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Christianity
on Trial: Arguments Against
Anti-Religious Bigotry
Encounter Books
Review
by Ryan McMaken
Those
things which are God’s are not subject to the imperial power.
~
Ambrose of Milan
Any
liberal arts student knows the story: Christianity, an enemy of
science, a catalyst of war, and an enslaver of men has brought mankind
nothing but misery since it rose to prominence in the Roman empire
and destroyed that gentle and enlightened civilization. At least,
this is the story you will encounter in virtually every literature,
history, or political science course that one might endure. Both
inside and outside the academy, however, most of the clichés
about the inhumanity of Christianity generally amount to little
more than vague references to various events that the New York Times
has decided are unforgivable sins committed by Christians throughout
history.
With
the publication of Christianity
on Trial, authors Vincent Carroll and David Shiflett attempt
to shed some light on the historical record. The book, a collection
of chapters each dealing with Christianity’s record on specific
issues from slavery to science to the Third Reich is a kind of historical
Christian apologetic. Unlike an ordinary apologetic, the book makes
no attempts to engage theological questions or to prove the veracity
of the Christian religion. It is instead an examination of historical
events involving ordinary Christians, the Catholic Church as an
organization and, after the Reformation, the Protestant churches
as well. For Carroll and Shiflett, the prevailing belief among smug
non-Christians, a belief that Western history is the history of
brave "free-thinkers" working against the tyranny of Christianity,
is little more than self-satisfaction based on historical ignorance.
The
book begins by juxtaposing pre-Christian Roman civilization with
Christian civilization. The story of the Roman Empire at the time
of the birth of Christ is one of a society with no concept of the
human being as a sovereign individual with claims against state
and society. It is a time of disposable children, disposable women,
and widespread human slavery. For example, in the empire of the
1st century, it was not unusual for a pregnant woman
to receive a note from her husband instructing her that when she
gave birth: "if it is a boy keep it, if a girl discard it."
"Discarding" a baby usually consisted of leaving it on
the nearest dungheap. The baby would usually die of exposure within
a few hours, or possibly be eaten by wolves. If the baby was fortunate
it would be found by a member of one of the local Christian communities
that often kept an eye on places where babies were dumped in order
to adopt them. The discarded babies were usually girls, but deformed
male babies could suffer the same fate, and the practice was so
widespread that in many parts of the empire, men outnumbered women
by 30 percent or more.
Once
grown, pagan women could rarely expect better treatment than they
had been afforded when they had been infants. Compared to Christian
women, pagan women married younger, had less choice in whom they
married, and were expected to endure frequent adultery from their
spouses since Saint Paul’s admonition to men to remain faithful
was hardly the prevailing attitude among pagan men. The Christian
ideal that men and women must be held to identical systems of ethics
and were equals in the eyes of God was, to say the least, a novelty
in pagan Rome. Ironically, according to the authors, Saint Paul,
the man villainized by non-Christians as the leading misogynist
of the bible was quite possibly the most prominent proponent of
"sexual equality" in the Empire.
Carroll
and Shiflett go on to describe a myriad of other revolutions that
the Christians brought to the pagan world. The restriction of sexual
behavior to marriage was certainly an affront to Roman noblemen
who kept young boys imprisoned in their private chambers for their
sexual pleasure, and the idea that the poor, the helpless, and the
weak should be treated with kindness and mercy struck many pagans
as ridiculous considering their pagan ideals of strength, heroism,
and conquest. The medieval knight’s oath to protect orphans and
widows would have struck a Roman centurion as pointless and absurd.
This
first chapter sets the tone for the rest of the book which presents
Christians and their leaders as often the brake against war, slavery,
the domination of the weak by the strong, and the excesses of the
State in general.
As
slavery returned to the Christian world through the New World, it
was Jesuits and Popes in the Spanish world and Methodists and Quakers
in the British world that fought against slavery and eventually
forced its end. Drawing upon Paul’s directive to slaveowners that
they "do not threaten [the slaves], since you know that he
who is both their Master and yours is in heaven, and there is no
favoritism with him." The Methodist John Wesley and his followers
concluded that if slaves are equal to their masters in heaven, why
must things be different on earth? Indeed, the Catholic Church came
to the same conclusion and condemned slavery repeatedly in 1462,
1741, 1815, and 1839. Unfortunately, all too often, slave traders
paid little attention. For Carroll and Shiflett, the story of the
abolition of slavery is a veritable who’s who list of Protestant
and Catholic leaders. Ironically, it was the non-Christian philosophers
like David Hume and Thomas Jefferson who spent their time constructing
pseudo-scientific justifications for slavery. While David Hume was
comparing slaves to parrots, Christians like the Quaker activist
George Fox would have none of it: "Christ died for all, for
the Taiwanese, and for the blacks, as for you that are called whites."
But
what of the Christian record on science? Every pundit in America
knows that Christianity has crippled science and supported ignorance
among the Western world. One word is all that need be said: Galileo!
