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A. The Barbarians

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Title: A. The Barbarians


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2
A. The Barbarians
  • The conversion of Europe, the Xianizing of the
    whole western world, may owe its accomplishment
    to what appeared at first as a disaster to both
    Xianity the empire the invasion of vast
    hordes of barbarians.
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • Already we have seen Alaric the Visigoths sack
    Rome in 410.
  • While Augustine was dying in 430, the Vandals
    were besieging Hippo.
  • Barbarian invasions were to last for 600 yrs.

3
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • Already we have seen Odoacer of the Ostrogoths
    dethrone the last of the western emperors in 476.
  • In rapid succession of a number of barbaric
    kingdoms were set up
  • Visigoths (415-711) in Spain southern Gaul
  • Ostrogoths (493-554) in Italy
  • Burgundians (443-543) in southeastern Gaul
  • Vandals (429-533) in North Africa
  • Franks under the Merovingians (486-752)

4
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • In rapid succession of a number of barbaric
    kingdoms were set up
  • Lombards (586-774) in northern Italy
  • Angles, the Saxons, the Jutes left Denmark n.
    Germany settled in south Britain (443-485)
  • Slavic tribes also moved into the eastern empire.
  • Culturally, the invaders were not savages
    neither were they nomads.
  • They were agricultural people who sought new
    lands because of overcrowding.

5
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • In the arts they were not primitive.
  • The Germanic people brought precise principles of
    law which later furnished the basis for the
    ecclesiastical practice of penance indulgences.
  • Salvian (5th c. Xtian) claimed the barbarians
    were morally more chaste than the nobility of the
    empire, he especially commended Gaiseric, the
    Vandal, for closing the brothels of Carthage.

6
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • Religiously, the barbarians were of 2
    backgrounds.
  • There were pagans but many barbarians already
    claimed to be Xtians of the Arian variety.
  • Most of the Goths had come to embrace Arian
    Xtianity under Ulphilas, the apostle of the
    Goths, who had given them an alphabet
    translated the Bible into their tongue.
  • All of the Teutonic tribes were eventually
    converted to Xtianity.

7
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • From the Visigoths Xtianity came to the
    Ostrogoths, the Vandals the Lombards.
  • One of the most notable conversions of the period
    was that of Clovis, King of the Franks (Gaul).
  • At the repeated insistence of his wife, Queen
    Clotilde, a Catholic Burgundian princess, C.
    finally embraced Xtianity, was baptized,
    compelled his entire army to be baptized.

8
Baptism of Clovis Clovis I was king of the
Franks from 481 to 511. In 496 he con- verted to
Christianity, which gain- ed him the support of
the Roman Catholic Church for his conquests of
other tribes in western and Central Europe.
During his rule Clovis enlarged the Frankish
territory to include most of modern France and
Germany.
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A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • Using his new religion as a political weapon, C.
    overthrew the Arian king of the Visigoths, Alaric
    II, consolidated his dominions with the aid of
    Catholic bishops Roman officials.
  • His codification of the Salic law his efforts
    to fuse the Romans the Teutons laid the
    foundations of the modern French nation.
  • The e.g. of C. was repeated throughout all of
    Europe.
  • Naturally there was little evidence of individual
    conversion in these mass conversions.

11
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • Thus the people brought their old beliefs mores
    into the ch.
  • For Clovis, Jesus was a tribal war god the
    people saw X as the heavenly ruler rather than
    the suffering redeemer.
  • The archangel Michael of the flaming sword became
    a spiritual champion his name was given to the
    citadel of Mont St. Michel.
  • Chs monasteries were built in great numbers,
    but people rulers fell far short of NT
    standards.

12
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • After defeat by Clovis, the Arian Visigoths
    settled in Spain continued in Arianism until
    Recared, King of Spain was converted to orthodox
    Xtianity in 587.
  • The Burgundians were the 1st barbarians to give
    up Arianism for orthodoxy they provided the
    pagan Clovis with his Xtian queen.
  • The Arian Ostrogoths in Italy capitulated to
    orthodoxy after defeats at the hands of Justinian
    in 553.

13
A. The Barbarians
  • 1. From Invasion To Conversion
  • The barbarian states were established because
    they had the military might to subdue the Roman
    Empire, but they did not have the education or
    experience to govern it.
  • Everywhere they were a minority, with the
    majority being Roman Catholic.
  • Besides the Anglo-Saxons in England, the only
    barbarian kingdoms which survived at the close of
    the 6th c. were the Franks in Gaul the
    Visigoths in Spain, they were both solidly
    Catholic.

