revsdd
Well-Known Member
Many believe that Constantine marked the fall of the true Christianity, when he turned it into a religion of the sword. My personal beliefs is that he did influence the altering of the Bible, he had the means and the motive. And Dan Brown, btw, has never influenced my belief structures.
Watch this video by Greg Boyd on Constantine's Pagan influence on Christianity. Do you disagree?
I never said that Constantine didn't influence Christianity. I said he had little to no interest in the canon. His interest was christology and his interest was certainly political and possibly theological. The speculation that his Christian faith was insincere rests on the assumption that it was politically advantageous for him to be a Christian and to be seen being a Christian - which, in the rough and tumble world of Roman imperial politics, is certainly a questionable proposition.
Constantine's influence on christological developments may have been more significant than any influence he could have exerted over the canon, which - as I pointed out - was largely (if informally) already in place by Nicaea. And I'm among those who have sincere doubt that Constantine's influence was positive. It opened the door to Christianity becoming the imperial religion, with great temporal power (some vestiges of which we still have) which is not at all what Christianity, in my view, was ever meant to be. "My kingdom is not of this world," Jesus said. I get frustrated when Christians lament our loss of secular power (as if it's right gor Christianity to have secular power) or declare this or that nation to be or have been a "Christian" nation. There is no such beast.
I haven't watched the video you posted, largely because I don't need to be convinced of constantinian/pagan influence over the early church. No Christian with even a shred of knowledge about church history should need to be convinced about that.
As to your personal belief that Constantine influenced the canon - it is just that: a personal belief without a shred of historical evidence to back it up. But it sounds good, and now you've posted it on the internet so some people will read it and say "I saw it on the internet so it must be true." Constantine was not interested in canon (which was already largely set) but in christology, which could be debated largely by reference to what was already accepted as canon - primarily the Gospels ( yes, by Constantine's time there was already a broad consensus about the four canonical gospels) and the pauline letters, and with reference to the various doctrinal positions already set out.
And, I also didn't say you were influenced by Dan Brown. I said that your position is "Dan Brown-ish" (ie, a nice conspiracy theory without a historical basis) except that Brown knew he was writing fiction and you apparently don't realize that you are as well. And I said that people love anything that sounds like a conspiracy theory, so many believe Brown was writing history.