The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal, Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force ….

March 31st, 2010

  • ISBN13: 9780060677015
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
This “fresh, blunt, and highly persuasive account of how the West was won–for Jesus” (Newsweek) is now available in paperback. Stark’s provocative report challenges conventional wisdom and finds that Christianity’s astounding dominance of the Western world arose from its offer of a better, more secure way of life. “Compelling reading” (Library Journal) that is sure to “generate spirited argument” (Publishers Weekly), this account of Christianity’s remarkable growth within the Roman Empire is the subject of much fanfare. “Anyone who has puzzled over Christianity’s rise to dominance…must read it.” says Yale University’s Wayne A. Meeks, for The Rise of Christianity makes a compelling case for startling conclusions. Combining his expertise in social science with historical evidence, and his insight into contemporary religion’s appeal, Stark finds that early Christianity attracted the privileged rather than the poor, that most early converts were women or… More >>

The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal, Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force ….

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5 people had something to say about on “The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal, Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force ….”:



  1. Paul Frandano said:

    This is the mystery of two millennia, right? How does an obscure sect led by an executed convict go from less than 100 adherents to an estimated 6 million on the eve on Constantine’s “conversion” in the early fourth century?

    Social scientist Rodney Stark did more than puzzle: he created a set of testable hypotheses and tried, via secondary literature (he reads no ancient language and disclaims any expertise in the traditional scholarship of early church history), to probe the key issues. Along the way, he uses contemporary social science findings from demography, the sociology of small groups, the psychology of conversion, medical statistics, and every other conceptual lever he could divine to create a compelling mosaic of findings, arrayed in discrete topical chapters (each of which had a former life as a scholarly article).

    Others have pointed out, as does Stark himself, that his work is a strictly scientific enterprise: his own religious views are for himself. he is a sociologist of religion. He gives respectful attention to the historical record of the early church, which consists almost exclusively of the well-known testaments from the early church -New Testament accounts, non-canonic letters and gospels, and works by Eusebius, Tertullian, and their peers. But in the end, the “miracle” of the expansion of the early church seems explicable by a number of readily understandable facts and processes.

    For example, the forty percent growth rate per decade from 30 CE to 300 CE, which arithmetically gets one from 40 converts to 6 million, seems virtually miraculous – until Stark compares this rate to the growth achieved by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints – the Mormons – which in the past century has averaged just over 40 percent per decade. In separate chapters, Stark also sheds fresh light on the geographic spread of Christianity, the success – rather than the long presumed failure – of “mission to the Hebrews,” the role of plagues and natural disasters as facilitators of the Christian mission, Christian conversion as an urban phenomenon, the comparative socioeconomic advantages of Christianity versus “paganism” in the “religious marketplace” of antiquity, and the “rationality” of martyrdom, the last of which contains more than a few startlingly relevant observations in the current context of terrorist martyrdom.

    Throughout, the emphasis returns again and again to social networks – friends converting friends, wives converting husbands, former Jewish co-religionists converting other Jews as Christian churches establish themselves in the “Jewish Quarters” of Roman towns and cities, mercy-bound Christians staying to care for plague victims while pagans flee the pandemic.

    Some chapters, needless to say, are less compelling than others. Stark’s fascinating discussion the allure of Christianity to the wholly disenfranchised women of the Roman empire, and of the advantages conferred to women in the early church, stands at odds with persuasive accounts – say, those of Elaine Pagels in The Gnostic Gospels or Bart Ehrman in Lost Christianities – of the steady hostility toward the role of women in the church and in the canonic New Testament accounts.

    This is a minor quibble. Stark has given us a necessary book – for believers, skeptics, pastors, and laypeople – that, in conception alone, is the stuff of genius. And – whipped cream on top – the author has serious journalistic chops, honed in a former life as a newspaperman, that make him that rare social scientist who can actually communicate his findings crystal-clearly to an intelligent reader. What results is a provocative, beautifully wrought book that sets a standard for contemporary exploration of a distant, thinly documented historical occurrence.
    Rating: 5 / 5