14
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • The barbarian invasion provided the setting for
    the ascendancy of one of Catholicisms most
    famous leadersGregory I (546-604).
  • He was the 4th last of the traditional Latin
    Doctors of the Church (with Ambrose, Augustine
    Jerome).
  • He was pope from 590 to his death (604) became
    father of the medieval papacy.
  • Of the 180 bishops of Rome between Constantine
    the Reformation, none was more influential than
    Gregory.

15
Dove (Holy Spirit) dictating to Gregory the
Homilies on Ezekiel.
16
Homilies on Ezekiel
17
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • The last of the Germanic tribes to enter the
    Roman Empire, the Arian Lombards, invaded Italy
    in 568 the ineffective imperial governor was
    unable to combat them.
  • This actually had a positive effect on the
    position of the ch at Rome the R. bishop became
    the leader protector of the people.
  • Gregory was the son of a Roman nobleman at 1st
    sought a career in civil administration.
  • He entered monasticism in 574, selling his family
    estates, founding 7 monasteries, giving the
    rest to the poor.

18
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • The pope made him an envoy to the court at
    Constantinople.
  • He returned to R. in 585 to become abbot of his
    monastery.
  • When the pope (Pelagius II) died (one of the 1st
    victims of the bubonic plague), the people of R.
    unanimously chose Gregory.
  • He was the 1st pope to have been a monk from
    this time Benedictine monasticism was closely
    allied with the papacy these 2 institutions gave
    medieval Catholicism its distinctive character.

19
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • a. Peace with the Lombards.
  • G. found Italy in an alarming state, devastated
    by famine, pestilence Lombard invasion.
  • According to legend, the bubonic plague was
    miraculously ended.
  • G. set the civil affairs of R. in order,
    collected taxes, provided for welfare, repaired
    buildings streets raised trained an army to
    repel the Lombards.

20
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • a. Peace with the Lombards.
  • Although he was technically under the emperor, he
    acted independently, garrisoned his army, sent
    orders to generals in the field, negotiated
    with the Lombards.
  • No bishop or pope before G. had dared to do half
    as much.
  • He appointed governors over certain areas
    increased his papal authority until the papacy
    was the largest, wealthiest, most powerful
    institution in Italy.

21
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • b. Conversion of Britain.
  • As a monk, G. had been deeply moved by the sight
    of some attractive young children in the slave
    market.
  • When he found they were Angli from England
    pagans, he determined to be a missionary to that
    land.
  • After he became pope, he commissioned Augustine,
    prior of his monastery in R., to accomplish this
    mission for him.

22
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • b. Conversion of Britain.
  • Ethelbert, king of the Jutes in Kent, was one of
    As first most notable converts he 10,000
    subjects were baptized on Xmas Day, 597.
  • Ethelbert was also overlord of the neighboring
    kingdoms of Essex and East Anglia so Catholic
    Xtianity came to 3 or 12 Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.

23
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • b. Conversion of Britain.
  • G. appointed A. archbishop King E. gave the new
    archbishop his own palace in Canterbury, which
    became the 1st episcopal center in England.
  • A. met opposition from the Celtic ch, which
    refused to adopt the Roman tradition of baptism
    or the Roman dating of Easter.
  • Later, after As death, at the Synod of Whitby,
    664, England severed her connection with the old
    Iro-Celtic ch in favor of Rome.

24
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • c. Gregorys Contributions.
  • G. left an indelible imprint on ecclesiastical
    theological issues.
  • As a theologian, he was not original, building
    mainly on the works of Augustine of Hippo.
  • He did, however, initiate several enduring
    practices.
  • He est. the mass as a repetition of the sacrifice
    of X that would benefit the living or the dead.

25
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • c. Gregorys Contributions.
  • He formulated the doctrine of purgatory, which
    played so large a part in the religion of the
    Middle Ages.
  • He was interest in liturgy popularized the
    Gregorian chants.
  • His contributions to the medieval papacy were
    even more noteworthy.
  • He repudiated the Patriarch of Constantinople
    when he used the title Ecumenical Patriarch
    (universal bishop).

