haq · @haq
136 followers · 2241 posts · Server kolektiva.social

1. Geology. Simmons could've spent a couple of minutes checking and discovered that there are several well-known "soft" stones such as soapstone, slate, serpentine, etc but she chose not to: "Like its limestone cousins - marble included - it is the only rock that can be scored with a butterknife". No.

2. History. Simmons prides herself on her travel journalism from the "Middle East", meanwhile back in England the self-described "medievalist" says: "The pond [where a broken axehead was found] was quite close to the present church, so this fitted with the theory that Christian sites appropriated pagan ones to smooth the transition between religious belief systems." Erm, like in Jerusalem? Smooooooth! Or genocidal. One of those. Also, not true that Christian sites appropriated Pagan places except occasionally in urban areas where space was limited.

3. History. Simmons mourns the loss that the Cluniac monastery in Lewes that she claims was "the heart and soul of the town" before the dissolution of the monasteries when in 1537 the 24 monks, who offered the town their thoughts and prayers, were supported by over 22,000 acres of land in Sussex (and more elsewhere so about 1,000 acres per monk). The land had been partially cleared of local peasants, who were replaced by sheep, and was run by unpaid servants known as lay brothers. I suppose unpaid servant was a step up for a starving landless unmarried male peasant, but I wonder where the women went....

4. Gibberish. As I mentioned before, this was clearly not read by an editor and is relentless nonsense, e.g.: "It had been a dry winter so far. In wet weather, travellers followed the ridgeway on the top, avoiding the boggy bottom of the valley. So that's what I would do also." Wet is dry and dry is wet, apparently.

5. History. Simmons describes the Christian crusades as: "the series of religious wars involving Christians and Muslims between 1096 and 1291. One of the Christians' avowed aims was to protect pilgrims travelling to the Holy Land" and one of their aims was large scale genocidal land-theft. Also Louis IX of France figure-headed crusades against the Holy Roman Empire, the Balts, and Tunis, amongst others, even within Simmons' chosen period which conveniently excludes the most embarrassing genocidal xtian on xtian crusades that occurred later.

6. Dis/Ablism. And lastly, on page 323 of 324, we discover illness and disability don't exist in Simmons world, even during a pandemic: "We humans are made to walk, and if we continue walking we'll stay fit and agile into old age, as the many white haired people I met climbing the hills between Southampton and Canterbury proved." Selection bias much?

Don't read this book, obv. /end thread and onwards to more edifying and entertaining reading

#books #reading #history #EnglishHistory #geology #christianity #christianhistory #catholicism #ablism #disablism

Last updated 2 years ago

haq · @haq
136 followers · 2237 posts · Server kolektiva.social

1. Geology. Simmons could've spent a couple of minutes checking and discovered that there are several well-known "soft" stones such as soapstone, slate, serpentine, etc but she chose not to: "Like its limestone cousins - marble included - it is the only rock that can be scored with a butterknife". No.

2. History. Simmons prides herself on her travel journalism from the "Middle East", meanwhile back in England the self-described "medievalist" says: "The pond [where a broken axehead was found] was quite close to the present church, so this fitted with the theory that Christian sites appropriated pagan ones to smooth the transition between religious belief systems." Erm, like in Jerusalem? Smooooooth! Or genocidal. One of those. Also, not true that Christian sites appropriated Pagan places except occasionally in urban areas where space was limited.

3. History. Simmons mourns the loss that the Cluniac monastery in Lewes that she claims was "the heart and soul of the town" before the dissolution of the monasteries when in 1537 the 24 monks, who offered the town their thoughts and prayers, were supported by over 22,000 acres of land in Sussex (and more elsewhere so about 1,000 acres per monk). The land had been partially cleared of local peasants, who were replaced by sheep, and was run by unpaid servants known as lay brothers. I suppose unpaid servant was a step up for a starving landless unmarried male peasant, but I wonder where the women went....

4. Gibberish. As I mentioned before, this was clearly not read by an editor and is relentless nonsense, e.g.: "It had been a dry winter so far. In wet weather, travellers followed the ridgeway on the top, avoiding the boggy bottom of the valley. So that's what I would do also." Wet is dry and dry is wet, apparently.

5. History. Simmons describes the Christian crusades as: "the series of religious wars involving Christians and Muslims between 1096 and 1291. One of the Christians' avowed aims was to protect pilgrims travelling to the Holy Land" and one of their aims was large scale genocidal land-theft. Also Louis IX of France figure-headed crusades against the Holy Roman Empire, the Balts, and Tunis, amongst others, even within Simmons' chosen period which conveniently excludes the most embarrassing genocidal xtian on xtian crusades that occurred later.

