Hostile to paganism, the early Christians, such as the
Church Fathers, embraced euhemerism in attempt to undermine the validity of pagan gods. The usefulness of euhemerist views to early Christian apologists may be summed up in
Clement of Alexandria's triumphant cry in
Cohortatio ad gentes: "Those to whom you bow were once men like yourselves."
The Book of Wisdom The
Wisdom of Solomon, a
deuterocanonical book, has a passage giving a euhemerist explanation of the origin of idols.
Early Christian apologists The
early Christian apologists deployed the euhemerist argument to support their position that pagan mythology was merely an aggregate of
fables of human invention.
Cyprian, a North African convert to Christianity, wrote a short essay ("On the Vanity of Idols") in 247 AD that assumes the euhemeristic rationale as though it needed no demonstration. Cyprian begins: Cyprian proceeds directly to examples, the
apotheosis of
Melicertes and
Leucothea; "The Castors [i.e.
Castor and Pollux] die by turns, that they may live", a reference to the daily sharing back and forth of their immortality by the Heavenly Twins. "The cave of Jupiter is to be seen in Crete, and his sepulchre is shown", Cyprian says, confounding Zeus and
Dionysus but showing that the
Minoan cave cult was still alive in Crete in the third century AD. In his exposition, it is to Cyprian's argument to marginalize the
syncretism of pagan belief, in order to emphasize the individual variety of local deities: Eusebius in his
Chronicle employed euhemerism to argue the Babylonian God
Baʿal was a deified ruler and that the god
Belus was the first Assyrian king. Euhemeristic views are found expressed also in
Tertullian (), the
Octavius of
Marcus Minucius Felix and in
Origen.
Arnobius' dismissal of paganism in the fifth century, on rationalizing grounds, may have depended on a reading of Cyprian, with the details enormously expanded.
Isidore of Seville, compiler of the most influential early medieval encyclopedia, devoted a chapter to elucidating, with numerous examples and elaborated genealogies of gods, the principle drawn from
Lactantius, ("Those whom pagans claim to be gods were once mere men"). Elaborating logically, he attempted to place these deified men in the six great periods of history as he divided it, and created mythological dynasties. Isidore's euhemeristic bent was codified in a rigid parallel with sacred history in
Petrus Comestor's appendix to his much translated (written c. 1160), further condensing Isidore to provide strict parallels of figures from the pagan
legend, as it was now viewed in historicised narrative, and the mighty human spirits of the patriarchs of the
Old Testament.
Martin of Braga, in his , wrote that idolatry stemmed from post-deluge survivors of Noah's family, who began to worship the
sun and stars instead of
God. In his view, the Greek gods were deified descendants of
Noah who were once real personages.
Middle Ages Christian writers during the
Middle Ages continued to embrace euhemerism, such as
Vincent of Beauvais,
Petrus Comestor,
Roger Bacon and
Godfrey of Viterbo. According to John Daniel Cooke, medieval Christian scholars embraced euhemerism because they believed that: While in most respects the ancient Greeks and Roman had been superior to themselves, they had been in error regarding their religious beliefs. An examination of the principal writings in Middle English with considerable reading of literature other than English, discloses the fact that the people of the Middle Ages rarely regarded the so-called gods as mere figments of the imagination but rather believed that they were or had been real beings, sometimes possessing actual power. Other scholars have written that: It was during this time that Christian apologists had adopted the views of the rationalist Greek philosophers. And had captured the purpose for Euhemerism, which was to explain the mundane origins of the Hellenistic divinities. Euhemerism explained simply in two ways: first in the strictest sense as a movement which reflected the known views of Euhemerus' Hiera Anagraphe regarding Panchaia and the historicity of the family of Saturn and Uranus. The principal sources of these views are the handed-down accounts of Lactantius and Diodorus; or second, in the widest sense, as a rationalist movement which sought to explain the mundane origins of all the Hellenistic gods and heroes as mortals. ==Snorri Sturluson's "euhemerism"==