26
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • c. Gregorys Contributions.
  • G. called this a flagrant violation of the
    primacy of R., referred to himself as the
    Servant of the Servants of God.
  • While Leo I is often recognized as the first
    pope, G. is the 1st to exercise universal
    authority openly declare himself to be pope.
  • In deed as well as name, he was patriarch of the
    West.

27
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • c. Gregorys Contributions.
  • He ordered the African bishops to oppose the
    Donatists punished those who had fallen into
    Manichaeismsetting the precedent for the
    subsequent inquisitions.
  • He brought Spain from Arianism into orthodoxy,
    directed the mission campaign in Britain took
    the Emperor Maurice to task over his restrictions
    on soldiers entering sacred orders.

28
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • c. Gregorys Contributions.
  • Anywhere everywhere he did whatever he deemed
    necessary to govern the entire ch.
  • Gs period as pope, by its extension of the
    popes authority, marks the transition from the
    ancient world of imperial R. to medieval Xtendom
    united by the Roman Catholic Ch.
  • The Medieval Period (Middle Ages) is so called
    because of its chronological position between
    ancient modern times.

29
A. The Barbarians
  • 2. Gregory The Great
  • c. Gregorys Contributions.
  • It forms the transition from Greco-Roman
    civilization to the Romano-Germanic civilization
    which was to control the future of the western
    world.
  • Pope G. stood on the threshold between the old
    the new order of things.
  • He was the last Church Father as well as the 1st
    medieval theologian.
  • He was the last Roman bishop the 1st medieval
    pope.

30
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • Xtians in the R. Empire immediately saw met the
    challenge of converting the barbarians who had
    come to them.
  • But there were some with a wider vision who were
    awakened to the possibility of missions in the
    homelands of the invaders beyond.
  • a. Willibrord in the Netherlands (658-739)
  • Wilfrid began with a brief preaching tour in
    Frisia on a trip to Rome on his return to Eng.
    he called for missionaries for Frisia monks
    swarmed over north-western Europe.

31
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • Xtians in the R. Empire immediately saw met the
    challenge of converting the barbarians who had
    come to them.
  • But there were some with a wider vision who were
    awakened to the possibility of missions in the
    homelands of the invaders beyond.
  • a. Willibrord in the Netherlands (658-739)
  • Wilfrid began with a brief preaching tour in
    Frisia on a trip to Rome on his return to Eng.
    he called for missionaries for Frisia monks
    swarmed over north-western Europe.

32
Willibrord
33
Willibrord Stamp
34
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • a. Willibrord in the Netherlands (658-739)
  • The most successful was Willibrord of Saxon
    Northumbria, the Apostle to the Netherlands.
  • W. went to Frisia in 690 was made archbishop of
    Frisia in 695.
  • By his death he had established the archepiscopal
    see of Utrecht had converted most of the people
    of the southern part of the Low Countries.

35
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • b. Boniface in Germany (680-754).
  • Willibrords assistant for 3 yrs was Winifrid who
    became known as Boniface, doer of good, who
    became known as the Apostle of Germany.
  • He was so successful that Pope Gregory II made
    him missionary bishop to Germany in 722.
  • One of Bs major achievements was the
    consolidation of existing chs into one
    ecclesiastical body.

36
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • b. Boniface in Germany (680-754).
  • Extremely popular, he single-handedly demolished
    their superstitions, nature divinations ritual
    incantations.
  • Before he was 60 he had converted practically the
    whole territory east of the Rhine north of the
    Danube.

37
St. Boniface
38
Martyrdom of St. Boniface (15th c. French painting
39
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • c. Scandinavian Missions.
  • Denmark Sweden were first evangelized by Anskar
    (801-865), the Apostle of the North.
  • Norway was Christianized from Eng. thru the
    efforts of 2 Norwegian kings, Olaf Tlryggvason
    (995-1000) Olaf Haraldson (1015-30).
  • The 1st Xtian king in Sweden was Olaf Lapking,
    baptized in 1007.
  • From the Scandinavian countries Xtianity spread
    to Iceland, Finland, Greenland.

40
A. The Barbarians
  • 3. Missions On The Continent.
  • d. Slavic Missions.
  • The Apostles of the Slavs were 2 brothers from
    a Gk family in Thessalonica, Cyril Methodius.
  • Emperor Michael III sent them as missionaries to
    what is now Moravia.
  • Cyril invented an alphabet for the people called
    Glagolithic (also Cyrillic) became the founder
    of Slavonic literature.
  • A Xtian princess brought Xtianity to Bohemia,
    from there it spread to Poland Hungary.

