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Author Kirsch, Jonathan, 1949-

Title God against the gods : the history of the war between monotheism and polytheism / Jonathan Kirsch.

Publication Info. New York : Viking Compass, 2004.

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  BL221 .K57 2004    Available  ---
Description xii, 336 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 315-321) and index.
Contents Prologue: The everlasting fire -- bk. 1. The god that failed: Against all the gods of Egypt : a young pharaoh's experiment in monotheism and why it failed. What did pagans do? : the case against classical paganism, and why it was wrong. Terror and true belief: The Jewish king who reinvented the faith of ancient Israel. Confessors and traitors: pagans and Christians go to war in ancient Rome -- bk. 2. War of God against the gods: "In this sign, conquer": the curious encounter of Christ and Constantine in the struggle for the Roman crown. The harlot in the bishop's bed : the war within the Christian church over the divinity of Christ. The ruler of the whole world : the investion of the totalitarian state by the first Christian Emperor of Rome. The orphans of Macellum : The Christian prince who survived a blood purge and struggled for the restoration of paganism. The secret pagan : Gods, empresses, and Julian's unlikely rise to the imperial throne. "Behold, the rivers are running backwards" : the pagan counterrevolution of the Emperor Julian. The handless scribe : the price of victory of the only true god.
Summary In this ... book, [the author] explores the final struggle between monotheism and polytheism in the ancient world, a war that was fought by a series of charismatic, visionary but also violent monarchs in the name of the One True God - an Egyptian pharaoh, a Jewish king, and two Roman emperors. Contrary to the conventional wisdom of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, the world of classical paganism was not steeped in sin. In fact, [according to the author], religious liberty and diversity were core values of classical paganism, and it was monotheism that introduced the terrors of true belief, including holy war, martyrdom, inquisitions, and crusades.-Dust jacket.
Provenance Gift of Dr. James H. Poivan, Professor of History, Emeritus.
Subject Monotheism -- History.
Monotheism.
History.
Polytheism -- History.
Polytheism.
ISBN 0670032867 alkaline paper
9780670032860 alkaline paper