[The following is Episode 6 of my 16-part documentary series entitled Larger than Life, about the role that beliefs play in shaping the events of our civilization.]
In
the centuries between 1600 and 1200 B.C., two great conflicts occurred that
would be forever remembered among civilizations and peoples up to modern times,
their sagas being told and retold in dramas, plays, poems, and religious texts
written in many languages, and recited in many lands. The Hebrews, under their leader Moses, would
defeat the powerful Egyptian empire in a bold slave revolt that gave them a new
beginning, and a new destiny. And the
Greeks, led by Agamemnon, Menelaeus, Odysseus, and others, would bring down the
kingdom of Troy , a rival sea power that dared to
offend the honor of their people. But
each of these victories resulted in new challenges, new trials and tribulations
that had to be faced in order to ensure a complete and lasting success. Moses led his people through the desert for
forty years before bringing them to their homeland, and almost none of those
who had left Egypt
with him would live to cross the River Jordan into that land. Odysseus would lead his own men through
strange and hostile waters for ten years before returning to his own homeland
of Ithaca , and,
like Moses, none of those who began the journey in his company would survive to
join him there. Moses was guided and
protected by the desert God of the Hebrews; Odysseus relied upon the support of
the Greek goddess, Athena. And while two
great nations would spring from the victors in these conflicts, Israel and Greece , the losers, too, would
remain to make a mark upon history. Egypt continued
to be a great power for centuries after the Hebrew slave revolt. But the survivors that fled from the ruins of
fallen Troy
would create a new kingdom in a distant land, a kingdom so powerful that it
would rise to conquer the Greeks, the Israelites, and the Egyptians alike. The name of this new empire, mightier than
any that had risen before it, was Rome .
According to Roman legend, it was
Aeneas, a prince of Troy ’s
royal family, who founded its kingdom.
Aeneas, like the Greek hero Achilles, had a mortal father and a goddess
for a mother. His mother was none other
than Aphrodite, one of the principal goddesses of the Greek and Trojan
pantheon. Aeneas had fought bravely in
the Trojan War, but after the fall of Troy ,
as the invading Greek armies ransacked the city, he fled with his son and aged
father. Like Odysseus, and Moses, Aeneas
and his comrades endured much wandering before arriving at what would become
their home, on the shores of Italy ,
and like these other two heroes, he faced conflict with hostile adversaries
even after he arrived. After defeating
his principal enemy, a native king, Aeneas married the daughter of another
king, of Latium ,
and through her fathered the Roman race.
Rome itself was believed to have been
founded centuries later, in 753 B.C., by Romulus
and Remus, twin sons of the virgin princess Rhea Silvia, a descendent of
Aeneas. Her father had been a king, who
had been deposed by his evil younger brother Amulius. Amulius had tried to eliminate any future
rivals by forcing Rhea, the king’s only daughter, to become a priestess, but
when she fathered twin sons with the god Mars, Amulius was forced to resort to
more desperate measures. He tried to
have his infant nephews murdered by having them thrown in a basket into the Tiber River . The boys were saved, nursed, and protected by
a she-wolf, until they were discovered by a shepherd and brought up by his
wife. When they reached manhood, they
confronted and overpowered their evil uncle, and restored the throne to their
grandfather. The brothers then left to
found a new city of their own, Rome ,
and after the death of Remus, Romulus
became its sole ruler. And according to
legend, Romulus
was eventually carried up to heaven by his father, the god Mars, and was
himself worshiped as a god by later generations.
Romulus and Remus Reared by a She-Wolf |
Seven kings ruled Rome
over a period of about two and half centuries, beginning with the legendary Romulus and ending with
Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, a tyrant who was overthrown in 510 B.C. After this revolution, the Romans began a
social experiment that would result in one of the most memorable and glorious
ages in history, the rise of the republic.
