Saturday, April 28, 2018

Christian History Made Easy Lesson 2





As the Christians began to organize, what major changes began to appear?
Between the 1st and 4th centuries:
Certain bishops (or overseers) became responsible for all the churches in certain areas instead of one local church.
Buildings began to be built for the purpose of Christian worship.
Baptism began to include not only believers but also infants of believing families.

As the Christian Church was suffering attack from the Roman world, what attack came from within the church itself?





Ancient Christian Heresies caused much confusion and dispute.







Heresies

Adoptionism - God granted Jesus powers and then adopted him as a Son.

Albigenses - Reincarnation and two gods: one good and other evil.
Apollinarianism - Jesus' divine will overshadowed and replaced the human.
Arianism - Jesus was a lesser, created being.
Docetism - Jesus was divine but only seemed to be human.
Donatism - Validity of sacraments depends on character of the minister.
Eutychianism - Jesus finite human nature is swallowed up in His infinite divine nature.
Gnosticism - Dualism of good and bad and special knowledge for salvation.
Kenosis - Jesus gave up some divine attributes while on earth.
Marcionism - An evil God of the O.T., good God of the N.T. 11, books in the Canon
Modalism - God is one person in three modes.
Monarchianism - God is one person.
Monophysitism - Jesus had only one nature: divine.
Nestorianism - Jesus was two persons.
Patripassionism - The Father suffered on the cross.
Pelagianism - Man is unaffected by the fall and can keep all of God's laws.
Semi-Pelagianism - Man and God cooperate to achieve man's salvation.
Socinianism - Denial of the Trinity. Jesus is a deified man.
Subordinationism - The Son is lesser than the Father in essence and or attributes.
Tritheism - The Trinity is really three separate gods.


Who were the gnostics?

•The Gnostics were a religious sect that emerged in the Roman Empire about the same time as Christianity.
•The word “Gnostic” comes from the Greek gnosis (“knowledge”). 
The Gnostics were a religious sect that emerged in the Roman Empire about the same time as Christianity.
The word “Gnostic” comes from the Greek gnosis (“knowledge”). 
In the late 1st century, natural disasters and a plague afflicted the Roman Empire.
In this context, a negative view of the physical world may have made sense.
In AD 79, Mt. Vesuvius erupted and destroyed Pompeii.










The Gnostics fraudulently attached the names of famous Christians to their writings, such as :
The Gospel of Thomas 
The Gospel of Philip
The Gospel of Mary
The Gospel of Truth 
The Gospel to the Egyptians
The Secret Book of James
The Apocalypse of Paul
The Letter of Peter to Philip
The Apocalypse of Peter
The Testimony of Truth
The Gospel of Judas





Who was Marcion and what was he teaching?



•Marcion was the son of a pastor; he gained great success in the shipping business.


•In the mid-second century, Marcion developed a theology that mingled a negative view of the physical world with a heretical understanding of the Christian tradition.
•When he refused to repent, Marcion was excluded from fellowship in his father’s church.
•He fled to Rome where he donated a substantial sum to the church.
•In Rome, Marcion developed his theology into a full-fledged system that borrowed from Gnostic ways of thinking.
•According to Marcion:
The God of the Old Testament and the Father of Jesus Christ were two different deities
The physical world was evil; therefore, Jesus only seemed to have a physical body, and the Father of Jesus would not resurrect anyone’s physical body.
The Christian life should deny all physical pleasures, even sexual relations between spouses.
The teachings of several apostolic texts contradicted Marcion’s teachings.
In response, Marcion created a canon—or “authoritative list”—of writings for his followers.
Marcion’s list included only 11 books: An edited version of Luke’s Gospel and ten of Paul’s letters.

How Did the Churches Respond?

Christians responded by


1. Clarifying what sort of Christian writings should be authoritative or canonical

2. Summarizing their faith in a confession known as the Rule of Faith.

3. Giving bishops (overseers) in certain cities the responsibility for maintaining doctrinal integrity in their churches. 


The churches met in a series of councils to discuss and affirm what biblical scripture actually teaches on doctrinal issues.


The Hypostatic Union


The hypostatic union is the term used to describe how God the Son, Jesus Christ, took on a human nature, yet remained fully God at the same time. Jesus always had been God (John 8:5810:30), but at the incarnation Jesus became a human being (John 1:14). The addition of the human nature to the divine nature is Jesus, the God-man. This is the hypostatic union, Jesus Christ, one Person, fully God and fully man.