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B. The Moslems
  • While Xtianity was making great gains among the
    barbarian tribes of western Europe, a new storm
    was swirling down upon the empire from the
    deserts of Arabia.
  • Marching under the banner of a new theocracy
    called Islam, they posed the greatest external
    threat yet to both empire Xtendom.

43
B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • The religion of Islam was the product of the mind
    spirit of a single individual, Mohammed, its
    prophet (570-632).
  • Orphaned at 6, M. was reared by an uncle in the
    Quraysh tribe, which had control of the Kaaba,
    the national religious shrine of the Arabs.
  • The Kaaba contained the sacred Black Stone the
    well reputedly kicked up by the infant Ishmael
    when Hagar left him to search for water (Gen.
    218-21).

44
The Kaaba
45
B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • M. became disillusioned by the idolatrous worship
    degenerate behavior he observed in connection
    with Arabian religion, when he began making
    caravan trips to Syria Palestine, his religious
    feelings increased.
  • He became the business manager of a rich widow,
    Khadijah, whom he married.
  • His 2 sons by Khadijah died in childhood, only
    1 of 4 daughgters, Fatima, survived.

46
B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • His wealth enabled him to have wider religious
    contacts more leisure time for long periods of
    reflection on religion.
  • One night in the hills near Mecca, in a cave on
    Mt. Hira, he said that he had a vision of the
    angel Gabriel telling him to recite.
  • He went home produced the entire 96th sura of
    the Koran.
  • In a 2nd appearance, Gabriel commissioned him a
    prophet of the Lord, subsequent revelations
    that make up the Koran came frequently.

47
B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • M. began proclaiming the Day of the Lord in the
    marketplace.
  • The day was to be one of resurrection, final
    judgment, everlasting fire.
  • Though people were impressed with his poetic
    oratory, after 4 yrs he had only 40 converts.
  • Because of his attacks on the Kaaba, the Quraysh
    disturbed his meetings with violence, he feared
    for his life.

48
B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • 300 mi to the north, 6 men left the Medina to
    seek out Mohammed as the leader who might bring
    the tribes of Medina Mecca together.
  • They arrived in Mecca just in time to help him
    escape assassination.
  • Thus, in 622, M. his followers made their great
    Hegira flight to Medina, marking the beginning of
    the Islamic calendar.
  • In Medina he became the undisputed leaders of a
    religious theocracy, defended the city against
    Meccan attacks boldly attacked captured Mecca
    itself.

49
Mecca
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B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • Within 8 yrs M. had become the strongest
    chieftain in all Arabia.
  • He stripped the Kaaba of its idols images, but
    continued to pay tribute to the Black Stone.
  • By 632 M. was dead at 62, but he had instituted a
    new religion that would unify the Arabian people
    into one brotherhood.

52
B. The Moslems
  • 1. Mohammed The Prophet
  • The strict monotheistic faith of Islam made rigid
    moral spiritual demands on the people which
    they eagerly accepted, for M. had convinced them
    that they were divinely appointed to bring all
    peoples into submission to the will of God.

53
Medina
54
B. The Moslems
  • 2. The Religion of Islam
  • Islam implies submission to the will of God,
    means the submitters.
  • It must be understood in order to evaluate the
    historical developments of wars, conquests,
    expansion.
  • The fanatical followers of M. have always been on
    a holy crusade to capture convert the world for
    the God (Allah).
  • Islam is built around 5 basic doctrines

55
B. The Moslems
  • 2. The Religion of Islam
  • 1) There is no God but Allah, M. is his
    prophet.
  • 2) Gods work is carried on among men by angels,
    the mediating spirits of God.
  • 3) The will of Allah is written down in the
    Koran, which contains all a Moslem needs to know
    to obtain salvation.
  • 4) The great figures of Judaism Xtianity are
    revered by Islam, but its own prophet M.
    surpasses them all.

