Was the death of Hellenic and Norse paganism a bad thing? (user search)
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  Was the death of Hellenic and Norse paganism a bad thing? (search mode)
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Question: Was the death of Hellenic and Norse paganism a bad thing?
#1
Yes
 
#2
No, its replacement by Christianity was a good thing
 
#3
It was neither a good nor bad thing
 
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Total Voters: 42

Author Topic: Was the death of Hellenic and Norse paganism a bad thing?  (Read 2375 times)
afleitch
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« on: October 27, 2019, 06:46:36 AM »

Hellenism didn't just die. It was destroyed. As was non superstitious Hellenic thought. How it was destroyed (and early and proto Christian sects too) is inherently a bad thing.
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afleitch
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« Reply #1 on: October 27, 2019, 11:34:07 AM »

Hellenism didn't just die. It was destroyed. As was non superstitious Hellenic thought. How it was destroyed (and early and proto Christian sects too) is inherently a bad thing.

Surely you mean "subsumed"?

Not completely. I'm talking about the literal destruction of pagan worship, temples and pagans themselves. From the Edict of Milan which tolerated Christian worship it took only 16 years before Constantine was ordering the destruction of pagan temples.

There were further edicts by Constantius II and persecution under Theodosius (including the first decree that homosexuality was illegal and they were to be burned alive) ending with the absolute prohibition of non-Christian public worship. With Marcian eventually confiscating their property and condemning them to death.

Christianisation was not a morally neutral act that was undertaken at this time. Or in later times. It could be coercive, destructive and persecutory.
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afleitch
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« Reply #2 on: November 18, 2019, 10:53:31 AM »

It's worth noting the position of non-'white' people in the Roman Empire and the Roman understanding of race and skin tone before trying to make Englightenment comparisons. Just putting that out there.
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