
Cities of God
From Booklist
Contemplating the rapid spread of early Christianity, Lucian the Martyr
marveled in the fourth century that "almost the greater part of the
world is now committed to this truth, even whole cities." To explain
Christianity's remarkable success in capturing the cities of the Roman
Empire, Stark deploys an empirical social science that exposes the flaws
in previous historical theorizing. By parsing records of church
construction, inscriptions on tombs, and names on imperial contract
permits, Stark converts plausible conjectures into testable hypotheses
about the growth of Christianity in the 31 largest Roman cities. And
while some of the statistically validated hypotheses fit within
conventional wisdom, others compel fresh thinking. The traditional
belief that Christianity spread through mass conversion, for instance,
gives way to a numerically substantiated dynamics of person-to-person
conversion. And despite recent acclaim for the Gnostics as the true
early Christians, the evidence links the Gnostic impulse to dying
pockets of stubborn paganism, not the rising new faith. Like Stark's
Victory of Reason (2005), this book will spark controversy--the kind
that attracts curious readers. Bryce Christensen
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