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The Myth of Persecution: How Early Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom Hardcover – March 5, 2013

3.4 out of 5 stars 106 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: HarperOne (March 5, 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0062104527
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062104526
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 1 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (106 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #347,439 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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268 of 347 people found the following review helpful By elena maria vidal on March 25, 2013
Format: Hardcover
"Te Martyrum candidatus laudat exercitus." ~from the Te Deum

When I wrote to Dr. Moss requesting her latest work The Myth of Persecution, I received a prompt and gracious reply assuring me of a copy. Dr. Moss hoped that I would not see the book as an attack upon the Church. I responded that I did not see the book as an attack on the Church and even if it was, the Church has been through worse. We have nothing to fear from the truth of history.

After reading the book my reply is not altered. It is a well-written book with clear explanations indicative of a skilled teacher. However, I recommend Myth to others with reservations, since in spite of the genuine scholarship which Dr. Moss shares with us, there is a contemporary political slant given to the narrative which clouds the objectivity of how the historical evidence is presented. For instance, my cognitive processes are strained to envision St. Justin Martyr (pp. 109-112) and Glenn Beck (p. 250) as confreres in a long battle of paranoid right-wing true believers to demonize the opposition. And the whys and wherefores of the legend of Saints Chrysthanus and Daria (pp. 83-88) are intriguing enough without dragging Ann Coulter into the mix. (p. 255)

The main premise of Myth of Persecution is that the early Christians, and those generations who followed immediately after them, exaggerated the Roman punishment of those who refused to comply with the laws of the Empire. (p. 16) Dr. Moss claims that the Christians made it appear that they suffered one long relentless persecution for over three hundred years, which made them see themselves as victims and everyone else as the enemy. (pp.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful By Sceptique500 on October 4, 2015
Format: Kindle Edition
On p. 256 the author sums up her argument: “…I’ve argued that the view of the church as continually and unrelentingly persecuted throughout history is a myth, a myth that was solidified after the conversion of the Emperor Constantine for the purposes of retelling the history of Christianity, supporting the authority of bishops, financing religious buildings, and marginalizing the view of heretics.”

From the (negative) reviews I’ve perused on Amazon, I take it that much of the discussion has centered on the “facts” of persecution. Now, it is interesting that the same people arguing facts here might refuse to discuss facts in evolution - but this certainly is a disingenuous and invidious comment on my part.

The author argues, quite modestly, that we cannot decide the facts (one fact can hide another, and most relevant facts are in any case hidden if not obliterated). While the real facts may be beyond our reach, we might aver a plausible reconstruction of the intent of those who wrote down the “facts” well after the fact. Their intentions were not innocent, the author surmises – they followed a recognizable agenda of control of the narrative.

I find the insight that we can recover agendas long buried in texts quite sensible. It is at first counter-intuitive: how can we, in ignorance of “all the facts,” move on to “intent,” which by definition is hidden in one’s soul? While historical facts are infinite, the author argues, the rhetorical devices to which we harness them are relatively few. I would concur. As descendants of apes, our minds are simple vehicles. People have learned to manipulate our illusions early on (psychologists are catching on and systematizing the techniques – it is called marketing). This is so easy - the methods have hardly changed over time.
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By Michel McGervey on September 9, 2015
Format: Kindle Edition
Liked the logical and thorough documented presentation of the concepts presented. The frequent reference to accepted sources adds credibility to the conclusions derived. Would like to see a contrary opinion without circular arguments be as well substantiated.
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By Patrik N on September 12, 2015
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Great book that stripes Christian religions naked of their cloak of innocence and "holier-than-thou" aura.

Very lightweight and easy to read.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful By Mando44646 on September 11, 2015
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Fantastic introduction and discussion of this topic. As someone who loved early Roman history, I was already very familiar with much of the content, though no one had ever before collected it together into a form that an average reader could read and enjoy. The Christian persecution complex is a very important historical/cultural issue that still has ramifications today, especially as the Religious Right appeals to mythology and tales in order to somehow prove that the mean gays, and atheists, and liberals, and Muslims, and whoever else, are persecuting them and being mean to them.
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19 of 31 people found the following review helpful By P. Woodland on March 25, 2013
Format: Hardcover
I am by no means any manner of religious/Biblical expert. I do have a fascination for the study of religions and their histories. I was baptized Catholic and for my first 6 years of school I had a Catholic education. My commentary on this book might offend some but religion is one of those divisive topics.

I found Ms. Moss's writing style to be very easy to read and the book was well laid out. I especially found the section on the etymology of the word martyr to be fascinating. I love learning how words come to mean what they do.

Many of the stories of the martyrs were part of my religious education at school; we were all taught of the glory of dying for your belief in God. Instant ride to heaven, that! In fact I still remember the fear - I grew up in Philadelphia in a time when the city was having crime issues and "motorcycle gangs" (according to the nuns anyway) were running rampant. If one of these evil types were to invade the school and ask us to renounce our God we were to die rather than do so. I'm not kidding. This is what went through the nuns' heads and what they passed on to us. I only went through sixth grade so I could not have been that old. And people wonder why I have no religion....

But I digress.

Although the above anecdote does prove the power of the martyr legend. But back to the book. Ms. Moss goes through the history of Christianity and of the more famous martyrs. The facts are presented in a straightforward manner with her various positions in support of her topic. I found it fascinating. To me organized religion is more about consolidation of power than anything else so I would expect that the Romans or any other power base would see a growing "cult" as a threat.
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