  2. R. S. Corzine said:

    I was a bit skeptical at first of Stark’s proposed methodology: applying the results of modern sociological research to questions of early Christian History. But he employs this method in a very responsible way, using the sociology to generate an expectation and then checking that against the actual historical evidence to see if it is borne out. The result, I think are some real insights. Stark has done Christians a real service in helping them to understand the historical roots of their faith. It is also, I would submit, immensely practical for modern Christians to reflect on how the early Church thrived and grew in the midst of a pagan culture.
    Rating: 5 / 5


  3. Bobby Winters said:

    A good friend of mine suggested this book, and when I read it the first time, I did it in a day. It is very readable and very intelligent. As a life-long Christian, I had never paused to think about how a new religion on one end of the Mediterranean Sea spread to the whole of the Roman world in as little as 300 years. Stark makes some very credible arguments about how this was done. The mechanisms described do not require “magic”, however that does not make the result any less miraculous.

    Church leaders and theologians would do well to read this book and ponder for themselves. For the thinking person who is open to arguments that actually use numbers in an intelligent way (no Bible Code here!), this is a book that offers insight into the mechanisms of church growth, the practical consequences of sexual immorality, and the positive effect of having a high value on women.
    Rating: 5 / 5


  4. Rizal Halim said:

    Rodney Stark uses a sociological perspective to reconsider the development of Christianity from the early first century until it became the dominant faith and official religion of the Roman Empire in the fourth century. Stark, who is currently a university professor of social sciences at Baylor University, begins with the basic premise that the development of Christianity is not purely a social and political factor, but rather the product of human faith that stands up to all social phenomena: from interaction with pagan values and persecution, to the various social crises such as epidemic and political disorder. Stark writes, “Whatever one does or doesn’t believe about the divine, obviously God didn’t cause the world to be Christian.” That the world has become Christian and will continue to be Christian depends on human effort that is based on the reflection and commitment of that Christian faith and community.

    Stark states that the early Christian community gained it converts through a social network built by intimate interpersonal attachment. Interpersonal relations within the early Christian community built a strong social network that allowed the steady growth of conversion during the first centuries. In this context, it becomes important for Stark to reconsider what was the social basis of the early Christian community. Many historians and sociologists in the twentieth century claim that Christianity and all religious movements are driven by the lower social strata in a community. For Stark, this assumption is no longer accurate because of the fact that the early Christians consisted of the privileged and the middle class in the community. Christianity was pardoned by the political authority because it included members among the family, friends and relatives of the early believers. Had the early Christians consisted of merely the poor and the oppressed, the Roman authority would consider it as “a political threat, rather than simply as an illicit religion.”

    By explaining the fact that early Christians consisted of the privileged, Stark doesn’t mean alienating the poorer class within the early community. Rather, he relativizes the assumption that most new cult and sect movements, as Christianity was, are driven by those who were poor. In addition, Stark is convinced that, whether power is held by rich or poor, all members of a religion have the same desire toward “the rewards that do not exist in this world.” Moreover, it is the vision toward the other world that sustained the life of the early Christians, so that they became a solid social community.

    Rating: 4 / 5


  5. Anthony Sacramone said:

    Mr. Freeman includes Rodney Stark’s “The Rise of Christianity” in the bibliography of “The Closing of the Western Mind,” but one wonders if he read it. One of Stark’s compelling and convincing theses about the success of Christianity in the ancient world is its response to two devastating plagues that wiped out up to a third of the population. For example, Mr. Freeman lionizes that great physician Galen for his discoveries but fails to mention that when a plague struck the Roman world in the mid-second century, the great Galen’s response was to run away. What possible good was all his knowledge to those left to die? However, the Christians stayed put and nursed the dying–not only Christians but pagans. We see this happening again a century later. Not only did the nursing the Christians provided greatly improve the odds of surviving the plague, but it left pagans with a view of Christians as selfless and nurturing, giving them greater incentive to convert. Mr. Freeman makes no mention of the plagues and the Christian response whatsoever.

    In short–of what use are the philosophical and “rationalist” traditions that Mr. Freeman celebrates when you’re dead? It was Christian “superstition” that kept many of their pagan neighbors alive. But this is devastating to Mr. Freeman’s thesis, that something great was lost with the rise of Christianity for which there was no suitable substitute, and that the only explanation for Christianity’s rise is political manipulation and bullying. I highly recommend Mr. Stark’s book as a complement to Mr. Freeman’s for the sake of scholarly balance.
    Rating: 5 / 5

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