
Christian Mythology
Revelations of Pagan Origins
$39.31
- Paperback
224 pages
- Release Date
20 November 2014
Summary
Reveals how Christian mythology has more to do with long-standing pagan traditions than the Bible
- Explains how the church fathers knowingly incorporated pagan elements into the Christian faith to ease the transition to the new religion
- Identifies pagan deities that were incorporated into each of the saints
- Shows how all the major holidays in the Christian calendar are modeled on pagan rituals and myths, including Easter and Christmas
In this exte…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781620553688 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1620553686 |
| Author: | Philippe Walter, Claude Lecouteux |
| Publisher: | Inner Traditions Bear and Company |
| Imprint: | Inner Traditions Bear and Company |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 224 |
| Edition: | 2nd |
| Release Date: | 20 November 2014 |
| Weight: | 315g |
| Dimensions: | 229mm x 152mm x 18mm |
What They're Saying
Critics Review
“Walter writes in a distinguished academic tradition that goes back to Jesse L. Weston and Sir James Frazier. He describes a rich complex of pagan, European traditions that inform Christian ritual. In doing so, he illuminates beliefs that underlie some of our most cherished stories and practices. I will recommend this book to my students.” * Steve Harris, associate professor of English, University of Massachusetts *“It is generally understood that Christianity strengthened its position early on in the popular mind by usurping and bending pagan rituals and sacred locales. In this ambitious scholarly treatise, professor of medieval French literature Walter marries the pagan and Christian calendars in great detail by examining ancient myths, saints, and celebrations. He visits All Saints Day, the Twelve Days of Christmas, Candlemas, Easter, Ascension, St. John’s Day of Summer, St. Peter’s Chains Day, and St. Michael’s Day to find that these yearly rounds, roughly 40 days apart, share a mythical realm with the dates of Carnival, best understood as ‘a religion–it was even the religion preceding Christianity.’ Walter’s sources include acts of councils, confessors’ manuals, literary texts such as Arthurian romances, hagiographic works, and medieval iconography. While he doesn’t attack Christianity on its spiritual merits, he concludes boldly that ‘Christianity would have had no chance of imposing itself in the West if, on certain points of dogma and rites, it had not responded to the religious needs of the converted pagans.’ … This volume makes a strong scholarly contribution to understanding the evolution of belief, where ‘it is important to understand that nothing has been lost or created.’” * Publishers Weekly *
About The Author
Philippe Walter
Philippe Walter is a professor of medieval French literature at the Université Stendhal in Grenoble. He has published numerous books about the Middle Ages and has overseen the editing and translation of the Grail romances for the prestigious Bibliothèque de la Pléiade. He lives in France.
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