Join CEMS for the launch of Prof. Jonathan Sheehan’s (UC Berkeley) latest book, On the Altar: A History of Sacrifice from the Sacred to the Secular (Princeton University Press, 2026). On the Altar offers a new examination of sacrifice. It is a history of the Christian and secular imagination, from Europe to the Americas.
Prof. Sheehan will deliver a lecture on his new book. The will be followed by a Q&A and a drinks reception.
To attend, please sign up here: https://buytickets.at/centreforearlymodernstudies/2183472
Book Description: On the Altar: A History of Sacrifice from the Sacred to the Secular
From the beginning, sacrifice lived a double life in Christianity, both abandoned and essential. Christ’s death on the cross was the sacrifice to end all sacrifice, eclipsing the temple sacrifices of Judaism and paganism. And yet at the center of the lived faith was the repetition of sacrifice: the offering of Christ’s body, the sacrifices of ancient patriarchs, and the sacrifices of martyrs woven through liturgy, theology, and popular devotion.
But this double life collapsed in the Reformation. Quarreling heirs to Christian truth discovered that the sacrifices they once called Christian might be nothing of the sort. To build their new faiths—to discover the truth of Christian sacrifice—they turned to the past, learning from Christianity as it was how Christianity ought to be.
In On the Altar, Jonathan Sheehan offers a new account of sacrifice both sacred and secular. His story is in part a history of the Christian imagination across the centuries of the Reformation, when new martyrs and holy warriors fought for the truth of their sacrifices, when the empire of New World sacrifice was recruited to settle Christian conflicts, and when the sacrifices of the ancient Hebrews were weaponized for orthodoxy. But it is a history of the secular imagination as well, as the vast archive of Christian sacrifice was dispersed and applied to things that humans make, their religions, politics, and societies. With On the Altar, Sheehan reveals a new history of both Christianity and the secular world in which we still live.
Speaker Bio