Quote from: Octavianus on September 23, 2010, 06:57:25 PM
Eventually the Christians would prevail. Some say it was because "it is true", but there are other possibilities.
This is where I have my problem.
If early Christianity survived because it was more attractive than the other religions of the time, what had seeming disappeared by the 19th century that it was dubbed a slave religion?
I make this point because I can't really find a lot to argue against in Neitzche's assertion. The dogma of most Christian groups, especially in the 19th century, did indeed encourage acceptance. Such resistance to this notion, for example, Marx, continue to be the subject of attacks from many Christian groups. Modern medicine, which began in the early 19th century, of course, did offer some promise of relief in the immediate term, yet somehow managed to avoid the same fate as Marxism.
I appreciate your illustration of the decline around the 3rd century onward. I also appreciate your descriptions of the refusal of early Christians to pay tribute to the emporer and the reasons for the Roman's intolerance to this. These matters are emphasised by historical record and fit well into what can be expected of human behaviour.
But there remains the question, what was so attractive with early Christianity that so many were prepared to identify with it and not any other cult, of which there were many?
If I may contruct an alegory. There's a resturant offering free food. Everyone goes to that resturant and others go out of business.
Many years later, people are still going to that resturant, though it no longer offers any food.
There were many rebellions against Roman rule. In almost every case, the sources of these died out. I appreciate Judaism didn't but there are many other factors.
Yet this single cult survived. Not only survived, but was eventually nationalised by the Romans and adopted in place of all others.
Yet today, such is the mystery of whatever this was, that we are even now arguing over 'lost gospels' and other conspiracies.