24.1.26

The un-Hellenic in Christianity


The Greeks did not see the Homeric gods as set above them as masters, or themselves set beneath the gods as servants, as the jews did. They saw as it were only the reflection of the most successful exemplars of their own caste, that is to say an ideal, not an antithesis of their own nature. They felt inter-related with them, there existed a mutual interest, a kind of symmetry. Christianity, on the other hand, crushed and shattered man completely and buried him as though in mud: into a feeling of total depravity it then suddenly shone a beam fo divine mercy, so that, surprised and stupefied by this act of grace, man gave vent to a cry of rapture and for a moment believed he bore all heaven within him. It is upon this pathological excess of feeling, upon the profound corruption of head and heart that was required for it, that all the psychological sensations of christianity operate: it desires to destroy, shalter, stupefy, intoxicate, the one thng it does not desire is measure: and that is why it is in the profundest sense barbaric, ignoble, un-Hellenic.

Friedrich Nietzsche
1844 - 1900