56
B. The Moslems
  • 2. The Religion of Islam
  • There are 6 great prophets Adam, Noah, Abraham,
    Moses, Jesus Mohammed, the greatest of them
    all.
  • 5) There will be a resurrection day a final
    judgment for every individual the followers of
    M. will cross into the Gardens of Paradise,
    infidels (non-Moslems) sinful Moslems will fall
    into the abyss of hell.
  • There are 4 religious practices to which every
    Moslem is bound

57
B. The Moslems
  • 2. The Religion of Islam
  • There are 4 religious practices to which every
    Moslem is bound
  • 1) prayer, 5 times a day, facing Mecca in the
    bodily position described in the Koran
  • 2) almsgiving, including both the Jewish tithe
    additional charity
  • 3) fasting from all gratifications of the senses
    during the entire month of Ramadan
  • 4) pilgrimage to Mecca during ones lifetime,
    either personally or by proxy.

58
B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • Believing that they were divinely commissioned to
    subdue all people to Gods will, Moslems did not
    hesitate to organize, train give military
    expression to their missionary call.
  • In developing Arabian unity around Islam, M. used
    violent as well as nonviolent means with his own
    people.
  • Then he personally led them in their first
    military conquests of Xtianity in 629.

59
B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • It was not, however, until after his death that
    Islam spread like a devouring fire over the East.
  • Armed with the belief that death in combat on
    behalf of Allah would ensure entrance into
    paradise, the terrifying Moslems swept down on
    Damascus in 635, conquering it almost instantly.
  • Jerusalem held out longer, but fell under a
    bloody siege in 637.

60
B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • 638 saw the fall of Antioch, Tripoli, Tyre,
    Caesarea 15 other cities on the Mediterranean
    coast.
  • By the end of 639 nothing of the eastern empire
    was left in Syria.
  • Mesopotamia surrendered, by 641 all of Egypt had
    been conquered, the advance across N. Africa
    had begun.
  • Iraq fell in 637, by 649 had subdued all of
    Persia by 652 (only 12 yrs) Moslems controlled
    most of Asia Minor.

61
B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • Attempting to capture Constantinople, they were
    turned back by the awesome Taurus Mountains.
  • Determined to take C. they organized a navy
    took Cyprus (648), Aradus (649) Cos Rhodes
    (654).
  • They defeated Emperor Constans II in a naval
    battle at Phoenix (655), but the Moslems were
    spread too thin.
  • For 5 yrs (673-678) they tried to take C. by land
    sea, but were repeatedly driven back.

62
B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • A peace of sorts was affected in 679, but
    hostilities resumed in 695.
  • In 732 Charles Martel, ruler of the Franks,
    turned the tide in the West by his decisive
    victory over the Saracens (a word used by
    medieval writers of Arabs generally later
    applied to the M. nations against whom the
    crusaders fought.
  • The Battle of Tours (732) was the decisive event.

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B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • If the invading Arabs had not been turned back at
    Tours, they might well have engulfed all of
    Europe.
  • Though they had finally been stopped, the Moslems
    in 45 yrs (633-678) had torn from the eastern
    empire some of its richest most populous
    provinces, had left it only a shadow of its
    former self.
  • The occupation of the Holy Land by the Moslems
    was especially offensive to Xtians throughout the
    world.

65
B. The Moslems
  • 3. The Moslem Conquests
  • Centuries later, the Crusades of the 11th, 12th
    13th c. were undertaken to recover the Holy Land
    from the clutches of Islam.

66
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • Xtianity had been depleted like the empire.
  • The gains of Xtianity in the West had been
    counterbalanced by excessive losses in the East.
  • a. The Consolidation of the Church.
  • 3 of the patriarchs were now in Moslem territory.
  • Rome was gaining political autonomy, C. was
    enjoying imperial patronage, but Alexandria,
    Antioch, Jerusalem had been humiliated.

67
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • The patriarchs of Alexandria Antioch lived
    abroad in exile, but Sophronius stubbornly
    remained in Jerusalem.
  • Multitudes of Xtians found it more expedient to
    exchange Xtianity for Islam, within a
    generation, the majority of the population of N.
    Africa, Egypt, Syria, Mesopotamia, even
    Palestine became Moslem.
  • The Xtianity that survived was greatly modified,
    faithful Xtians found themselves cut off from
    the rest of Xtendom for centuries.

68
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • These events were beneficial for the
    consolidation of the ch.
  • The patriarch of C, which had been one among 4
    equals, became the head of eastern Catholicism.
  • The 424 dioceses throughout the Balkan peninsula
    Asia Minor came under the direct rule of the
    see of C.
  • The loyalty and integrity of the clergy were
    strengthened with new stringent requirements.

