faith throughout time

the point of this page will change. however, for now it will serve as a forum for the class of christian history at mac for the fall semester of 2010. notes, pics, hand-outs, questions & the like will be available here. also, this will be the place where conversations from class can continue to grow and expand. it is my hope that this blog will help facilitate continued growth as we attempt to explore the christian faith through time.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Do NOT call them the dark ages!



With the Roman Empire crumbling around them, those who called themselves Christian faced entirely new struggles to both survive and spread the faith in new and dangerous times. The church emerged as a stabilizing and unifying force in the West but, some might argue, at the cost of compromising the faith in order to appease the Barbarian hordes that threatened to detroy everything. Gone were the days of the Early Church, gone were the days of the Imperial Church, here were the dawning days of the Barbarian Church.

CH1A03-Christian History
1 November 2010
In the Valley of the Shadow of Death
The Fall of Rome, the Rise of the Papacy & Celtic Christianity
I. The Great Recession
A. The invaders
B. is for Barbarians
C. Muslim Forces
D. In the east
E. In the west
F. Descent into Darkness

II. The Great Ascension
            A. Victory over Arianism
            B. Monasticism
            C. The Papacy
                        i. Gregory the Great
                        ii. Donation of Constantine & Isidorian Decretals

III. How the Irish Saved Civilization
            A. peregrini
            B. Patrick
            C. is for Columba
            D. The Conversion of the English
                        i. The English missionaries




IV. The 2, 4, 6
2 events
Synod of Orange (529): Working against the Semi-Pelagianism of its day, this council had much to say concerning the constitution and fallen nature of humanity, together with God’s remedy of redemption through his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. The synod drew its inspiration from Augustine who had died almost a century before.
Barbarian Invasions (A.D. 500-950): For the sake of argument, these are the dates given to discuss the series of crushing military blows that would come to shape Western Europe as well as Christianity in those regions. Dated from the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West.

4 Terms
peregrini: From the Latin peregrinus meaning "from abroad" these “Intrepid Irish Adventurers for God” went into Western Europe and helped spread Christianity to numerous pagan tribes as well as be instrumental in the Christianizing of the British Isles. Their work helped the Church function throughout the 6th to the 10th centuries before Scandinavian raiders greatly damaged Ireland’s monastic communities.
Isidorian Decretals: Forgeries from the ninth century professing to have been written by one Isidore Mercator. The decretals depicted that the Popes of Rome were considered superior from the beginning, permitted all bishops to appeal directly to the Pope thus limiting archbishops and regarded Bishops and Popes as free from secular control.
servus servorum Dei Latin for ‘servant of the servants of God.’ It was a name given to Gregory the Great. It did not originate with him, but it did seem to suit his character.
Donation of Constantine: Most likely an Eighth-century forgery. It proclaimed to be written by Constantine describing his conversion, baptism and healing from leprosy by Pope Sylvester I. In it Constantine, out of gratefulness, hands over his Roman palace and the territories of Italy to the Pope and his successors.

6 names
Patrick (ca. A.D. 387-461): The patron saint of Ireland. Although much of his life is wrapped in hagiography and legend, it is fairly safe to say that he is largely responsible for the conversion of the Ireland to Christianity.
Columba (A.D. 521-597): Irish monk who began the monastery on the Isle of Iona (extant today). Iona was the launching point for many Irish missionaries that were destined to bring Christianity to numerous Barbarians, including the tribes on the neighbouring island of England.
Gregory ‘the Great’ (A.D. 540-604): Arguably one of the most influential popes ever. He worked tirelessly to both unite the greatly fractured Western European tribes as well as brought a new period of primacy to the papal office. He was instrumental in increasing the prestige of the Church throughout the West.
Augustine of Canterbury (d. 26 May 604): Appointed by Pope Gregory (the Great) to evangelize the English. He was remarkably successful and eventually established his archbishopric in Canterbury. He also established an important bishopric in York, both of these remain in existence in this very day. His work tied the English Church to Rome until the time of Henry VIII.
Julian I: Byzantine Emperor who did much throughout the 6th century to strengthen the Roman Empire and spread Christianity as well. A thoughtful scholar, statesman and faithful Christian who did much to spread and support Chalcedonian Theology.
Isidore of Seville (AD.. 560-636): His brief summary of Christian doctrine Book of Sentences was to be studied for centuries in the West as a textbook of theology. His name was used in the title of an 9th century forgery known as the Isidorian Decretals that argued, among other things, that the Bishops of Rome were superior from the beginning of the Catholic Church.

