What if everything you believe about morality was shaped by a revolution you never chose?
For centuries, ideas like human dignity, equality, compassion for the weak, and suspicion of unchecked power have felt self-evident. We argue about politics, ethics, and justice as if these instincts were natural facts of human existence.
They are not.
In Dominion, Sarah Lambert uncovers the hidden story behind the moral framework that governs the modern world. Drawing on history, philosophy, and cultural analysis, this book reveals how Christianity did far more than spread a religion. It rewired how power, suffering, and worth are understood across civilizations.
What you're about to discover will change how you see everything from ancient empires to modern activism. You will see why the cross was once an obscene symbol of humiliation, how weakness became moral authority, and why today's debates about justice still follow a theological pattern even when God is no longer named.
Few people realize that modern secular values did not replace Christianity. They inherited it. From the rise of universal human rights to the triumph of the victim, from charity to conscience, the moral logic of the West carries a legacy that refuses to disappear.
This book matters now because we live inside a moral system we did not invent. It explains why outrage feels righteous, why cruelty feels intolerable, and why power is always on trial. Whether you are a believer, a skeptic, or somewhere in between, Dominion offers clarity rather than persuasion, understanding rather than argument.
You will gain a deeper grasp of history, a sharper awareness of modern culture, and a clearer understanding of yourself. This book is for readers who question inherited assumptions, thinkers uneasy with easy answers, and anyone who senses that the past still governs the present.
The hidden truth behind modern morality is not comforting. It is illuminating.
Ready to see the world differently?
Get your copy of Dominion today and uncover the revolution that never stopped unfolding.
Related Subjects
History