69
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • Society in general appeared to be intensely
    religious during this period.
  • Attendance at ch was large regular.
  • Worship developed into an exquisitely beautiful
    art, with sacramental worship, rather than
    preaching, becoming central.
  • Baptism was universally officially conferred
    upon infants.
  • Penance was not obligatory, but was encouraged.

70
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • Marriage was regulated controlled by the ch
  • Fasting before communion was required.
  • Theological writings were few inconsequential
    there seemed to be an abnormal desire to spurn
    the spiritual intellectual, to fix religion
    in concrete terms.
  • This was especially expressed in the compulsion
    of people everywhere to see, handle kiss relics
    icons.
  • This widespread practice precipitated one of the
    greatest controversies in the eastern ch with
    effects in modern times.

71
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • Icons, technically speaking, are flat pictures,
    usually painted in oil on wood, but also made in
    mosaic, ivory, other materials, used to
    represent X, the Virgin Mary, or some saint.
  • Iconoclasm, used in our vocabulary as a synonym
    for destruction, means the shattering of
    something established to make room for something
    new different.
  • In ch. hist. it refers to the effort to abolish
    images, pictures, or any material likenesses of
    any sacred personage or event.

72
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • The iconoclast thus were the destroyers of icons
    or sacred images.
  • The iconoclasts called the people who worshiped
    or venerated images the iconolaters.
  • 1) Leo the Iconoclast.
  • In 726, Emperor Leo III published an edict
    declaring all images idols ordering their
    destruction, thus becoming known as Leo the
    Iconoclast.

73
IconThe Nativity of the Theotokos
74
Icon of the Archangel Michael
75
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 1) Leo the Iconoclast.
  • Leo believed that the use of icons was a chief
    obstacle to the conversion of Jews Moslems.
  • The Jews were offended by icons because of the
    2nd com which forbids the making of graven
    images.
  • As a soldier on the eastern frontier of the
    empire, Leo had been impressed with the Moslem
    rejection of idolatry in any form.

76
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 1) Leo the Iconoclast.
  • When he became emperor, L. accepted iconoclasm as
    a divine mission he was ordained of God to
    perform set about to eliminate image worship
    from his empire.
  • The b. of R. condemned Leo for his iconoclastic
    decree, in retaliation the emperor
    reapportioned Sicily, southern Italy, the
    entire western part of the Balkans Greece from
    R. to the patriarchate of Constantinople.

77
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 1) Leo the Iconoclast.
  • Disturbances erupted throughout the empire, a
    systematic persecution was loosed against the
    more ardent defenders of the icons.
  • John of Damascus wrote apologies against the
    iconoclasts, Pope Gregory III held two synods
    at Rome condemning Leos supporters.

78
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 1) Leo the Iconoclast.
  • In 741, was L. was succeeded by his son
    Constantine V who continued his fathers
    policies.
  • In 753, he called the Synod of Hieria the synod
    held that by representing only the humanity of X,
    the icon worshipers either divided his unity as
    the Nestorians or confounded the two natures as
    the Monophysites.

79
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 1) Leo the Iconoclast.
  • The synod also declared that the icons of the
    Virgin Mary the saints were idols decreed the
    destruction of all of them.
  • 2) John of Damascus (675-749).
  • The iconoclastic disputes produced the greatest
    medieval theologian of the eastern ch who was
    also the ablest defender of images in the early
    days of the controversy.

80
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 2) John of Damascus (675-749).
  • J. appealed to the images mentioned in the Bible,
    the brazen serpent in the wilderness, the lions
    in Solomons temple, but his primary argument was
    from the incarnation the Eucharist.
  • If God himself became flesh, then physical things
    cannot be evil, if X is bodily present in the
    bread wine, then sensory aids to religion are
    not wrong.

81
John of Damascus
82
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 2) John of Damascus (675-749).
  • He also argued from Platos notion that
    everything in this world is really an imitation
    of the eternal, original form.
  • Js work greatly influenced the 787 council at
    Nicaea where images were sanctioned again.
  • Under Constantines son, Leo IV (775-80), the
    persecution subsided.

