this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2024
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Rough Roman Memes
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Explanation: Julian the Apostate was the last Pagan Emperor of Rome, and a champion of religious freedom in the Empire for all peoples, Christian, orthodox or heretic, as well as pagans. As his name implies, he was actually a convert - raised Christian, but converted to paganism as an adult. He wrote extensively against Christianity, both on grounds of morality and of (what pagans saw as) factual truth.
“Champion of religious freedom” might be a bit stretch. He actively tried to suppress the Christianity through various edicts limiting their access to education, state bureucracy and military. That and by attempting to give the various pagan cults similar structure and hierarchy the christians had.
Dude was the worlds first neo-pagan.
Too bad he forgot to put his damn armor on.
If removing the privileges of Christianity is suppression - well, I suppose that is very much the argument used by Christians of the time, who regarded Julian's declaration of religious toleration to be a special and offensive privilege oriented towards nonbelievers, including Jews. As we all know, tolerance is a special privilege no one should get except the True Believers(tm). Especially heinous was Julian's toleration of Christian heretics! It's outrageous that he refused to respect the right of the Church to persecute people who believed the wrong thing.
Julian's reputation remains marked by centuries of Christian apologetics.
That might come off as hostile - I mean it as mocking the Catholic Church of Late Antiquity, not accusing you of holding those views.
... not really sure that "He tried to reform Roman paganism" in any way contradicts "Champion of religious freedom", or in any way affirms "He actively tried to suppress Christianity".