
The Return of the Sacral King
Author(s) -
Paul R. DeHart
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the catholic social science review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-6292
pISSN - 1091-0905
DOI - 10.5840/cssr20202527
Subject(s) - christianity , politics , antique , roman empire , empire , order (exchange) , judaism , argument (complex analysis) , political authority , philosophy , state (computer science) , ancient history , religious studies , history , law , theology , political science , biochemistry , chemistry , finance , economics , algorithm , computer science
In Pagans & Christians in the City, Steven D. Smith argues that in contrast to ancient Rome, ancient Christianity, following Judaism, located the sacred outside the world, desacralizing the cosmos and everything in it—including the political order. It thereby introduced a political dualism and potentially contending allegiances. Although Smith’s argument is right so far as it goes, it underplays the role of Christianity’s immanent dimension in subverting the Roman empire and the sacral pattern of antiquity. This division of authority not only undermined the Roman empire and antique sacral political order more generally—it also subverts the modern state, which, in the work of Hobbes and Rousseau, sought to remarry what Western Christianity divorced.