83
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • 2) John of Damascus (675-749).
  • After his death, the Empress Irene, acting as
    regent reversed the policy of her predecessors.
  • She called the 7th General Council at Nicaea in
    787 which undid the work of the Synod of Hieria,
    set limits to icon veneration, decreed their
    restoration throughout the country.
  • Iconoclasm, however, retained a strong following,
    especially in the army.

84
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • In 814, the Second Iconoclastic Controversy
    took place under Leo V the Armenian, a general
    elected emperor by the army.
  • Again icons were removed from chs public
    buildings, defenders of icons were exiled,
    imprisoned, martyred.
  • Leo was assassinated in 820 his son grandson
    followed his policies, but on the death of the
    grandson, Theophilus, the tide turned once more.

85
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • Theodora, widow of Theophilus, acting as regent,
    had the monk Mehtodius elected patriarch in 843.
  • On the first Sunday of Lent a great feast was
    celebrated in honor of the icons, a feast which
    has been solemnly kept ever since in the eastern
    ch as the Feast of Orthodoxy.
  • The long controversy was over.
  • The icons had persevered won.

86
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • The iconoclastic controversy in the East had very
    little theological repercussions in the West, but
    it did have a profound practical effect.
  • This particular controversy is usually considered
    the last step toward the great schism between
    East West, before the actual breach.

87
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • The iconoclastic issue was a showcase example of
    Caesaropapism, the system whereby an absolute
    monarch has supreme control over the ch within
    his dominions exercises it even in doctrinal
    matters normally reserved to ecclesiastical
    authority.
  • The popes in R. viewed the flagrant Caesaropapism
    in the East during the icon dispute with growing
    apprehension.

88
B. The Moslems
  • 4. Effect On Christianity
  • b. The Iconoclastic Controversy.
  • The unity achieved by imperial decree at Nicaea
    in 787 again in 843 proved to be temporary.
  • With the development of the temporal power of the
    papacy, the way was prepared for the final
    separation between the independent ch of the West
    the ch of the Byzantine Empire.

89
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • In the 700s the Lombards were again threatening
    to overthrow Rome.
  • But if R. were to maintain any semblance of
    independence from Constantinople, it would have
    to look for protection from some other source
    than the emperor.
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • In 739 Gregory III appealed to Charles Martel for
    aid against the Lombards, but in vain.

90
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • When Charles Martel died, his son Pepin the Short
    became virtual ruler of the Franks.
  • He quickly saw that he the papacy could be of
    mutual assistance to each other.
  • He desired the kingly title as well as the kingly
    power in France so he sought the moral sanction
    of the ch for a revolution against the last of
    the Merovingians.
  • He received this approval from Pope Zacharias.

91
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • In 751 P. was formally made king of France,
    crowned by no less than Boniface, the great
    missionary to Germany.
  • In exchange for papal assistance, P. had agreed
    to drive the Lombards from Italy, which he did in
    755 756.
  • P. has been eclipsed by his son Charlemagne, but
    he must be remembered for establishing two
    critically important precedents.

92
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • The 1st was the acquiring of the throne by the
    sanction of the pope.
  • Charlemagnes coronation is much more famous, but
    Ps was actually the 1st demonstration of the
    papacys power in setting up governments, which
    led to the reestablishment of the empire in the
    West.
  • The 2nd precedent was the granting of territory
    positions to the pope.

93
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • After defeating the Lombards, P. created the
    papal states, consisting of 22 cities their
    environs, stretching across Italy from Rome to
    Ravenna.
  • In this action known as the Donation of Pepin
    (756), he gave outright to the R. ch its
    bishops all the cities won by him from the
    Lombards.
  • This act was justified by the precedent of a
    fabled document called The Donation of
    Constantine.

94
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • In this document Constantine the Great was
    supposed to have donated grants of land to Pope
    Sylvester for curing him of leprosy.
  • In this spurious account, C. gave Sylvester all
    succeeding popes all the cities of Italy the
    western regions.
  • So Pepin appeared to be merely returning lands to
    their rightful overlord.

95
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96
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • The Donation of Constantine was generally
    accepted as authentic throughout the Middle Ages,
    until its forgery was exposed by Nicholas of Cusa
    in 1433 Lorenzo Valla in 1440.
  • The imp result of the Donation of Pepin was the
    establishment of an entirely new commonwealth on
    the map of Europe, a commonwealth which was to
    continue in existence from 756 until the
    unification of Italy in 1870.

