ABSTRACT

With Constantine the foundations of an edifice were laid that we call the Church. In this chapter those foundations will be noted, the subsequent construction of the edifice will be discussed, the imagined world created by its systems of myth and ritual will be described, some transformations and reproductions throughout its history will be analyzed, and the question of a Christian mentality will be raised. From Constantine to the present is a long stretch of Christian history, much too vast to be summarized in a chapter. Thus the focus will fall on just those topics and moments that allow us to apply the categories from our emerging social theory of religion. We want to analyze the social interests of the church and the myth and ritual systems of Christianity as structures of an imagined world in order to ask about the mythic grammar that underlies certain ways of thinking about the social worlds.