History lessons for critiques on Christianity
May 12, 2021
_Before we worry too much about school students, its the adults who need remedial history lessons if two recent articles are anything to go by.
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In 2020-2021 the culture wars honed in on ACARA, the Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authoritys recent review of the Australian curriculum. ACARA, it turns out, shifted the emphasis in history studies to focus on indigenous culture. Personally, I support that. But as recent articles in Crikey and here on Pearls and Irritations show, we actually need some remedial Western history for adults.
Lets start with Tory Shepherd in Crikey (6 April 2021) and her article entitled ‘Saints preserve us’ telling us what George Pells 2021-Easter article in The Australian gets wrong. Not being an Oz reader, I missed it, but it was clearly vintage George: out-there, up-front, slaying dragons. What got Shepherd riled-up was Pells claims about the Christian origins of Easter. According to her, this is self-indulgent tosh. Easters origins are pagan derived from the pre-Christian goddess Eostre, with Christianity later taking over the pagan feast. She also lambastes Pell and those who believe in the son of God crawling out of a tomb to ascend bodily to heaven, later commenting, You cant make this shit up.
Abstracting from gratuitous insult to Christians, especially given she hasnt the slightest understanding of the Christian meaning of the resurrection, its Shepherds own howlers that left me gobsmacked.
She is unequivocal: Easters origins are pagan. Hang on a minute! First, its not at all certain that the word easter is derived from the name of the goddess Eostre. The sole mention we have of her comes from the monk-historian Bede (c.673-735) from Jarrow in Northumbria who, in a passing reference, loosely connects her with easter. However, Eostre has no equivalents in Norse or Germanic pre-Christian religion and the scholarly consensus is that Bedes reference is probably a mistranslation or misunderstanding.
What Shepherd completely misses is that the actual religious roots of Easter are in the Jewish Passover feast, from which our English word paschal is derived. This is reflected in French where Easter is Pques, in Italian its Pasqua, in Spanish Pascua. Passover commemorated the Hebrew exodus from Egypt and, explicitly within this Jewish context, that the early Christians commemorated the death of Jesus and belief in his resurrection. Our word easter most probably originates in the Old High German word eostarun (Ostern in modern German), which is carried over into English as Easter. No Anglo-Saxon goddesses here.
I wrote a letter to Crikey pointing this out, but it was ignored, probably dismissed as mere pedanticism.
But Shepherd isnt alone in not doing her homework. There are similar problems with Noel Turnbulls Our Christian heritage and the culture wars in P&I (4 May 2021). Focusing on ACARAs new syllabus, Turnbull quotes Education Minister Tudge telling us that teaching indigenous history should not lead to dishonouring our Western heritage, which sounds reasonable to me. But not to Turnbull, who proceeds to refer to the Christian heritage as more exciting than a slasher movie, regurgitating examples of Christian violence, while ignoring the Christian contributions to music, art, literature, spirituality, civilization and building-up society.
Now Im on the public record criticizing Christianity and specifically Catholicism, but I try to be factual. Christianity, like all religions, has behaved violently, but its not the churchs exclusive preserve. However, balance doesnt suit Turnbulls political point-scoring against Tudge and right-wing culture warriors, so Christian history becomes a slasher movie.
Theres another howler in Turnbulls article that calls for comment. He tells us that what we in the West know about the past, the classics and the development of mathematics was due to its continued existence in Muslim countries while it was being destroyed in Christian ones. Excuse me!
A few dates here might help. Muhammad died in 632CE. Driven by jihad, the Arabs had overrun the Byzantine provinces of Syria, Egypt and North Africa by 708. So where did the Greco-Roman tradition survive between the late-Roman world and the Arab arrival? The answer: in Christian Byzantium, especially in Syria and Egypt, where the Arabs first encountered classicism. So much for its being destroyed in Christian [countries]. Also, Christian theology itself was profoundly influenced by Neo-Platonic philosophy; Augustine of Hippo is an obvious example, but many other Eastern church scholars built their theology on Greek philosophy. In other words, what the Muslims inherited of classical culture came via late-Roman Christianity.
Turnbull also assumes that Islamic enlightenment stood in stark contrast to the dark ages of barbarism, superstition and economic stagnation in Western Europe. This disjunction is nowadays largely rejected by historians. The reality was much more complex. Back in 2013, I published a book on Europe in the tenth century, The Birth of the West (New York: Public Affairs) in which I devoted a chapter to Islamic Spain, often promoted as Islamic culture at its best. The picture that emerges, however, is far more complex than civilization versus Western barbarism. Al-Andalus Islamic Spain certainly reached a cultural high point under the Caliph Abd al-Rahmn III (912-961) who, interestingly, was three-quarters Hispano-Basque and only one-quarter Arab, and his son Caliph al-Hakim II (961-976).
But it was certainly not the tolerant paradise, especially for Christians, that some imagine. Even under the caliphs mentioned, it was a highly stratified society with a strict demarcation of roles, including wearing identifying badges for Christian and Jews, especially under the Caliph al-Mansr (d.1002), a dictator who carried on constant jihad against the Christian north of Spain. As well as Christians, even more, liberal Muslims of the Mutazilah school were martyred in Islamic Al-Andalus.
And Western Christianity was not lost in barbarism as Turnbull suggests. The Irish monks in the seventh century preserved Latin and Greek learning they saved civilization as Thomas Cahill says and from the Carolingian renaissance onwards the Greco-Roman classics were often taught in continental monasteries and the trivium of grammar, dialectic (logic) and rhetoric was basic to monastic education. Scholars like Alcuin of York, Charlemagnes education minister, Gerbert of Aurillac (Pope Sylvester II) were polymaths, thoroughly schooled in the Greco-Roman classics and in Gerberts case in mathematics, science, astronomy and music. He was ecumenical enough to go to Spain to learn from the Muslims.
In conclusion: Im flummoxed as to why, in order to encourage and enhance First Nations and Muslim history, you have to denigrate your own. Surely, we can do both?

Paul Collins
Paul Collins is an historian, broadcaster and writer. A Catholic priest for 33 years, he resigned from the active ministry in 2001 following a dispute with the Vatican over his book Papal Power (Harper Collins (1997)). He is the author of 17 books, the most recent being The Depopulation Imperative (Australian Scholarly (2021)) and Recovering the ‘True Church’ (Coventry (2022)). A former head of the religion and ethics department at the ABC, he is well known as a public commentator on Catholicism and the papacy and also has a strong interest in ethics, environmental and population issues.