Julian's initial toleration of Christianity is coupled …

Years: 362 - 362

Julian's initial toleration of Christianity is coupled with a determination to revive paganism and raise it to the level of an official religion with an established hierarchy.

The new emperor, who apparently sees himself as the head of a pagan church, performs animal sacrifices and is a staunch defender of a sort of pagan orthodoxy, issuing doctrinal instructions to his clergy.

Not surprisingly, this incipient fanaticism soon leads from apparent toleration to outright suppression and persecution of Christians.

Pagans are openly preferred for high official appointments, and Christians are expelled from the army and prohibited from teaching classical literature and philosophy.

The latter action leads his contemporary and comrade-in-arms Ammianus Marcellinus, who admires Julian's virtues and is himself an adherent of the traditional religion, to censure the emperor: That was inhumane, and better committed to oblivion, that he forbade teachers of rhetoric and literature to practice their profession if they were followers of the Christian religion.

Julian writes an attack on Christianity, Against the Galileans (known today only by fragmentary citation).

“The trickery of the Galileans”—his usual term—has nothing divine in it, he argues; it appeals to rustics only, and it is made up of fables and irrational falsehoods.

Though a professed Neoplatonist and a sun worshiper, Julian himself is, according to Ammianus, an addict of superstition rather than religion.

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