A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

The triumph of anti-Constantinianism

Over at Faith and Theology there’s a (somewhat tongue-in-cheek) poll on the “worst theological invention.” What’s interesting is not just that only one of the “inventions” is an actual heresy, but that “Christendom” and “just war theory” got enough nominations to make the poll. (Though, in fairness, biblical inerrancy and “the Rapture” are the current leading contenders for worst.)

I say this is interesting not so much to disagree but to wonder at the fact that, at least in certain theological circles, the radical reformation/free church revisionist account of Christian history has triumphed almost completely and with little opposition. The story is that the early church was radically countercultural and pacifist until the conversion of the Emperor Constantine (who didn’t make Christianity the state religion as is sometimes asserted, but did institute religious toleration and opened the door for eventual establishment). From there the story is one of steep decline wherein the church becomes complicit in war, imperialism, crusades, slavery, genocide, you name it, roughly until, well, now. Just war theory is one manifestation of the Christendom’s attitude of compromise toward worldly powers. Granted there are always dissenters upheld as heirs of the true anti-Constantinian gospel such as anabaptists, but the overall picutre is a pretty bleak one. The prescription that usually follows this re-telling of the history is for the church to return to its countercultural roots in order to provide a radical witness against war, capitalism, consumerism, “radical individualism” and other ills of the modern age.

In much of the recent academic theology I’ve read (which is admittedly a limited sample) this story seems to be taken almost for granted. The only major theologian I can think of who has really contested this account is Oliver O’Donovan. But I can’t help but wonder why magisterial Protestants, Catholics, and Orthodox Christians (for whom the Emperor Constantine is in fact a saint) haven’t been more ready to look critically at this anti-Constantinian/anti-Christendom narrative. After all, doesn’t it imply that the church went deeply and radically wrong for pretty much most of its history? What does this imply for the doctrine of providence, for instance? And what does it say about the practice of infant baptism, which seems like it fits better with the quasi-state church model as opposed to the practice of believer’s baptism associate with the free churches? And what about the Christologica dogmas formulated in many cases under the watchful eye of the emperor? Can they still be deemed legitimate?

Again, I’m not saying the revisionist story is out and out false. I’m just not convinced that mainline Christians haven’t been too quick to jump on the anti-Constantinian bandwagon rather than sifting the wheat from the chaff when it comes to the legacy of Christendom.

5 responses to “The triumph of anti-Constantinianism”

  1. I read an interesting story the other day about how Benedict XVI, back when he was a professor of theology, did in fact leave a university precisely because the non-Catholic faculty had gone over to making statements like, “the Cross is a symbol of the triumph of sado-masochism” and things like that.

  2. Oh, and I like how he eliminated some things because of his personal biases. I think it illustrates exactly the problem with theology in mainstream Christianity: surrounding ourselves only with people who share our highly fallible points of view, we imagine infallibility simply because all the sensible people we know agree with us. Hence the air of self-congratulation that pervades academic theology.

  3. I noticed that N.T. Wright mentioned the issue in passing in his denunciation of The Da Vinci Code:

    “And when Constantine, faced with half his empire turning Christian, decided to go with the tide, what was the church supposed to do? Protest that it would be more authentic to remain a beleaguered and persecuted minority? Let comfortable Western Christians think about what the church had suffered under Diocletian in the years immediately before Constantine — and what the church is suffering in many parts of the world today — and ask themselves who has compromised, and with what.”

  4. Actually, estimates I’ve seen of the percentage of the empire that was Christian in Constantine’s time are closer to 10%.

    This fascinating phenom Lee mentioned is by no means only Christian. Buddhists in the West assume that Buddhism, as a/the good religion, has always been anti-state, egalitarian, anti-death penalty, anti-sexist, anti-homophobic, and pacifist, when in historical fact it has been none of those things for essentially all its history in Asia.

    I think we could better approach the problem by asking, 1) why is it that a large body of religious intellectuals have adopted this basket of views; and 2) why has that same body been unwilling to recognize its innovatory character? Why do they insist on linking to the past history of their favored religion?

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