{"id":4447,"date":"2019-11-26T16:31:49","date_gmt":"2019-11-26T21:31:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/?p=4447"},"modified":"2019-11-26T16:55:45","modified_gmt":"2019-11-26T21:55:45","slug":"tom-hollands-dominion-a-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/2019\/11\/26\/tom-hollands-dominion-a-review\/","title":{"rendered":"Tom Holland&#8217;s Dominion: A Review"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/9\/2019\/11\/holland-review.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"810\" height=\"450\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-4459\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/9\/2019\/11\/holland-review.png 810w, https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/9\/2019\/11\/holland-review-360x200.png 360w, https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/9\/2019\/11\/holland-review-768x427.png 768w, https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/9\/2019\/11\/holland-review-750x417.png 750w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 810px) 100vw, 810px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size:78px;line-height:52px;float:left;font-family:times\">T<\/span>he major themes of Tom Holland&#8217;s newest book of history, <em>Dominion<\/em>, are exemplified by the differing presentation of the book in the United States as opposed to Holland&#8217;s native Britain.\u00a0 The British edition of the book is <em>Dominion: The Making of the Western Mind<\/em>.\u00a0 The cover features the head of a Corinthian pillar with an inverted modern skyscraper above.\u00a0 The American release, on the other hand, is entitled:\u00a0 <em>Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World<\/em>.\u00a0 Its cover is graced by Salvador Dali&#8217;s &#8220;Christ of St. John of the Cross&#8221;, a depiction of Christ crucified over a misty and chaotic world, if not before its very foundations.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/9\/2019\/11\/dali-cross.png\" align=\"right\" width=\"300\" height=\"445\">The contents of the book in both cases and Holland&#8217;s argument are the same.\u00a0 The difference in presentation, then, expresses a difference in the audience of readers and how congenial they might be expected to be toward his message.\u00a0 <em>Dominion<\/em> is a work of cultural history, not church history, but it communicates that the history of the culture of the European West and its former colonies cannot be disentangled from Christianity and its central teachings.<\/p>\n<p><em>Dominion<\/em> grew out of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newstatesman.com\/politics\/religion\/2016\/09\/tom-holland-why-i-was-wrong-about-christianity\">an essay by Holland published by the <em>New Statesman<\/em> in 2016<\/a> which itself expressed the beginnings of Holland&#8217;s reappraisal of Christianity.\u00a0 Most of Holland&#8217;s published work surrounds antiquity and, in particular, its empires.\u00a0 In the essay and the subsequent book, Holland describes his childhood love of dinosaurs which ultimately led to his abandonment of the faith of his youth.\u00a0 His later love of the classical world he sees as closely related.<\/p>\n<p>The likes of Caesar, Augustus, and Xerxes are super predators on par with any Tyrannosaurus Rex.\u00a0 These are men who boasted publicly of having killed and enslaved thousands.\u00a0 These are men who viewed themselves as so superior to the common run of humanity that their only real kin were the gods.\u00a0 These are men who found the poor, the weak, the sick, the humble to be pathetic filth more akin to animals than to themselves.\u00a0 While Holland was not then and is not now a Christian in religious belief, he has discovered that his own moral sense has little to do with that of the classical world and everything to do with the moral teachings of Christianity.<\/p>\n<p>This new book explores that initial insight.\u00a0 Holland begins in familiar territory, the Persian wars, and describes the classical world in all of its bestial glory before moving on to the world of Judaism and thence entering into the era of Christianity.\u00a0 In regard to Judaism in particular in the Second Temple period, Holland adopts for the purposes of his argument the commonly held views of critical historians.\u00a0 These include the Persian origin of many elements of Judaism, ancient Israel&#8217;s early polytheism from which monotheism later evolved, and that at least the early history of the Old Testament is entirely myth in the sense of fiction.<\/p>\n<p>As a non-believer, these are undoubtedly Holland&#8217;s actual positions, but even were they not, there would be little sense in contesting them here.\u00a0 The arguments involved would constitute other books entirely.  More directly, however, Holland&#8217;s argument is directed toward a general audience and not to Christians only.\u00a0 He aims to correct the record of Western history on several counts and to demonstrate that even those who consider themselves most secular in our contemporary cultural moment are, in fact, Christian in their bones.\u00a0 Our atheists are Christian atheists.<\/p>\n<p>Holland&#8217;s strength as a writer has always been centered in his abilities as a storyteller.\u00a0 His approach in <i>Dominion<\/i> proceeds from this strength.\u00a0 In a sequence of eras beginning in the fifth century BC, Holland selects figures and tells their stories in parallel.\u00a0 In the fifth century AD, this is Ss. Basil, Gregory of Nyssa, and Macrina, Martin of Tours, Paulinus of Nola, and Augustine.\u00a0 In the thirteenth century, it is Elizabeth of Hungary, Conrad of Marburg, and Thomas Aquinas.\u00a0 In the early part of the twentieth century, it is three men who fought at the Battle of the Somme in 1916&mdash;Otto Dix, Adolf Hitler, and J.R.R. Tolkien.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>Holland traces his themes from classical Greece to the present cultural moment.