New Book Announcement: “Constantine and the Divine Mind”

I’m happy to announce that my forthcoming book, Constantine and the Divine Mind: The Imperial Quest for Primitive Monotheism, has just been picked up by Wipf and Stock publishers.

What’s the book about?  Essentially, it’s a new historical proposal about the reason for Constantine’s famous conversion to Christianity. It’s also about monotheism.

Few subjects seem to have posed a bigger challenge to historians of Rome and early Christianity than Constantine’s relationship with the Christian religion.  Indeed, the emperor’s dramatic turn to the Christian god remains one of history’s most controversial and hotly-debated episodes: Was Constantine’s conversion “sincere”?  If so, why did he convert?  When did this conversion take place?  And what kind of Christian did he ultimately become?

I won’t spoil anything just yet, but I’ll say this much: in Constantine and the Divine Mind, I will be offering a new portrait of Constantine as a deeply religious man who believed he was on a divine quest to restore the original religion of mankind.  By tracing this quest, I will be illuminating the process by which he embraced the Christian god, and how the reasons for that embrace continued to manifest in his religious policies.

The book’s foreword will be written by historian Joseph Early Jr., PhD, associate professor of religion at Campbellsville University, and the author of A History of Christianity (Baker Academic, 2015) and many other books and articles.

If you are at all interested in Christianity, Roman history, monotheism, the psychology of religious conversion, or the challenge of religious diversity, then this book will have something for you.  Be on the look-out for updates, including a release date, as the manuscript edges closer to completion.

For now, here are some photos of myself and Constantine, who I feel I’ve come to know personally over the past few years of research:

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Bronze head of Constantine, 4th Century CE; Capitoline Museums, Rome
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Remains of the Colossus of Constantine, originally in the Basilica of Maxentius, 4th Century CE; Capitoline Museums, Rome

Comments

3 responses to “New Book Announcement: “Constantine and the Divine Mind””

  1. jimspace3000 Avatar
    jimspace3000

    Great photos of Constantine! I bet this includes the information in your presentation “Revisiting Homoousios: Origins, Intentions, and Aftermath,” which was eye-opening for me.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Jeff Fletcher Avatar
    Jeff Fletcher

    Love to get this. Please let me know when it’s available.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Jason Myers Avatar
    Jason Myers

    Looking forward to how you relate your research back to our main focus which is to be the kingdom of God. Loved ‘The God of Jesus’ so this one also is sure to not disappoint.

    Like

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