I've read theories of Constantine mixing Sun worship with christianity when christianity became legal in Rome.
Do any of you have an opinion on this?
Do any of you have an opinion on this?
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My opinion is that the above theory is utter bunk.I've read theories of Constantine mixing Sun worship with christianity when christianity became legal in Rome.
Do any of you have an opinion on this?
Throughout his reign as emperor Constantine remained the high priest of the Mithraic cult of Sol Invictus (Invincible Sun).I've read theories of Constantine mixing Sun worship with christianity when christianity became legal in Rome.
Do any of you have an opinion on this?
More bunk. Keep it comingThroughout his reign as emperor Constantine remained the high priest of the Mithraic cult of Sol Invictus (Invincible Sun).
More bunk. Keep it coming![]()
No, it is what some people have claimed is history with no actual evidence to back it up. You are simply repeating the pet theory of Alexander Hislop, which has been thoroughly demonstrated to be without credibility. IE. it is bunk.You can call history bunk if you wish --- it's still history.
No, it is what some people have claimed is history with no actual evidence to back it up. You are simply repeating the pet theory of Alexander Hislop, which has been thoroughly demonstrated to be without credibility. IE. it is bunk.
I've read theories of Constantine mixing Sun worship with christianity when christianity became legal in Rome.
Do any of you have an opinion on this?
The Chi-Rho sign which appeared to Constantine bears very little resemblance to any of the solar halos I have seen. What examples are you basing your comparison on?Further the sign before the battle of the Milvian bridge was distinctly solar - either a cross formed from the solar halo or three small crosses representing thirty years as per roman numerals. This is consistent with a phenomenon called a solar halo and immediately after the battle Constantine minted coins depicted him as a companion of Sol Invictus.
What sources claim this?
The common belief that Constantine used the Chi-Rho sign at the battle of the Milvian Bridge is in error. It is a conflation and misunderstanding of two Authors: Lactantius and Eusebius of Caesarea.
In Eusebius's Life of Constantine you will read that before the battle Constantine looked up at the sun and saw a cross of light and the words "in hoc signo vinces" or in this you will conquer.
I see nothing in Eusebius' work to support this promise.He also took this sign to promise him a thirty years reign, hence the speculation surrounding this vision and the phenomenon of a Solar Halo.
Ok, having reread Eusebius I can see my mistake, although it is plain that the sign on the shields of the soldiers at Milvian is the very same Chi Rho used on the Labarum.Just after this part of his work, Eusebius describes the Labarum with its Chi-Rho as used during the campaign against Licinius. This has lead to centuries of confusion between the cross of light and the Chi-Rho.
Lactantius describes the sign that Constantine had placed on his shields due to a dream and describes a latin cross with a rounded top, the Staurogram (The work in question is called On the deaths of the Persecutors).This sign was likely carried at the Milvian bridge, not the Chi-Rho, but due to their similarity and the general disuse of the Staurogram, they became conflated.
According to Eusebius, Constantine was fully aware that it was Christ who had favoured him, having come to him in a dream.It is a common misperception that Constantine bore the Chi-Rho initially, but he only started using such a flagrant Christian symbol from about 317 AD when it appeared on Imperial coinage. The fact is that Constantine did not know which god had favoured him initially, so it is unlikely that the sign would have been so clearly a Christian symbol.
What propaganda by which enemies are you referring to?Chi-Rho was already in widespread Christian use at the time and Constantine's mother Helena was a Christian so he would have been aware of it. If he had used the Chi-Rho at that stage it would also have clearly shown him to be pro-christian, a fact that his enemies would have commented upon in their propaganda, yet they did not say a word about it.
I've read theories of Constantine mixing Sun worship with christianity when christianity became legal in Rome.
Do any of you have an opinion on this?
Even if this is the case, Christians don't follow Constantine, they follow Christ.
It's not the case. And St. Constantine is an example of a man of evil saved by fairh in our Lord. It was a miracle that the holder of an office that hadnsince Nero sought to eradicate our faith would convert to it; a protege of the worst persecutor, Diocletian, no less!
The glory and awesome power of God is evident on several historical occasions where the persecution of Christians suddenly and abruptly ended: the conversion of St. Constantine, the downfall of the oppressive Moorish regime in Spain, the demise of the radical Revolutionaries of France, and of Robespierre, and indeed the eventual defeat of Napoleon, the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in Eastern Europe, the independence of Armenia, and most spectacularly in recent memory, the end of the Soviet Union.
Truly, God has kept His promise in Matthew 16:18