From:

http://www.latimes.com/news/state/20000902/t000082401.html


A WORLD FULL OF GODS, The Strange Triumph of Christianity

By Keith Hopkins


By JONATHAN KIRSCH, Special to The Times


     Now and then, a certain playfulness can be found in
otherwise sober works of biblical history and commentary, but "A
World Full of Gods" is downright zany. Keith Hopkins, a professor
of ancient history at Cambridge, breaks out of the customary
restraints of academic scholarship to conjure up what it was like
to live in the world in which Christianity competed with Judaism
and a whole pantheon of pagan gods and goddesses. The result is
an intellectual tour de force--"a triple helix of multicolored
and interwoven strands," as Hopkins puts it--that challenges us
to see the history of Christianity through the eyes of those who
actually lived it.

     Hopkins' goal is to put us in touch with what he calls
"empathetic wonder"--"we have to imagine what Romans, pagans,
Jews and Christians thought, felt, experienced, believed"--and,
to do so, he insists on adopting a mind-boggling array of
literary devices, including the first-person testimony of a pair
of time travelers who visit ancient Rome, a TV drama set in the
Essene community at Qumran where the Dead Sea Scrolls were
written, a meditation on Jesus' apocryphal twin brother, a lively
exchange of correspondence between the author and various
colleagues and critics, and much more.

     Along the way, Hopkins succeeds in evoking the sights and
sounds of the ancient world with daring and imagination. For
example, his time travelers, dubbed Martha and James, describe
the smell of burning human flesh on a funeral pyre in Pompeii,
the fine points of buying and selling slaves ("Just like used
cars," they say), the sexual adventures that might enliven a
visit to a Roman bath and a spirited session of goddess-worship
devoted to Isis.  Now and then, he allows his characters to
engage in thoroughly modern (and sometimes thoroughly mundane)
banter with each other.

     "I'd kill for a coffee," says Martha, exhausted by the
exertions of slave-shopping.

     "You'll have to do with some bread and goat's milk," James
replies.

     The original custodians of the Dead Sea Scrolls, whom
Hopkins describes as "the intense devotee core" of the ascetic
sect known as the Essenes, are depicted with the same wry
intimacy. We learn, for example, that members of the community
"were not allowed to spit, interrupt, dress badly, guffaw
foolishly, gesture with the left hand . . . or defecate on the
Sabbath," a rule that was enforced by the simple expedient of
setting up the latrines "beyond the maximum distance which an
observant Jew could walk on the Sabbath." To explain how the
messianic expectations of the Essenes differed from those of the
early Christians, Hopkins offers us the script for a television
program in which the characters include not only the Essenes but
also someone called Bob, who is described both as a TV director
and as God.

     What drives Hopkins to all of these exertions and
contortions is his conviction that conventional histories of
religion do not adequately convey the richness or the diversity
of the ancient world--they do not allow us to fully appreciate
how remarkable it is that Christianity managed to survive and
prevail against the rival faiths of antiquity.

     Hopkins insists, for example, that no single textbook
definition can sum up the beliefs of early Christianity: "Perhaps
'Christianities' would reflect its diversity better," offers
Hopkins. He concedes that Jesus may be approached as a man of
flesh and blood--"The real Jesus was a Jew, the leader of a
radical revisionist movement within Judaism"--but he is
ultimately less interested in the historical Jesus than the
transcendental one. "Like the sacred heroes of other great
religions," he insists, "he is a mirage, an image in believers'
minds, shaped but not confined by the images projected in the
canonical gospels."

     The unlikely success of Christianity, according to Hopkins,
can be explained by the very fact that Jesus was the focus of
such controversy among early Christians. "Religions create, and
thrive on, passionate commitment and passionate conflicts," he
argues. "And early Christians disagreed fervently among
themselves as to whether Jesus was wholly divine, or wholly
human, or a subtle mixture of human and divine."

     "A World Full of Gods" is charged with high spirits and
bawdy humor, and the experience of reading it is often
phantasmagoric and even psychedelic.  But Hopkins is utterly
earnest in his goals as a teacher. He wants us to understand that
"ancient Christians constructed many Jesuses, as modern believers
still do," and he seeks to share with us "the tension and the
excitement" that he experiences when encountering both the myths
and the realities that helped to turn the first courageous
followers of Jesus into the founders of a new faith.


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   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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