Quotes:
“Christianity continues to bear the imprint of its Jewish heritage and of the Greco-Roman world into which it first moved, but more than any of the other faiths of [humanity] it has proved its capacity to outlast cultures with which it has seemed to be identified and some of which it helped to create.”
~LaTourette, History, 1:271.
“Supreme egotism and utter seriousness are necessary for the greatest accomplishment, and these the Irish find hard to sustain; at some point, the instinct to see life in a comic light becomes irresistible, and ambition falls before it.”
~William V. Shannon
If anyone denies that it is the whole man, that is, both body and soul, that was “changed for the worse” through the offense of Adam’s sin, but believes that the freedom of the soul remains unimpaired and that only the body is subject to corruption, he is deceived by the error of Pelagius and contradicts the scripture which says, “The soul that sins shall die” (Ezek. 18:20); and, “Do you not know that if you yield yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are the slaves of the one whom you obey?” (Rom. 6:126); and, “For whatever overcomes a man, to that he is enslaved” (2 Pet. 2:19).
~Canon 1 from the Synod of Orange (A.D. 529)
The Emperor Constantine the fourth day after his baptism conferred this privilege on the Pontiff of the Roman church, that in the whole Roman world priests should regard him as their head, as judges do the king. In this privilege among other things is this: “We-together with all our satraps, and the whole senate and my nobles, and also all the people subject to the government of glorious Rome-considered it advisable, that as the Blessed Peter is seen to have been constituted vicar of the Son of God on the earth, so the Pontiffs who are the representatives of that same chief of the apostles, should obtain from us and our empire the power of a supremacy greater than the clemency of our earthly imperial serenity is seen to have conceded to it, choosing that same chief of the apostles and his vicars to be our constant intercessors with God.
~Chapter XIV from the Donation of Constantine


© James Robertson 2010

Sunday, October 17, 2010

The Empire Strikes Up


Greetings everyone...here are the notes for the class where we begin to explore how Christianity changed and took shape when it was supported by the state. I am looking forward to the interesting discussions that this will, no doubt, create. How are the faithful to respond when they believe their religious institution has been corrupted?



CALLED OUT:
“OFFICIAL” FAITH & THE RISE OF MONASTIC ORDERS

I. Official Faith
            A. Julian “the Apostate”
            B. Julian and Christianity
            C. Faltering of Arianism
                        i. ANOMOIANS
                        ii. SEMI-ARIANS/HOMOIOUSIANS
                        iii. HOMOIANS

II. The Cappodocians
            A. Macrina
            B. Basil “The Great”
            C. Gregory Nyssa
            D. Gregory of Nazianzus

III.Theodosius I & the Nicene Creed (finally!)

IV. Imperium in imperio
            A. War
            B. Wealth
            C. Women
            D. Words

V. Monastic Response
            A. The Beginnings
            B. Monasteries Develop
                        i.Basil of Caesarea
                        ii. Martin of Tours
                        iii. Jerome
                        iv. John Chrysostom

VI. The 4,5,6’s
4 terms
Monasticism: From the Greek “monos” meaning alone, it is a religious way of life characterized by the practice of renouncing worldly pursuits to fully devote one's self to spiritual work. The origin of the word is from Ancient Greek, and the idea originally related to Christian monks.
Semi-Arians: a name frequently given to the Trinitarian position of the conservative majority of the Eastern Christian Church in the 4th century, to distinguish it from strict Arianism
“Spiritual Sisters”: name given to the women who were living in the homes of supposedly celibate priests.
Imperium in Imperio: Latin for “an order within an order” it could also mean something along the lines of what the state empowers an individual or group to do in order to best serve the state.

5 (more) terms
Council of Constantinople: Called by Theodosius in 381 to affirm the Creed of Nicaea and deal with the Arian Controversy. Considered by most as the 2nd ecumenical council, it was also the first one held in Constantinople (at the church of the Hagia Irene).
Eremetical: solitary monks
Laura: when monks lived in solitude but close enough to encourage fellowship
Cenobitic: when monks lived together in a community, governed by a leader.
Consubstantial: Used to define the term homoousios as it pertained to Jesus’ relationship in the Trinity. The idea was coined by Tertullian & found official sanction in the Nicene Creed.

6 names
Julian “the Apostate” (A.D. 331/332-363): Became Caesar in 355 and renounced Christianity & sought to restore paganism to its former pre-Constantine glory.
Theodosius I (A.D. 347-395): He made Nicene Christianity the official religion of the empire; he was also the last emperor to rule over both halves of the Empire.
Pachomius (ca. A.D. 292-348): Long considered the founder of Christian cenobitic monasticism. His name means “the falcon”
Basil of Caesarea (A.D. 330-379): established guidelines for monastic life that focused on community life, liturgical prayer, and manual labour. Together with Pachomius (A.D. 292-348): he is remembered as a father of communal monasticism in Eastern Christianity.
Jerome (A.D. 347-420): Well known for his work translating the Bible into Latin that came to be known as the “Vulgate”
John Chrysostom (A.D. 349-407): Influential church leader who received the name Chrysostom (which means “golden-mouthed”) due to his reputed eloquence and power as an orator. He also wrote against abuses of power by both the church and the state.


“The essential feature of heresy is that it is not unbelief…in the strict sense of the term, but a form of the faith that is held ultimately to be subversive or destructive, and thus indirectly leads to such unbelief. Unbelief is the outcome, not the form of heresy.”
Alister McGrath Heresy: A History of Defending the Truth, 33.

“No one else but the Saviour himself, who in the beginning made everything out of nothing, could bring the corrupted to incorruption; no one else but the Image of the Father could recreate [people] in God’s image; no one else but our Lord Jesus Christ, who is Life itself, could make the mortal immortal; no one else but the Word, who orders everything and is alone the true and only-begotten Son of the Father, could teach [people] about the Father and destroy idolatry…Two miracles happened at once: the death of all [people] was accomplished in the Lord’s body, and death and corruption were destroyed because of the Word who was united with it. By death immortality has reached all and by the Word becoming man the universal providence and its creater the leader, the very Word of God, has been made known.” Athanasius, The Incarnation of the Word, 4:20, 54.

Writings of Athanasius on Arianism found here


© James Robertson 2010