In a previous episode, we encountered similar experiments that had been
undertaken by the Greeks, in Athens , Sparta , and other
city-states. Solon and other reformers
had established democracy, or rule by the people, as the form of government for
Athens . Now one very interesting question – but one
that is very rarely asked, even today . . . especially today – is what the
difference is between a democracy and a republic. We Americans have a Democrat Party and a
Republican Party, and may believe that they are fundamentally – or at least
superficially – different in their philosophies and platforms, but most of us
don’t see a particular link between the name “Democrat” or “Republican” and
what makes each party stand for what it does.
Are these merely different names for the same thing? “Democracy” means, in its literal translation
from the Greek, “rule by the people”, while “republic”, on the other hand,
literally translated from its Latin roots means, “the public thing”. The Greek philosopher Plato wrote a classic
book on politics, the title of which is generally translated into English as
“The Republic.” Ironically, in this
book, Plato suggests that the most perfect form of government would not be one
ruled by the people, or a democracy as his fellow Athenians knew it, but rather
one ruled by those most capable of leading – a kind of dominant caste made up
of “philosopher-kings”.
The Roman Senate |
Whether the Romans had
something like Plato’s ideal in mind when they created their “republic” is not
clear – probably the most important thing on their minds at the time was to
prevent the rise of future tyrants like the one they just deposed. We’ll see in a moment that if this was their
goal it was eventually doomed to fail, but not before the republic produced
centuries of greatness for Rome . In place of a king, the new republic was
headed by two chief executives - or consuls, as they were eventually called -
that were chosen annually by their peers.
The two leaders were advised by a council of elders, known as the
senate, an institution that had survived from the earlier age of kings. While the formal power of the senate was
limited, its members held office for life, and their advice was highly
respected. But while this new form of
government was more democratic than the one that had been overthrown, in its
earliest years its effectiveness was marred by a deep social division that had
existed among the Romans for centuries.
There were two classes of free citizens in Rome : patricians and plebeians. The patricians, aristocratic land-holders,
enjoyed both wealth and privilege, while the plebeians rarely had wealth, and
were completely excluded from participating in political affairs. This eventually led to violent dissension
between the two classes, until the plebeians successfully gained rights and
privileges comparable to the patricians.
In part because of this struggle, new offices were created that
exercised special powers in the government, including two quaestors to help the
consuls manage financial affairs, two censors responsible for overseeing moral
issues, and a number of tribunes whose function was to protect and represent
the rights and interests of the plebeians.
In 445 B.C., intermarriage between patricians and plebeians was
recognized by law, and in 367 B.C., Rome ’s
highest office, the consulship, was opened to the plebeian class. Within the next one hundred years, the
political distinctions between the two classes had all but disappeared, and the
republic became truly democratic. And
yet, while these formal class distinctions disappeared, there continued to be a
conspicuous rift between rich aristocrats, who could now be found among both
patricians and plebeians, and the poorer general population, who came to be
known as the populares. This growing gap
between rich and poor would contribute to the eventual downfall of the Roman
republic.
Hannibal's Army |
Marius and his Republican Legion |
By the time of Sulla’s
death, the Roman republic had become a sham, and the government was under the
control of the powerful, whether this power came from military might, wealth,
or the ability to sway the masses. In 59
B.C., might, wealth, and ingenuity were each personified in three men who
together would rule Rome as a triumvirate: Pompey the Great, renowned for
clearing the Mediterranean Sea of pirates and for his conquests of lands in the
east, including Syria and Judea, Crassus, an immensely wealthy man who gained
his fame in putting down a slave rebellion led by the gladiator Spartacus, and
a young, ambitious, clever, and immensely popular politician named Julius
Caesar. These three continued to pretend
that they were lawfully holding political office, first with Caesar serving as
consul, and later Pompey and Crassus, and each, when not in Rome , having military commands over foreign
provinces, at the head of large armies.