\u00a0 He finds these themes not only within a given era in the stories of people from varied lands and languages but also stretching across eras and giving shape to the formation and reformation of Western culture.\u00a0 In an interview, Holland described the writings of St. Paul as like a depth charge, the shockwaves of which pulse and ripple outward through the centuries.<\/p>\n<p><em>Dominion<\/em> is not, as already indicated, a work of church history.\u00a0 It is not a book aimed at tracking the development of theology or of particular church institutions in the West.\u00a0 Rather, it traces the interplay of Christian teaching and culture which has resulted, over two millennia, in a profound transformation of culture.\u00a0 This transformation is apparent both to the extreme counter-cultural nature of Christianity&#8217;s proclamation in the Roman world, the <em>datum<\/em> which originally inspired Holland&#8217;s reflection, but no less so in the works of Nietzsche as but one modern example.<\/p>\n<p>Nietzsche had a profound understanding of the nature of Christian teaching and the way in which it had completely upended the preceding worldview of the classical world.\u00a0 He understood it and he hated it.\u00a0 He further foresaw the consequences that would come when Western culture finally decided to divest itself of Christian moral teaching and the worldview whose underpinnings it had already rejected at an intellectual level.\u00a0 These consequences were reaped in blood throughout the twentieth century and, should de-Christianization prove successful in the future, they can only continue and intensify.<\/p>\n<p>The truth, however, as Holland shows, is that the de-Christianizers have not been that successful at all.\u00a0 Atheists attack the Scriptures and Christian history as immoral <i>when compared to the standards of Christian morality<\/i>.\u00a0 They do not do this to undermine the consistency of the Christian worldview from the outside but rather because they still share that morality which found its origins in Christian teaching.<\/p>\n<p>Same-sex marriage advocates reject Christian moral teachings regarding the propriety of sexual relationships but firmly embrace a vision of loving monogamous marriage which is itself purely the product of that same teaching.\u00a0 Pro-choice activists argue for the right of women to control their own bodies, which dignity found its origin in Christian teaching that women, as well as men, are formed in the image of God and of equal value.<\/p>\n<p>The very idea that women have a right of consent in sexual matters grew from the beginnings of Christian monasticism.\u00a0 Christian leaders had to transform a culture in which women belonged to their fathers until given by that father to a husband to allow that a woman could choose not to be married, to remain chaste if she so desired in order to devote herself and her life to Christ.\u00a0 The culture wars are, in Holland&#8217;s argument, an inter-Christian conflict between those who wish to maintain Christian tradition as a historic whole and those who wish to sacrifice or transform some elements while retaining others intact.<\/p>\n<p>The greatest contribution of Holland&#8217;s book likely stems from his intimate familiarity with the ancient world.\u00a0 This allows him to present Christianity in a form much closer to the state in which it originally existed, rather than as &#8220;a religion&#8221;.\u00a0 In fact, he traces the development of the idea of the secular from St. Augustine&#8217;s struggle to understand the events of his own age within the context of his Christianity.\u00a0 He further describes the emergence of the concept of &#8220;religion&#8221; and its radical transformation over time to its present understanding.<\/p>\n<p>With these later developments peeled back, Christianity emerges as a system of interacting with understanding the world, described in teachings and lived by the actual human persons of every era. This way of thinking and seeing has been bred into the bones of every person born in the West for centuries, though today it may go unnoticed like the air which we breathe.\u00a0 Holland&#8217;s mapping of the road from the ancient world to the present moment illuminates the latter and explains it.\u00a0 It also provides a map, for those so inclined, to walk back through the intervening eras and arrive at Christianity&#8217;s core at the moment of its ancient birth.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Christianity emerges as a system of interacting with understanding the world, described in teachings and lived by the actual human persons of every era. This way of thinking and seeing has been bred into the bones of every person born in the West for centuries, though today it may go unnoticed like the air which we breathe.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13,"featured_media":4459,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,8,13,16,454,392,29,31],"tags":[76,109,142,275,311,316,514],"class_list":["post-4447","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-atheism-2","category-culture","category-ethics","category-historiography-2","category-philosophy","category-recent-events","category-saints","category-secular-theology","tag-atheism","tag-culture-2","tag-ethics-2","tag-philosophy","tag-saints-2","tag-secularism","tag-tom-holland"],"yoast_head":"<title>Tom Holland&#039;s Dominion: A Review &#8211; Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/orthodoxyandheterodoxy\/2019\/11\/26\/tom-hollands-dominion-a-review\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Tom Holland&#039;s Dominion: A Review &#8211; Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Christianity emerges as a system of interacting with understanding the world, described in teachings and lived by the actual human persons of every era. 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