6. Dis/Ablism. And lastly, on page 323 of 324, we discover illness and disability don't exist in Simmons world, even during a pandemic: "We humans are made to walk, and if we continue walking we'll stay fit and agile into old age, as the many white haired people I met climbing the hills between Southampton and Canterbury proved." Selection bias much?

Don't read this book, obv. /end thread and onwards to more edifying and entertaining reading

#books #reading #history #EnglishHistory #geology #christianity #christianhistory #catholicism #ablism #disablism

Last updated 2 years ago

steve dustcircle ⍻ · @dustcircle
274 followers · 9101 posts · Server masto.ai
Yale Divinity School · @YaleDivinitySchool
386 followers · 303 posts · Server mstdn.social

It is obvious that certain narratives in the New Testament contradict each other and cannot be woven into a historically coherent whole. How, then, do scholars construct who the "historical Jesus" was?

Learn about this process from Dale B. Martin's class: youtu.be/d_dOhg-Fpu0

#christianhistory #HistoricalJesus #yds #yalereligiousstudies #yaledivinityschool #yale

Last updated 3 years ago

thinkStory · @thinkStory
315 followers · 1309 posts · Server mastodon.green

A great video lesson on from tiktok.com/@simkern on at the link.

“If a story contains AS elements, is that entire story AS? Is it *bad*? Are you *bad* for consuming it?”

tiktok.com/@simkern/video/7188

#antisemitism #tiktok #purityculture #christianhistory #jewishhistory #simkern #SensitivityTip

Last updated 3 years ago

LisaClarkDiller · @ldiller
351 followers · 673 posts · Server mas.to
Yale Divinity School · @YaleDivinitySchool
378 followers · 281 posts · Server mstdn.social

When did Christianity become a "World Religion"?

Short answer: around the 19th Century.

Long answer from Prof. Dale Martin in the Yale Religious Studies Department (and occasionally Yale Divinity School): youtu.be/v1Bh_SAEU90?t=1851

#christianhistory #christianity #yaledivinityschool #religiousstudies #yale

Last updated 3 years ago

Lance 📖 · @Lance
52 followers · 606 posts · Server bibly.com

Apologist Dismisses Biblical Critics’ Claims, Details Proof For the Virgin Birth: ‘Put Your Faith and Trust in the Evidence’

There will always be critics, and we pray for them 😃

faithwire.com/2022/12/23/apolo

#virginbirth #christianhistory #faith

Last updated 3 years ago

Lance 📖 · @Lance
49 followers · 585 posts · Server bibly.com

In Turkey, a wealth of early church remains beckons the Christian traveler.

There's a lot of Christian history in Turkey, how about that.

christianpost.com/news/in-turk

#turkey #christianhistory

Last updated 3 years ago

Yale Divinity School · @YaleDivinitySchool
304 followers · 160 posts · Server mstdn.social

Would you like to better understand the Hebrew Bible (aka Old Testament for Christians)? Sure you would! Here's an entire semester's worth of classes: youtu.be/kruMkkg7y-s

#yaledivinityschool #yale #judaism #HebrewBible #christianhistory #christianity #biblestudy #bible #oldtestament

Last updated 3 years ago

Would you like to study the Hebrew Bible (aka Old Testament for Christians)? Sure you would! Here's an entire semester's worth of classes: youtu.be/kruMkkg7y-s

#yaledivinityschool #yale #judaism #HebrewBible #christianhistory #christianity #biblestudy #bible #oldtestament

Last updated 3 years ago

- Stumbling on Happiness - Gilbert
- The Monk - Lewis
- The Klan - Sims
- Bachman Books - King
- How We Decide - Lehrer
- Presentation of Self - Goffman
- Native Religions of North America - Hultkrantz
- Harriet the Spy - Fitzhugh
- Complete Robot - Asimov
- One Corpse Too Many - Peters
- The Big Four - Christie

I think that's all of them.

2/2

#mysterynovels #indigenous #ReligiousStudies #history #childrensbooks #SciFi #psychology #sociology #horror #navalhistory #christianhistory

Last updated 3 years ago

An like everyone else. On and off since 2018, though a different account on a different instance that I'm trying to transfer (and toots/posts don't come in the xfer). Degrees in and but I now work in / . My interests:

#mastodon #ReligiousStudies #writing #webdevelopment #qa #classicfilm #sociology #religion #economics #books #python #linux #travel #spreadsheets #wine #buddhism #christianhistory #christianity #introduction

Last updated 3 years ago

Richard · @Aslanmane
149 followers · 789 posts · Server theres.life