Caesar used his army with great success, conquering the land of the
Gauls, in Western Europe , but Crassus proved
to be less skillful in managing an army than he was in managing his
wealth. In a military campaign against
the Parthians, in the east, his army was badly defeated, and Crassus was
killed. The alliance between Caesar and
Pompey, which had always been an uneasy one, now broke down. When the Roman senate, under Pompey’s
leadership as sole consul, ordered Caesar to either disband his armies or be
declared a public enemy, Caesar turned his armies toward Rome , crossing a small stream called the
Rubicon that had been the lawful boundary of his province, while uttering that
immortal line, “The die is cast”. In
addition to the great military skill that he had acquired during his wars in
Gaul, Caesar still had the wiles of a clever politician, and as his armies
advanced through Italy ,
the moderation that he showed to all who fell under their sway won him new allies. Entire legions of soldiers joined his cause,
and many cities willingly opened their gates upon his approach. When the two opposing armies joined in battle
on the plains of Pharsalus , in eastern Greece , Pompey’s armies were crushed, and Pompey
himself fled to Egypt ,
with Caesar in pursuit. Pompey died in Egypt , but at
the hands of an assassin, not Caesar’s, leaving Caesar as the uncrowned king of
the Roman world.
Julius Caesar |
The rest of Caesar’s story, of his
romance with Cleopatra, his death at the hands of Brutus, Cassius, and other
senators, and the avenging of his murder by Marc Antony, his friend, Marcus
Lepidus, a former lieutenant, and Gaius Octavius, his grand-nephew, is well
chronicled in the histories and dramas of later centuries. During the short time that he had ruled, he
had been a benevolent dictator, perhaps even an enlightened one, but his rule
did seal the doom of the Roman
Republic . The new governing triumvirate of Antony , Lepidus, and
Octavius would also break down, and in its wake only one man would remain to
hold the reins of power. This was
Caesar’s nephew Octavius, later given the honorary title of Augustus by a
senate that still pretended to hold the reigns of power over an imaginary
republic. Augustus Caesar also
maintained this fiction, allowing all of the old republican offices to remain,
but tacitly keeping all of the most important powers to himself. He called himself “Imperator” – or “emperor”
in our language - but in his time the word was much less ostentatious – or
odious - meaning only that he was
commander-in-chief of all of Rome ’s
legions. Nevertheless, it was indeed an
empire that Augustus and his successors controlled – a world empire that
included Greece , Egypt , Europe, and a tiny province named Judea . And it was
during Augustus’s reign that a child would be born in Judea
who would be destined to create a world empire of his own.
At first, life under Roman rule was
peaceful and not oppressive. Even as it
moved into its imperial phase of government, the Roman attitude towards
religion continued to be one of qualified toleration. Its subjects could freely worship any god of
their choice and practice any form of religious worship, whether the religion
was one that had been established in their native land, or one that was
encountered either in or beyond the empire’s borders after joining the Roman
family of nations. In fact, in the Roman Empire there was a proliferation of gods,
goddesses, cults, and religious practices that came from many different
nations, and spread throughout the land with the movements of the peoples that
practiced them. Even the Romans
themselves fell under the sway of a foreign religion – that of the Greeks – and
came to identify their traditional gods with deities in the Greek
pantheon. The Roman goddess Juno was
identified with Hera, Rome ’s
Jupiter with Zeus, Mars with Ares, and so on.
Mystery cults, originating from Greece ,
Persia ,
and other lands, also flourished. The
empire was literally a marketplace of religious ideas. Rome ’s
attitude of toleration was only abandoned if it was perceived that the
practitioners of a religion posed a threat to the established order. And it was here that the Judeans eventually
ran into trouble with its conquerors.
Crassus Plundering the Temple |
And it was in the midst of
these troubled times that Jesus of Nazareth was born, that central figure of
the Christian faith, who would spend his short life preaching, healing the
sick, and gathering a band of devoted followers who would carry on his
inspiring message of hope, redemption, and universal love long after he had
departed. We are of course back once
again in uncomfortable territory as we attempt to look at the origins and
influence of Christianity with the eye of an impartial and detached observer,
because Christianity continues to be a dominant force in our culture and
civilization, and has been for nearly two thousand years. But just as we did with the Jewish Tanakh (Christian Old Testament), we
have to say from the start that the Christian New Testament, in the version that survives
today, is not without its contradictions and inconsistencies. We are provided, for example, with two
genealogies of Jesus, one from the gospel of Matthew, the other from the gospel
of Luke, which are supposed to demonstrate that he is a direct descendant of
King David, in accordance with earlier biblical prophecies about the Messiah. And while the thoroughness of these
genealogies is not unimpressive – the one in Luke traces Jesus’ ancestry all
the way back to Adam – they are inconsistent with each other. Even worse, they trace the link to King David
through Joseph, but as the gospels tell us, Joseph was not even Jesus' actual
father. The accounts of his birth in
Matthew and Luke also differ in the details.
