Candida Moss, The Myth
of Persecution: How Early Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom. New York, NY: HarperOne, 2013. 308 pages. $25.99.
If the person who wrote the publicity materials that accompanied
The Myth of Persecution: How Early
Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom wanted to provoke readers, the
strategy worked. The lede asserted, “It’s widely accepted that the history
of Christianity is steeped in martyrdom. Jesus died on the cross. Most of his
Apostles met gory and untimely ends. Many of his early followers were
relentlessly and gruesomely persecuted for their beliefs. But what if this
history is false? What if many of these stories were systematically
exaggerated, forged, and fabricated?” If ever an antecedent mattered, the “this
history” is such an instance. The reader assumes that the book will argue that
Jesus didn’t die on the cross and that most of his apostles did not meet
untimely ends.
The book’s
author, Candida Moss (PhD, Yale), Professor of New Testament and Early
Christianity at Notre Dame and author of a number of works on martyrdom, argues
neither. Rather, in her book’s eight chapters—which come with an introduction,
generous footnotes, and an index—she looks only at early Christian stories of
persecution. These she analyzes with the eye of a critical historian seeking to
determine what “really” happened. In doing so she sets out to convince her
reader that the writers of persecution stories fabricated, altered, and
embellished their narratives. Interestingly, she never argues that they
“invented them.” And Moss makes her case in order to call contemporary
Christians to avoid thinking of themselves as having always been persecuted.
She believes this history prevents them from engaging in dialogue with and
finding common ground with opponents, particularly in the political arena.
In her
first chapter, “Martyrdom Before Christianity,” Moss tells a story about how
she questioned the events of Jesus’ suffering and death as a young student in a
religious studies class. Her teacher appealed to Jesus’ followers’ willingness to
suffer and die as evidence for the veracity of their claims. This appeal Moss
interprets as her teacher asserting a commonly held belief (in the author’s
mind) that only Christians have ever died for their beliefs. Thus, Moss devotes
her first chapter to arguing that Christians did not invent the idea of
martyrdom (25). But it seems to this reader that she misunderstood her
teacher’s logic—or at least the logic of those who appeal to the disciples’
martyrdom as validating the historical events of Christianity. It seems more
likely that the apologetic logic goes like this: if the disciples fabricated a lie about the resurrection, surely at least one of them would have confessed tothe lie in order to save his own life in the face of death. Jesus’ and the
disciples’ martyrdom suggested they truly believed the story about which they
gave witness—not that they were the only ones who had ever died for their
beliefs. What follows in Moss’s book, then, feels like a straw man. She describes
noble deaths from the Trojan War to Socrates to The Maccabees to support her
assertion that people other than Christians have died for causes in which they
believed and that Christians even “adopted, borrowed, and even directly copied
from these other traditions” (53).
The idea of
unoriginal work forms the basis for her next chapter, “Borrowing of Jewish and
Pagan Traditions.” Moss reveals her theological presuppositions in statements
such as, “These sorts of theological discrepancies can be quite alarming for
anyone who views the Bible as inerrant” (56). No. They aren’t. And her view
of the text affects her understanding of its origins. After arguing that Luke did
“heavy-handed editorial work” when borrowing Jesus’ death account from Mark, she
makes the outlandish assertion, “Every time someone is referred to or described
as dying like Christ they are actually dying like Socrates and the Maccabees”
(62). Even if Luke crafted his narrative to emphasize ways in which Jesus was
the ultimate philosopher, one must not necessarily see Luke’s doing so as disingenuous as Moss seems to do.
In the author’s third chapter,
“Inventing Martyrs in Early Christianity,” Moss gets to the subject her title
raises. And the very assertion that early Christians “invented” stories she fails to
support. Rather, she concludes, “None of the early Christian martyrdom stories
is completely historically accurate. Even if portions of the accounts are
possible and even probable, we can’t be sure that they provide us with accurate
information” (124). The complete accuracy of martyrdom stories is an altogether
different subject from the “invention” of them, and one of somewhat less
importance to the Christian practice of Protestants than Roman Catholics. Although Moss
has argued that in seeking to debunk the ancient stories, “it’s unfair” indeed
“anachronistic” to “hold ancient writers to modern standards of history
writing” (93), she goes on to do precisely that. Nevertheless, she concludes her
look at embellished stories with the assurance that the presence of alterations
“does not mean, however, that there were no martyrs at all or that Christians
never died. It is clear that some people were cruelly tortured and brutally
executed for reasons that strike us as profoundly unjust. The question is how
many” (125). But indeed, the question is not how many. The question this author
has raised in her very title is whether Christians, in fact, “invented” the
story of martyrdom. The word “invented” suggests they made them all up, or
created them. And she herself demonstrates that Christians did not, in fact,
invent such stories. Martyrdom did happen and it continues to take place with
alarming frequency.
