This is a fascinating skeptic's view of the early history of the Christian church.
Though unabashed racism generally and anti-semitism specifically are not unusual to find in old classics, in this one it is essential to the writer's message. His is a very high opinion of the Roman Republic, her philosophies, myths, and government, from which he claims the greatest nations of the eighteenth century have descended, the European nations of which he is a part. Against these grand nations he compares the ancient Jewish people, and with this disparagement he begins his book, and lays upon it the foundation for his later condemnation of the Jesus sect that was birthed from them.
Chief among his judgments of the Jewish nation and the Christianities that followed it is their intolerance toward any other form of worship, polytheism and idolatry in particular, and their inability to assimilate with surrounding nations and cultures which followed that intolerance. From here, he tracks the growth and development of the early church, especially the relationship of the early Jesus followers to their Jewish brothers and sisters, the belief in miracles as a foundation to their faith and conviction, the early dealings with schismatic groups and sects, and the rise of the early church government.
An elementary understanding of the history of the early church will help in understanding this book. The writer assumes this knowledge of the reader. If a reader has only carefully read and understood the book of Acts, this may be sufficient, as the history in this book follows Luke's history quite closely.
As a Christian and anarchist, I found this book to be one of the most enlightening short reads I've had when it comes to forming an understanding of the relationship of the early Christians to empire, and how the expression of the faith that followed Jesus stood in resistance to the earthly Powers, grew among them, and nonviolently tore them down by their subtle aggravation and consistent undermining of those authorities as they made them irrelevant by that presence as an alternative nation among them.
I do not share the author's antisemitism or white supremacy. Nor do I share the author's veneration of the myths and philosophies of the violent Roman Empire over the simple faith of the colonized Jews or the persecuted Christians. I am, in fact, intolerant, exactly as this author suggests. I will not tolerate the ambition of empire, or the self serving idols of nationalism, racism, or class. I do not tolerate violence or powers of greed and acquisition. I am intolerant. I will live apart. This book was inspiring to me, as I celebrate the fall of empire then and now, by the simple, foolish, slow and unassuming growth of the Kingdom of God that will ultimately cause its final ruin and bring it to its final judgment.