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Christianity or
Mithraism
Mercian
Order of St.George
It is surprising that
Christianity was to become the international religion, when one
considers that the already well-established religion of Mithraism was a
natural challenger for that title. Up until the time of the Emperor
Constantine, it was the latter religion which was more popular within
the framework of the Roman Empire, and Christianity was regarded as
being only one sect amongst numerous other sects. It was only when
Constantine decreed that Christianity was to be the state religion, that
Mithraism, together with a host of other religions and sects, was put
into the melting pot, and ideas of that religion, most suited for the
Christian purpose, were absorbed into the new state-approved religion.
Mithraism, the religion followed by those
who worshipped the sun god Mithra, originated in Persia about 400 BC,
and was to spread its Pagan ideas as far west as the British Isles. In
the early centuries of the Christian era, Mithraism was the most
wide-spread religion in the Western World, and its remains are to be
found in monuments scattered around the countries of Europe, which then
comprised the known civilised world.
Mithra was regarded as created by, yet
co-equal with, the Supreme Deity. Mithraists were Trinitarian, kept
Sunday as their day of worship, and their chief festivals were what we
know of as Christmas and Easter. Long before the advent of Jesus, Mithra
was said to have been born of a virgin mother, in a cave, at the time of
Christmas, and died on a cross at Easter. Baptism was practised, and the
sign of the cross was made on the foreheads of all newly-baptised
converts. Mithra was considered to be the saviour of the world,
conferring on his followers an eternal life in Heaven, and, similar to
the story of Jesus, he died to save all others, provided that they were
his followers.
For three centuries both religions ran
parallel, Mithraism first becoming known to the Romans in 70 BC,
Christianity following a century later, and it wasn’t until AD 377
that Christianity became sufficiently strong to suppress its former
rival, although Mithraism was to remain a formidable opponent for some
time after that, only slowly being forsaken by the people. It was only
the absorption of many Mithraist ideas into Christianity which finally
saw its downfall.
The big turning point was brought about by
the Congress of Nicaea in AD 325. Constantine, a great supporter of the
Christian religion, although not converting to it until the time of his
decease, gathered together 2,000 leading figures in the world of
theology, the idea being to bring about the advent of Christianity as
the official state religion of Rome. It was out of this assembly that
Jesus was formally declared to be the Son of God, and Saviour of
Mankind, another slain saviour god, bringing up the tally of slain
god-men to seventeen, of which Mithra, together with such men as Bel and
Osiris, was included.
Just as Nicaea can be regarded as the
birthplace of Christianity, so too it can be regarded as the graveyard
of what we imagine Jesus taught. From that time onwards, Christianity
was to absorb the superstitions of Mithraism, and many other older
religions, and what was believed to have happened to earlier saviour
gods, was made to centre around the Nazarene. The coming of Christianity
under state control was to preserve it as a religion, and was the death
knell of all other sects and cults within the Roman Empire.
Had Constantine decided to retain Mithraism
as the official state religion, instead of putting Christianity in its
place, it would have been the latter that would have been obliterated.
To Constantine however, Christianity had one great advantage, it
preached that repentant sinners would be forgiven their sins, provided
that they were converted Christians at the time of their Passing, and
Constantine had much to be forgiven for, He personally did not convert
to the new religion until he was on his death bed, the reason being that
only sins committed following conversion were accountable, so all sins
committed by a convert, prior to conversion, didn’t matter, and he
could hardly have sinned too much whilst he was lying on his death bed.
Mithraism could not offer the same comfort to a man like Constantine,
who was regarded as being one of the worst mass-murderers of his time.
The Emperor Julian, who followed
Constantine, went back to Mithraism, but his short reign of only two
years could not change what Constantine had decreed. His defeat, and
death, at the hands of the Persians, was used by the Christians as an
argument in favour of the new, against the old, being looked upon as an
omen that Christianity had divine approval. If Julian had been spared to
reign some years longer, the entire history of international religion
would almost certainly have been different.
Under Emperor Jovian, who followed Julian,
the substitution of Christianity for Mithraism made further progress,
and old Pagan beliefs, like the Virgin Birth, Baptism and Holy Trinity,
became generally accepted as the basis of the state religion. The early
Christian idea of Unitarianism was quickly squashed in favour of
Trinitarianism, and those who refused to accept the Holy Trinity were
put to the sword, the beginning of mass slaughter in the name of
religion, which was to go on for centuries.
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