[History of the Conflict Between Religion and Science by John William Draper]@TWC D-Link bookHistory of the Conflict Between Religion and Science CHAPTER III 2/67
No insignificant portion of the vast public revenues found their way into the treasuries of the Church.
As under such circumstances must ever be the case, there were many competitors for the spoils--men who, under the mask of zeal for the predominant faith, sought only the enjoyment of its emoluments. ECCLESIASTICAL DISPUTES.
Under the early emperors, conquest had reached its culmination; the empire was completed; there remained no adequate objects for military life; the days of war-peculation, and the plundering of provinces, were over.
For the ambitious, however, another path was open; other objects presented.
A successful career in the Church led to results not unworthy of comparison with those that in former days had been attained by a successful career in the army. The ecclesiastical, and indeed, it may be said, much of the political history of that time, turns on the struggles of the bishops of the three great metropolitan cities--Constantinople, Alexandria, Rome--for supremacy: Constantinople based her claims on the fact that she was the existing imperial city; Alexandria pointed to her commercial and literary position; Rome, to her souvenirs.
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