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            their treasures—bronze doors, gilt idols, and even their                Further Reading
            gold-shingled roofs—which disastrously affected the  Drake, H. A. (2000). Constantine and the bishops:The politics of intoler-
                                                                  ance. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
            pagan cause. He even engaged in the first persecution of
                                                                Elliott,T. G. (1996). The Christianity of Constantine the Great. Scranton,
            non-Christians by Christians. Between this clear      PA: University of Scranton Press.
            favoritism and instructing his children in the new faith,  Jones, A. H. M. (1979). Constantine and the conversion of Europe.
                                                                  Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press.
            Constantine sent the message that the route to power,  Lieu, S. N. C., & Montserrat, D. (1998). Constantine: History, historiog-
            influence, and riches now lay through Christianity.    raphy and legend. London: Routledge.
                                                                MacMullen, R. (1984). Christianizing the Roman Empire A.D. 100–400.
              To his horror, Constantine found that rather than a
                                                                  New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
            universal monolithic hierarchy, the Christian  “church”  MacMullen, R. (1997). Christianity and paganism in the fourth to eighth
            consisted of mostly independent house-churches loosely  centuries. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
                                                                Rousseau, P. (2002). The early Christian centuries. London: Longman.
            confederated with no standardized doctrine, ritual, or
            scripture. As reported by Eusebius, Constantine consid-
            ered himself a bishop, a new kind of Christian Pontifex
            Maximus, or priest-king, charged with the protection
            and promotion of Christianity—an example followed by             Consumerism
            his successors for the next millennium and more.To this
            end, as soon as he gained control of the whole empire,  onsumerism involves a devotion to the acquisition
            he called Christian leaders to a council at Nicaea (325 – Cof goods not needed for basic, or even embellished,
            326 CE), where his insistence on standardizing beliefs and  subsistence. It is further associated with a desire for nov-
            practices defined “orthodoxy” and pushed Christianity  elty, even a commitment to faddism, rather than con-
            into a monolithic hierarchical autocracy; his insistence on  tentment with established styles sanctioned by tradition.
            standardization also led to the first state-sponsored per-  The spread of consumerism, socially and geographically,
            secution of Christians (the “Donatists”) by Christians, set-  is one of the most significant developments in world his-
            ting yet another dubious example for his successors.  tory over the past two to three centuries. Growing com-
              Constantine was both the best and the worst thing that  mitments to consumer culture represent not only a sign
            ever happened to Christianity.Without him, Christianity  of economic change and growing prosperity, but also a
            would never have become the critical cultural, political,  significant shift in values.
            and religious force that it did, since nowhere has it
            become a majority religion without state-sponsored  Beginnings
            favoritism and persecution. Constantine’s insistence  Consumerism is not, of course, entirely modern. Elites in
            on hierarchical autocracy, an orthodoxy of ritual and  various societies indulged in aspects of consumerism
            doctrine, and the persecution of nonbelievers ensured  from the advent of civilization if not before.Bursts of con-
            Christianity’s triumph (and some of its greatest crimes).  sumerism occurred,for example,at various points in Chi-
            It also laid the foundation for three critical events in Euro-  nese history, as wealthy landowners and aristocrats built
            pean and world history—the Papal Revolution, the Cru-  houses with showy furniture and fancy gadgets, and
            sades, and the Protestant Reformation. Without      showed off a parade of eye-catching costumes.The passion
            Constantine’s conversion, the modern world as we know  of Roman elites for Chinese silks was an example of con-
            it would not exist.                                 sumerism,and so was the domestic indulgence in jewelry
                                                                common in wealthy Muslim homes in the Middle East.
                                           Jerome S. Arkenberg
                                                                  There were, however, several constraints on consum-
            See also Byzantine Empire; Roman Empire             erism in traditional societies. One was the poverty of the
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