In chapter four, “How Persecuted
Were the Early Christians?” Moss concludes that readers should not “underestimate
the reality” of persecution (160). This seems to contradict her premise. She
even concedes that the earliest Christians were, in fact, tortured and executed
in appalling ways. But she challenges the idea that these Christians endured
sustained persecution on an imperial or
provincial level. While her argumentation about the realities for Christians
under Roman rule might prove a helpful corrective, she has so thoroughly downplayed
those times when Christians actually did die due to active imperial measures
that she makes it difficult for the reader to trust her. Also, although one can
concede to a difference in degree between a law that prohibits a Christian from
holding office and letting lions devour them, Moss refuses to concede that the
former constitutes a form of persecution. Since the imperial government did not
target Christians for a sustained
period, early Christians, she seems to think, hardly endured difficulty on
account of their faith. Additionally, her subtitle asserts that the early
Christians themselves invented their story of martyrdom. But in this chapter she
argues that the stories were written later than was previously thought and
altered or embellished even later. The “early” Christians invented nothing.
In “Why Did the Romans Dislike
Christians?” Moss argues that the reputation of
Christians in the Roman world was that of recluses who refused to swear oaths
and serve in the military. Consequently, their beliefs sometimes led to execution,
as would the actions of anyone failing to perform a civic duty. Such
killings Moss separates from persecution. But if one defines persecution as
suffering for one’s religious beliefs, this reader would argue that their
experience would most certainly qualify both as persecution and even martyrdom.
So what if the government did not target Christians specifically in such cases?
Moss has built her case that
Christians have exaggerated their history of enduring government opposition by
limiting what experiences qualify as persecution and martyrdom. She concludes
that, except for the climax of the Great Persecution in the early fourth
century, nothing in the Roman treatment of early Christians “fits with the
commonly held myth of Christian martyrdom” (187). Interestingly, the Great
Persecution receives little attention. But if one argues that Christians
fabricated the story of their own persecution, doesn’t the reality of a “Great
Persecution” deserve a full chapter? She seems to gloss over whatever seems to
contradict her argument.
In “Myths
about Martyrs,” the author builds a straw man about motivations for enduring
martyrdom. Moss asserts that Christians have relied on God’s judgment and
revenge to vindicate them in another world, a mentality she perceives as wrong.
But throughout the New Testament believers find teachings that instruct them to
leave revenge to the just judge. Indeed, a biblical motivation for refraining
from taking one’s own revenge is trust in God’s ability to ultimately right all
wrongs (Rom 12.19).
Moss also criticizes Christians for
considering their own martyrs as superior to other types of martyrs because they
seemingly believe their own have more noble motivations. She challenges the
idea that “they do not have any interest in or expectation of reward in the
hereafter” (213)—a belief about martyrs that she criticizes as overly
simplistic. But one wonders if the myth she seeks to debunk actually exists.
Trust in a future when a believer will hear “well done” and receive rewards is taught
as a noble motivation in the Gospels and 1 Peter, among other places. The
Christian expectation of heavenly reward helps them endure, in fact. Jesus even mentions reward as a motivation for enduring (Matt 5.11).
In Moss’s final two chapters she finally arrives at a subject that seems to have motivated her arguments. In “The Invention
of the Persecuted Church,” she asserts that persecution stories currently serve
as a way to marginalize others and attack those who oppose Christians’ opinions.
Yet while some may attack others who disagree, it seems to this writer that the
persecution stories more often remind believers that this world will never
applaud Christian sexual ethics. And this world will never be their “home,”
because God has called Christ-followers, members of another kingdom, to serve on
earth as ambassadors. And what believers experience when others oppose them is
nothing new or strange.
In “The
Dangerous Legacy of the Martyrdom Complex,” Moss criticizes those on the
Christian Right for using the religious rhetoric of “holy war” and opposition
to build a political case. The Myth of
Christian Persecution includes contemporary examples of Rick Santorum and
Glenn Beck, thus coming off as a veiled attempt to criticize the Christian
right for viewing themselves as being opposed by the “world” and for
approaching politics with an “us v. them” mentality. Moss tells a story about
hearing a pro-lifer speak of “the world” and its low view of life, and she
concludes, “The implication was that pro-lifers are modern-day martyrs and
victims of persecution” (251). Interestingly, she chose those words, “martyrs”
and “persecution,” not the speaker.
It seems
that Moss has drawn on her prowess with historical documents, her ability to
write lucid prose, and her thoroughgoing knowledge of first-century backgrounds
to argue the existence of a cause-effect reality: persecution stories lead to
hard-nosed line-drawing by western Christians. But one is hard pressed to see such
a connection. Despite her argument’s many weaknesses, however, Moss does bring
a key strength to her work—a commitment to dialogue. Regardless of
why Christians on the right tend to speak in “war” and “battle” and “jihad” terms,
her assertions that all believers should listen to the opposition, find common
ground, tone down inflammatory rhetoric, and dialogue with others whose ideas seem to conflict with the
Bible come as timely applications. Though she never states it, her book brings with it a reminder that the One who said the persecuted
would be blessed also said, “Blessed are the peacemakers” (Matt. 5.9).
FYI: Links to the author's website, Facebook page, and Twitter account.
FYI: Links to the author's website, Facebook page, and Twitter account.


2 comments:
A supremely pleasurable read. I strongly recommend it for anyone interested in history, rhetoric, or the climate of our current public discourse.
The Equation book
The fact that this book can serve to open dialogue between the opposing sides can only be a good thing!
Thanks for such a thoughtful review for the tour.
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