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                        <title><![CDATA[The World's Oldest Anti-Christian Meme [Archaeology]]]></title>
                        <description>I first came across the Alexamenos graffito back in Bible college in the early 2000s. It was one of those &amp;ldquo;fun facts&amp;rdquo; that gets dropped into a church history lecture and sticks with you &amp;mdash; the ancient Roman equivalent of someone spray-painting an insult on a wall. I filed it away, thought it was fascinating, and largely forgot about it for two decades.</description>
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                            <div><article class="rssWrap">I first came across the Alexamenos graffito back in Bible college in the early 2000s. It was one of those &ldquo;fun facts&rdquo; that gets dropped into a church history lecture and sticks with you &mdash; the ancient Roman equivalent of someone spray-painting an insult on a wall. I filed it away, thought it was fascinating, and largely forgot about it for two decades.
Then, recently, I discovered something about it I had never known. There&rsquo;s a response to it. Scratched in a different room, in a different hand.
So I started digging into this more to verify the information and discovered more historical curiosities surrounding the graffiti than I ever knew existed which contextualises the image so much more than it just being a random insult using a donkey.

A Crude Drawing on a Wall
Sometime around the late second to early third century AD, someone scratched a picture into the plaster wall of a building on the Palatine Hill in Rome &mdash; part of what had once been a paedagogium, a kind of boarding school for imperial page boys. The building was eventually sealed off when the street was walled up to support extensions above it, which is why the graffiti survived at all. It wasn&rsquo;t rediscovered until 1857.
The image is rough, almost childlike. To the left, a young man &mdash; clearly a Roman soldier or guard &mdash; raises one hand in a gesture of worship. Before him is a cross. And on that cross is a crucified figure with the head of a donkey.
Below it, written in Greek: Alexamenos worships his god.
It is, in the most literal sense, a mocking cartoon. Someone who knew a Christian named Alexamenos decided to ridicule him for his faith. The message is clear enough: your god is an animal, a criminal, a joke. You&rsquo;re worshipping a crucified fool.
But here&rsquo;s the thing I discovered: the donkey head wasn&rsquo;t as random as I always thought it was. It wasn&rsquo;t some strange personal insult conjured from nowhere. Without knowing the background, it looks bizarre, and pos...<a href="https://thesacredfaith.co.uk/home/perma/1773050400/article/the-worlds-oldest-anti-christian-meme.html">Continue Reading &rarr;</a> You\'re reading <a href='https://thesacredfaith.co.uk/home/perma/1773050400/article/the-worlds-oldest-anti-christian-meme.html'>The World's Oldest Anti-Christian Meme</a> by <b>Luke J. Wilson</b>,
posted on <a href='https://thesacredfaith.co.uk'>The Sacred Faith: Timeless Truths for Modern Minds</a>.<br><br>If you enjoyed reading this, you can follow Luke J. Wilson on:  <a href='https://www.facebook.com/LukeJWilsonAuthor/'>Facebook</a>,  <a href='https://twitter.com/MrLewk'>Twitter</a>, or support them on <a href='https://www.patreon.com/LukeJWilson'>Patreon</a>.</article></div>
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                        <pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2026 10:01:11 +0000</pubDate>
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