Jesus' two natures, human and divine, are inseparable. Jesus will forever be the God-man, fully God and fully human, two distinct natures in one Person. Jesus' humanity and divinity are not mixed, but are united without loss of separate identity. 


The First Council of Ephesus in 431 AD recognized this doctrine and affirmed its importance.


How was the biblical canon established?


By approximately 500 BC, the 39 Books that make up the Old Testament were completed, and continued to be preserved in Hebrew on scrolls. 

Josephus. Josephus (A. D. 37-100) said that the Jews held as sacred only twenty-two books (which include exactly the same as our present thirty-nine books of the Old Testament).

The early church fathers accepted the thirty-nine books of the Old Testament. 

THE TESTS OF CANONICITY
(1) Did the book indicate God was speaking through the writer and that it was considered authoritative?

(2) Was the human author recognized as a spokesman of God, that is, was he a prophet or did he have the prophetic gift?

(3) Was the book historically accurate? Did it reflect a record of actual facts?







•By the early 2nd century, many writings were circulating among Christians; many of them claimed to have come from Jesus or his first followers.

Many of these writings were written in Gnostic communities, based on Gnostic experiences rather than any historical testimony about Jesus


Three standards emerged to determine which writings ought to be considered authoritative:
1.Must be connected to eyewitnesses of the risen Lord or to close associates of eyewitnesses.
2.Could not contradict other authoritative writings.
3.Should be recognized by churches throughout the world.

From the very beginning, the churches recognized as authoritative:


The four Gospels
The Acts of the Apostles
The epistles of Paul
At least one of John’s epistles

•Some disagreements persisted for several years over whether the other New Testament books could 
be clearly connected to eyewitnesses of Jesus. 
•By the late 4th century, the “New Testament canon”
had been settled.

What was this Confession of Faith?

Mark 12:29 (ESV) 
Jesus answered, “The most important is, ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.
Romans 10:9 (ESV) 
 ……because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.

The Greek word for fish (ichthus) represented a confession of faith among early Christians:
Iesous (Jesus)
Christos (Christ)
Theou (Divine)
Uios (Son)
Soter (Savior)


•In the 2nd century, a more comprehensive confession of faith emerged.
•This confession of faith was repeated when a new believer was baptized to distinguish between faithful Christians and Gnostics.
•It became known as the Rule of Faith, later as the Apostles’ Creed.




How did a Priesthood of Overseers develop?

In the 1st century, groups of equal elders (overseers) seem to have guided each local church (Phil. 1:1).

During the Gnostic controversy, overseers in certain cities where the apostles had ministered traced their teachings and authority back to the apostles.

Overseers in certain cities, such as Rome, gradually gained greater authority and began to oversee churches beyond their own cities.

•Polycarp’s church celebrated Easter at a different time than the Roman church.

•In AD 160, Polycarp and Anicetus, overseer of Rome, agreed to disagree about the Easter issue

•Near the end of the 2nd century, Victor served as bishop of Rome.

•Unlike Anicetus, Victor demanded that Christians in the eastern Roman Empire celebrate Easter on the same dates as the Roman church

•When Eastern Christians refused, Victor excluded them from fellowship with Roman Christians.

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Friday, April 27, 2018

Christian History Made Easy Session 1

Chapter 1
The Gospels, the Apostles,     Then … What?
What is in this Session?
  • You will learn …
  • How a fire in Rome in AD 64 led to early persecution of Christians.
  • How the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 affected perceptions of Christianity in the Roman Empire.
  • Who the apologists were and how they defended Christian beliefs.
  • Which human failures and factors God used to bring glory to himself.
Who were the Christians?
  • From the perspective of people in the 1st century AD, Paul and other believers in Jesus were considered to be part of a new Jewish sect (Acts 16:19–21).
Acts 16:19-21 (ESV) 
But when her owners saw that their hope of gain was gone, they seized Paul and Silas and dragged them into the marketplace before the rulers. 
20  And when they had brought them to the magistrates, they said, “These men are Jews, and they are disturbing our city. 21  They advocate customs that are not lawful for us as Romans to accept or practice.”
                                                                                                                                                     The Apostle Paul
  • In AD 54, Emperor Claudius expelled from Rome all persons practicing the Jewish religion.
  • This edict of Claudius included Jewish believers in Jesus (Acts 18:2).
Coin with image of Emperor Claudius
  • Tragedies in two cities led to changes in perceptions of Christianity.
  • AD 64: A fire destroyed 10 districts in Rome.
  • AD 70: The Roman army destroyed the Jerusalem temple.
  • The fire probably began by accident in an oil warehouse.
  • Many Romans claimed that Emperor Nero started the fire.
  • To stop the rumors, Nero blamed the Christians.
The Fire in Rome—AD 64
Persecution of Christians
  • The apostles Peter and Paul were probably martyred during Nero’s persecution of Christians.
  • Why did Romans despise Christians?
  • Christians rejected the traditional Roman gods.
  • Romans misunderstood many Christian customs, especially the Lord’s Supper.
  • Christians valued children and women in ways that challenged the social order.
  • Christianity seemed like a new religion; Romans were suspicious of new traditions.
Destruction of Temple—AD 70

