By the time of Lucian, popular religion had ceased to hold much
influence over the hearts of the cultured classes. Philosophy was the
new God, but there were efforts in some circles to divert men's minds
from the philosophical sects and restore a sort of unorthodox faith in
the old religion. Against this artificial revival of mythological faith,
Lucian pitted the influence of his tremendous satirical powers. In the
"Dialogues of the Gods," he pulls the curtain aside-exposing the Gods as
they engage in private disputes, domestic brawls, and love affairs, with
their jealousies and scandals, their paltry strifes and petty motives.
The lesson is simple: Can one worship beings with such weaknesses, such
foibles, and such scandalous and immoral lives? This new translation by
Baudelaire Jones breathes fresh life into ancient deities such as Zeus,
Hera, Hermes, Aphrodite, Poseidon, and Athena, revealing complex,
contradictory, sex-obsessed creatures that modern mortals can surely
relate to.