Carroll and Shiflett dispose of this stereotype with ease. After
all, it is not just a coincidence that the most technologically
advanced civilization on earth emerged not from the Far East or
from the Americas, but from Christian Europe. Unlike the centralized
bureaucracies of China that stymied novelty and innovation, heavily
decentralized Europe did not contain a bureaucratic class powerful
enough to stop innovation, and thus new technologies were introduced,
spread about Europe and contributed to the birth of a technological
society. The Christian monasteries maintained libraries, copied
ancient manuscripts, employed astronomers and preserved the knowledge
accumulated through the centuries of western civilization. The Franciscan
monk Roger Bacon wrote in the eleventh century that "it is
the intention of [natural] philosophy to work out the natures and
philosophies of things." He encouraged his fellow scientists
to adopt empirical methods using controlled experiments and observation.
These experiments would come to be carried out in the Christian
universities, the main centers of science and philosophy in Europe.
Christians were the finest astronomers in the world with the most
accurate calendars and the most accurate instruments. Carroll and
Shiflett give one of the best short explanations of the Galileo
affair available today and they point out that Galileo, that patron
saint of modern Christian bashers was never disciplined for any
crime against theology, but was censured for disobedience to the
Catholic authorities. No official proclamation was made drawing
conclusions on his observations from a theological perspective,
and even if such a proclamation had been made, it would not have
mattered since Christian philosophers, monks, and Catholic Cardinals
went right on supporting and performing scientific experiments using
the knowledge of Galileo, Copernicus, and countless other Christian
scientists.
Of
course, no book entitled Christianity on Trial would be complete
without a discussion of the role of Christianity in the rise of
the Third Reich. Naturally, Carroll and Shiflett illustrate that
if Christian organizations had any role in the rise of Nazism, it
was one of resistance. The most popular myth of Christians and the
Third Reich batted around today is the story of Pope Pius XII as
Nazi collaborator. How this myth got started is interesting since
Pius was almost universally accepted as an anti-Nazi hero following
the war. Pius had given Jews shelter inside the walls of the Vatican
and had even taken part in a plot to depose Hitler in 1939. This
approving attitude toward Pope Pius changed in 1960 with the play
The
Deputy by Rolf Hochhuth. Since then, the image of Pope as
Nazi collaborator has never been allowed to die thanks to the publication
of books like 1999’s Hitler’s
Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII. Regardless of the
wild accusations, Pius worked closely with bishops like the vehemently
anti-Nazi Cardinal Konrad von Preysing and often ordered his bishops
to intercede with secular leaders to bring to an end some of the
more brutal policies being carried out by Nazis and Communists alike.
Protestant
Christians were also hard at work in pre-war Germany trying to prevent
Hitler’s de-Christianization of the German people. Hitler, an occultist
and a supporter of a neo-pagan religion based on the idea of a sacred
German nation of conquering heroes made great pains to drain Christianity
from German culture and took numerous steps like requiring the use
of the word "Yuletide" in place of "Christmas"
and prohibiting any public displays of Christian ceremonial activities.
It was in response to this subjugation of the Christian churches
to the Nazi State that Martin Niemoller formed the "Confessing
Church" which would become the primary Protestant resistance
to Hitler’s regime. In 1934, Niemoller took a delegation to see
Hitler about his attempts to take over the churches. Niemoller personally
admonished Hitler and declared, "you told us that you would
take care of the German people. But as Christians and men of the
church, we too have a responsibility to the German people, laid
upon us by God. Neither you nor anyone else can take that away from
us." Not surprisingly, Niemoller was later tried on trumped
up charges and spent the duration of the war in Dachau where he
was later joined by thousands of fellow ministers, monks, nuns,
and priests, many of whom would not survive.
For
the last twenty centuries, Christians have been ubiquitous in Western
history, and Carroll and Shiflett bring the controversies over slavery,
science, the role of government, the Third Reich and many other
subjects to the reader in an accessible and engaging work intended
for all audiences. The book is most certainly about Christians,
but is not necessarily intended just for Christians. In other words,
it is a genuine attempt to set the historical record straight and
is not simply a feel-good book for Christians. The book also stays
out of interdenominational conflicts and makes no attempts to benefit
Protestants at the expense of Catholics or the other way around.
Credit is simply given where credit is due. Above all, it seems
that the authors want their readers to understand that human history
is a complex thing, and the attempt to oversimplify matters is often
the cause of much anti-Christian bigotry since it is often easier
to simply repeat widely accepted mantras about the sins of Christians
rather than to engage in serious historical inquiry. Nevertheless,
these mantras are repeated time and time again in newspapers, classrooms,
and coffee houses.
Usually
at this point in a book review, it would be apropos to sum up the
arguments made by the authors and attest to their veracity, or lack
thereof. I have had to conclude, however, that this book does not
really offer any theory, per se. This is not necessarily a problem
since the criticisms of Christianity that the authors are addressing
contain no theory either but are simply tired clichés that
have been repeated until people believed them. Carroll and Shiflett
do not claim to be historians, but have contented themselves with
condensing many interesting and valuable bits of information on
the history of Christianity into a single volume. Obviously, the
authors have concluded that Christians receive a bum rap based on
anti-Christian misinformation, but they leave most of the theory
up the historians whom they aggressively quote in this book while
presenting manageable breakdowns of complex subjects. Carroll and
Shiflett’s work is a recognition of the fact that as long as Christians
are held up as the villains of the past, they will continue to be
regarded as the villains of the present. This is an astute observation,
and one that George Orwell endorsed when he observed that those
who control the present control the past, and that those who control
the past control the future.
September
14, 2002
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
is editor of the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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McMaken Archives
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