  • The destruction of the Jewish temple in Jerusalem also affected perceptions of the Christian faith.
  • In AD 66, a group of Jewish insurrectionists took Galilee and Judea from the Romans.
  • Emperor Vespasian sent his son Titus to retake the rebel provinces.
  • In AD 70, Titus destroyed the Jewish temple.
  • Jesus predicted this event (Mark 13:1–2) (Luke 21:20-24) .
Mark 13:1-2 (ESV) 
And as he came out of the temple, one of his disciples said to him, “Look, Teacher, what wonderful stones and what wonderful buildings!”  And Jesus said to him, “Do you see these great buildings? There will not be left here one stone upon another that will not be thrown down.
Luke 21:20-24 (ESV) 
 “But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation has come near. 21  Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains, and let those who are inside the city depart, and let not those who are out in the country enter it, 22  for these are days of vengeance, to fulfill all that is written. 23 Alas for women who are pregnant and for those who are nursing infants in those days! For there will be great distress upon the earth and wrath against this people. 24  They will fall by the edge of the sword and be led captive among all nations, and Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.


  • The final group of Jewish rebels chose mass-suicide instead of surrender.
  • They died at Masada, a fortress that Herod the Great had built near the Dead Sea.
  • After the destruction of the Jewish temple, the Jewish and Christian faiths each became more distinct as Judaism became less diverse.
More Persecution

  • In the late 1st century AD, Emperor Domitian demanded to be worshiped as “Lord and God.”
  • Domitian and his successor Emperor Trajan persecuted Christians as well as Jews.
                                                                             Trajan Emperor of Rome AD 98-117

  • In AD 112, a governor named Pliny described how he dealt with Christians in a letter to Trajan.
  • Pliny described Christian beliefs as “outlandish superstitions.”
The Apologists
  • Because Christians refused to worship the Roman gods and emperors, Christians were accused of “atheism.”
  • Christian apologists defended their faith against false charges.
  • Justin was a philosopher who became a Christian and an apologist.
He believed that pagan philosophers had discovered dim shadows of divine truth.
  • Around AD 165, “Justin Martyr” was beheaded for his faith.
  • Christianity grew because God’s Spirit was working; at the same time, God uses human factors as he enacts his sovereign will in the world.
How God Was Working
  • What human factors were important in the early church’s growth?
  • 1. Christianity provided moral guidance in an immoral world.
  • Many Gentile “God-fearers” became believers in Jesus as their Lord and Messiah.
  • 2. Christianity valued women and children.
  • Unlike Roman religions, both Jewish and Christian faiths called men to be faithful to their wives and considerate of their children.
  • 3. Christianity offered relationship with a God who had intersected human history and who, through the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, understood humanity’s suffering.
  • The awareness of Christ’s sufferings comforted many early martyrs.
  • Polycarp of Smyrna before he was executed for his faith: “Eighty-six years, I have served Christ, and he has done me no wrong. How can I blaspheme my king, the one who has saved me?”
  • Sanctus of Lyons before martyrdom: “Nothing is painful so long as the glory of Christ is near.”
  • Regarding the martyrdom of Blandina: “They saw in the form of their sister him who was crucified for them.”
Questions?
  • 1. What was the Edict of Claudius? (see Acts 18:2) How did this edict affect early Christians?
  • 2. Soon after the fire in AD 64, the Romans executed Peter and Paul. After these tragedies, what sorts of discussions do you suppose Christians had with one another in their gatherings?
  • 3. How did the destruction of the Temple in AD 70 affect relationships between Jewish believers in Jesus and other Jews?
  • 4. What can Christians today learn from martyrs such as Justin and Blandina?
The above post may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. It is being made available in an effort to advance the understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, social justice, for the purpose of historical debate, and to advance the understanding of Christian conservative issues. It is believed that this constitutes a ”fair use” of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the Copyright Law. In accordance with the title 17 U.S. C. section 107, the material in this post is shown without profit to those who have expressed an interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
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