Tammuz
Senior Member
Have you heard of Mithraism? Likely so, if you have engaged at all with Jesus mythicism, regardless of your position on it. Have you heard of Zoroastrianism? Also pretty likely. It was the dominant religion in the Persian Empire before the Islamic conquest. Zoroastrians still exist today as very small groups in Iran and India, and other places, including the West. Have you heard of Zalmoxis? Perhaps not. A popular god among the ancient Getae and Dacians (who lived in modern-day Romania), notable enough that Herodotus bothered to write about him.
In all of these cases, we are talking about religions that in the course of history lost it. They never became world religions. Instead we got primarily Christianity and Islam (and the latter would not have existed, at least not in its current form, without the existence of the former, as it was deeply influenced by it).
My thought is, those religions who became world religions, did they have some sort of competitive edge? Some qualities that attracted adherents (and conquerors) more effectively than those religions that never made it big, like those mentioned above? Or did they just get lucky?
In all of these cases, we are talking about religions that in the course of history lost it. They never became world religions. Instead we got primarily Christianity and Islam (and the latter would not have existed, at least not in its current form, without the existence of the former, as it was deeply influenced by it).
My thought is, those religions who became world religions, did they have some sort of competitive edge? Some qualities that attracted adherents (and conquerors) more effectively than those religions that never made it big, like those mentioned above? Or did they just get lucky?