Heresy
A Chronicle of Religious Rebels Through the Ages
Heresy invites readers on a sweeping journey through the lives and ideas of those who dared to challenge religious orthodoxy from antiquity to the present day. Beginning with the mystical Gnostic quest for hidden knowledge, the narrative traces how early Christian thinkers reimagined divinity, creation, and salvation, setting the stage for centuries of theological conflict. Each chapter unpacks a distinct movement—from Arius’s battle over the nature of Christ to the dualist visions of the Paulicians, Bogomils, and Cathars—showing how dissent often sprang from deep spiritual conviction as well as social and political unrest.
The book then follows the threads of reform that rippled through medieval Europe, highlighting the Waldensians’ call for apostolic poverty, John Wycliffe’s push for scripture alone, and Jan Hus’s Bohemian stand against papal corruption. Readers will see how these precursors fueled the Protestant Reformation, with vivid portraits of Luther, Zwingli, Calvin, and the radical Anabaptists, whose beliefs reshaped worship, church authority, and the very relationship between faith and state. The stories of martyrs like Michael Servetus and the fierce debates over the Eucharist reveal the high stakes of interpreting scripture in a world where doctrine could mean life or death.
Moving into the modern era, Heresy examines how the concept of heresy evolved alongside Enlightenment reason, American revivalism, and global social movements. Chapters explore Unitarianism’s rational monotheism, the Shakers’ radical communalism, Mormonism’s new scripture, and the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ distinct eschatology, alongside the liberation theology that linked faith to justice for the poor. The narrative also captures the rise of Pentecostal ecstasy, the New Age syncretic quest for personal divinity, and contemporary struggles over issues such as LGBTQ+ inclusion, showing how the label of heresy continues to shift in a pluralistic world.
By the end, readers will not only have surveyed a rich tapestry of religious rebellion but will also grasp the enduring tension between orthodoxy and dissent—a dynamic that has driven theological innovation, cultural transformation, and the perpetual human search for meaning. Heresy offers both a scholarly chronicle and a compelling reflection on how questioning the established order can, paradoxically, become the foundation for new traditions and deeper understanding of the sacred.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of religious history, theology, or church history seeking a comprehensive overview of religious dissent. It will also appeal to general readers interested in how religious ideas develop and change over time, particularly those fascinated by the intersection of faith, society, and power dynamics. Anyone studying the relationship between religion and politics, or the evolution of Christian thought from antiquity to the present day, will find valuable insights in this chronicle of religious rebels.
May 22, 2026
51,614 words
3 hours 37 minutes
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