comes down to two factors.
    First, a critical mass of women - particularly wealthy Roman widows who tended to outlive their older husbands - liked Christianity. A virgin mother whose son was destined to save the world would have appealed to these women. And not surprisingly, this is when devotion to Mary takes prominence. These women had access to money and homes to accommodate other believers.
    Second, the Antonine plague and subsequent third century crisis likely shook belief systems considerably.

  • @pissanukatika3720
    @pissanukatika3720 10 місяців тому +1

    The Roman Empire created Christianity by secretly invented 27 books granted to peoples to read since the fourth century.

  • @jadenalmeida8592
    @jadenalmeida8592 7 місяців тому +1

    4:00

  • @unapologetics1162
    @unapologetics1162 10 місяців тому +1

    Ehrman knows more about roman civilizations than I'll ever even care to know, and yet he makes such bizarre statement with so much conviction, makes me question all his statements of fact.
    Hell is not an original Christian concept. All Christian concepts are either Jewish or Greek, and he'll isn't Jewish, but the Greek heros, like Odysseus, had visited their dead in Hades, a version of hell.
    The math is wonky because its at a limit case with no adjustment for the model over time. If 50% people are Christian and 50% an all encompassing pagan, and both missionaries are equally successful, then no one gains adherents. It's quite simple: if Christianity is exclusive to everything else, then everything else is exclusive to Christianity defacto. Now let's say you have a massive plague that everyone is dying. If you are pagan you die alone, if you are Christian you die with loved ones and get rewarded in heaven. Unless like Ehrman implies, virology science was advance enough to know that Christianity means doom, the choice is obvious on moral grounds.
    Christianity's strongest attribute is its moral claims. Everything else God can do, the pagan gods could do as well, you just had to go to more trouble to worship more of them, but that also increased your chance that at least some will help you.
    Finally all this business about Jews not wanting the world to believe in one God. Literally all Messianic claims are about that. That's why Christianity is Missionary.
    When Jews were conquered by Babylon, for other nations it means the conquering gods are stronger. Why not for the Jews? Only because they did believe there is only one God.

  • @aristotlenicolaides6370
    @aristotlenicolaides6370 4 місяці тому

    The early Christians multiplied fast because of the baptisms which was a tool to have your sins forgiven

  • @lulubelle0bresil
    @lulubelle0bresil 10 місяців тому +1

    wow, brilliant! so informative and lots of "food for thought" - THANK YOU! I'm really interested in this transition from polytheism to monotheism and then the later "monotheistic ma non troppo" culture of multiple saints and martyrs.

  • @davidoff7312
    @davidoff7312 6 місяців тому

    Marc Aurel lived from 121 to 180

  • @binford5000
    @binford5000 10 місяців тому

    Don't forget that you cant prove the afterlive. Your life as a sinner is basically scewed anyway , but if you behave, you might/will go to heaven.
    And you don't feel so bad about yourself and your earthy life if you can join your god in heaven.
    You also dont need to to assign certain aspects/attributes to your "new" almighty ONE god. If being asked if he can help with x, you answer not just x, but also y and z.

  • @stevenbishop8850
    @stevenbishop8850 10 місяців тому +2

    are the glasses supposed to be distracting?

    • @kencreten7308
      @kencreten7308 10 місяців тому +2

      Only for you.

    • @cochetah4339
      @cochetah4339 10 місяців тому

      These glasses are the best ones with her platinum hair...she has others that are pink and contrasts with blue hair just takes away from the seriousness and her smarts so I just look away...bad hair daze.

    • @MorningClarity
      @MorningClarity 10 місяців тому

      I find everything about her unnecessarily distracting. Glasses. Hair. Demeanor. What would motivate a person to present themselves this way?

    • @cochetah4339
      @cochetah4339 10 місяців тому +1

      @@MorningClarity Speaking as a 67 yr old Constitutional Conservative real university educated (BW is that like BC?) think it is shock treatment or so you can remember her as unique...lots of effort and money to spiffup...you need to learn to appreciate the narcissism which is IN you know...postmodernism.

    • @stevenbishop8850
      @stevenbishop8850 10 місяців тому

      Well, as far as Christians taking over Rome, I'm surprised it wasn't mentioned that Rome destroyed Israel. I'd consider that a feature to the discussion.

  • @donl9571
    @donl9571 10 місяців тому

    Robin Lane Fox proposed that Christianity's success was due to superior organization and administration. He felt the practice of appointing bishops for life was extremely powerful and compared Christianity's success to Manichaeism which was also a missionary religion at the time.

    • @1bengrubb
      @1bengrubb 10 місяців тому +2

      Not just organization---but a way to maintain it---tithe. Does any other religion require all adherents to support those who are teachers? So now there is a class dedicated to study and teaching and supported by the followers----I think all our universities were seminaries. Teaching a learning becomes a very important value...minus the dark ages where the common person is forbidden from reading the bible.

  • @Robert_L_Peters
    @Robert_L_Peters 10 місяців тому

    Do "moderate" and "very liberal" mean the same thing?

  • @ugetsu2093
    @ugetsu2093 10 місяців тому +3

    ‘Pagan’ and ‘heathen’ are exonyms used by Christians to belittle the adherents of the traditional religion(s) of the Roman Empire. Shouldn’t we start using an endonym or at least a less biased term? Some early Christians referred to them as Hellenes apparently, which sounds a bit more polite. Neo-Platonist is also a term I have seen used for those defending their religion in later centuries, but that may be a modern term.

  • @Mark-zk7uj
    @Mark-zk7uj 8 місяців тому

    "You just want to sin" is such a weird argument. If I were a believing Christian up to that point, the desire to sin wouldn't nullify my belief in a living God who would punish me for my sins any more than my desire to commit certain crimes causes me to forget the police exist.