In Matthew’s version, Joseph and Mary flee to Egypt ,
after Joseph is warned in a vision that Herod intends to kill the child, but
according to Luke, the couple returned directly to Nazareth , where the child was brought
up. But when it is remembered that the
earliest gospel was probably written forty years after Jesus’ crucifixion, we
can perhaps forgive some discrepancies in the tales of his life.
Jesus Giving the Sermon on the Mount |
|
Missionary Journeys of St. Paul
Paul had been born outside of Judea, in the city of
St. Paul Preaching at Athens |
But if it had been a conscious
decision of Paul’s followers to try to secure the existence of the new movement
by distancing themselves from the Jews, the result was less than successful,
and would lead to terrible consequences.
In the eyes of the Romans, the early Christians were just another Jewish
sect, and their leader, Jesus, a claimant to a crown that could only be
perceived as subversive to the empire.
Only Caesar was the supreme ruler, and there could be no king of Judea who was not Caesar’s vassal. The fact that Jesus’ brother, James, became
his successor in the new movement must have made it seem even more obvious to
the Romans that this was an attempt to create a new dynasty, a line of kings
linked by a common family. According to
early church history, after James’s death the Romans systematically hunted down
and killed every known relative of Jesus.
Clearly, this was no idle threat to them. Meanwhile, Jerusalem fell to Roman armies, and its
temple was destroyed. While members of
the new Christian faith were persecuted and martyred throughout the empire,
within Palestine ,
the Judeans would once again see a foreign power attempt to destroy their
national identity, as Roman legions decimated the land, and crushed the last
remnants of revolt. Both Jews and
Christians would survive, and their respective faiths would evolve and develop
in the crucible of persecution and social ostracism. But for the Christians, the struggle would
end in 313 AD, when a Roman emperor, Constantine would choose the Christian
cross as his standard of battle, and accept the Christian faith as his
religion. Within a few generations,
Christianity would become permanently established as the official religion of Rome . And Rome ’s
emperors would be just as thorough and unforgiving in rooting out the perceived
enemies or rivals of Christianity, as it had been centuries earlier in trying
to root out the Christians themselves.
The Christian religion now had a church hierarchy, and an official canon
of books to make up its own bible. And
by this time, any negative reference in these books to the Romans, or Roman
leadership, or the abuses of the empire, had been removed. In its place, a new villain, a new enemy had
been inserted, the Jewish scribes, Pharisees and high priests, and, by
implication, the Jews themselves. Moses
had created a new religion by leading a revolt against the Egyptian Empire;
Christianity had secured a permanent existence not by revolting against, but by
enduring the Roman Empire , and through its
endurance, conquering it. Yet for the
Christians, this new Promised Land would be a blessing and a curse. For the many that followed the simple
teachings of Jesus, and the inspired verses of Paul, faith, hope, charity and a
vision of a universal brotherhood realized itself in the families, farms and
simple villages that abounded with the faithful. On the other hand, the new power of the
church gave free reign to the ambitious, the prejudiced, the hateful, and the
ignorant, allowing them to persecute with an unbridled violence those who they
branded as enemies of the elect: the pagan practitioners of the old Greek and
Roman faiths, the Christian heretics, and the Jews. But while Rome ’s power was great, it was not unlimited. At the reaches of its territory, a new power
was growing in strength, threatening to bring down the empire itself. These were the Germans: the Goths, Vandals,
Franks, and Saxons. And in a remote
island at the fringes of the empire, a Celtic chieftain, loyal to Rome , would find fame and
immortality in taking a last stand against the German onslaught. His name was Arthur.
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