97
Lorenzo Valla on Donation of Con.
98
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 1. The Donation of Pepin
  • P. had laid the foundation of the ch-states
    constituted himself his successors as
    protectors of the Holy See.
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • P. died in 768 his kingdom was divided between
    sons, Charles Carloman when Carloman died in
    771, C. became sole ruler began the legendary
    reign that fused his name with greatnessCharlemag
    ne (Charles the Great).

99
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • C. soon began his conquestsLombardy, Saxony,
    Bavaria, northern Spain, Austria, etc.
  • Everywhere that C. marched conquered, he took
    the message organization of Roman Xtinaity.
  • His military conquests accompanying missionary
    efforts were especially appreciated by R.

100
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102
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • He ratified the donation of his father, made a
    sacred compact with the pope, extended the
    territories of the states of the ch, promised
    his protection always.
  • In response to Pope Leo IIIs enemies, C.
    declared that the Apostolic See has the right to
    judge everyone but can itself be judged by no
    one.

103
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • 2 days later, on Xmas Day, 800, while C. was
    kneeling at the altar in St. Peters, Pope Leo
    III, evidently with no warning to C., placed an
    imperial crown on his head.
  • The assembled nobility churchmen cried aloud
    To Charles Augustus, crowned by God, great and
    peaceful emperor of the Romans, long life and
    victory.
  • It signaled to Constantinople that C. was more
    than the king of France, he was supreme ruler of
    the western world.

104
Coronation of Charlemagne
105
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • It also signaled to Con. that the center of the
    empire had returned to Rome.
  • For the church, it announced that the new emperor
    was dependent for his authority upon the pope who
    had voluntarily conferred it upon him.
  • a. The State of Religion
  • C. was devout, concerned involved in affairs of
    the ch.

106
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • a. The State of Religion
  • Every morning he went to mass every evening to
    vespers.
  • He took an active part in the life of the ch,
    summoning councils interfering with their
    decisions.
  • The ch was virtually a department of state, but
    C. never ascribed to himself any religious
    designation.

107
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • a. The State of Religion
  • Instead, he preferred the role of David, who with
    his sword defended the Ark of the Lord.
  • There was outward reformation inward revival of
    monasticism under Cs pursuit of genuine
    spiritual Xtianity.
  • New ch bldgs were erected, a new architecture
    emerged which proved to be the forerunner of the
    later Gothic style.

108
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • a. The State of Religion
  • Because of Cs personal preference, the Gregorian
    chant experienced a real revival.
  • Baptism by immersion was replaced by pouring, and
    the baptistry gave way to the font.
  • The one abiding contribution which the West made
    to theology during this period was the addition
    of the filioque to the Nicene-Constantinople
    creed.

109
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • a. The State of Religion
  • Filioque means from the Son, was added to the
    creed as an affirmation that the HS proceeds
    equally from the Father the Son.
  • Although generally adopted in the West, the East
    refused the addition, preferring to say the HS
    proceeds from the Father by the Son.

110
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • b. The Carolingian Renaissance
  • C inaugurated a revitalizing of culture and
    learning by inviting to his court the most
    renowned scholars of his time to from the nucleus
    of a palace school where administrators for the
    state ch could be trained.
  • The Anglo-Saxon Alcuin (735-804) was head of the
    cathedral school at York when called to Cs court.

111
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The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • b. The Carolingian Renaissance
  • As royal tutor he established a palace library
    he also, as Abbot of Tours, set up an important
    school library at the monastery.
  • A. was the principal intellect architect of the
    Carolingian Renaissance.
  • He revived the ancient disciplines of grammar,
    rhetoric dialectic.

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114
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • b. The Carolingian Renaissance
  • Classical Xtian culture was revived A. dreamed
    of a new Athens enriched by the sevenfold
    fullness of the Holy Spirit.
  • A. informed C. that he was not to use his sword,
    the political power of the state, to impose
    religion.
  • He was the 1st to use the figure of the 2 swords
    with reference to the roles of ch state.

115
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • b. The Carolingian Renaissance
  • Thru A. ( others scholars) C. promoted the
    revival of classical Xtian culture, people were
    taught to read write appreciate books.
  • Perhaps more than any other sovereign in history,
    Charlemagne was head over all things in his day.
  • He was a warrior of great gifts, a patron of
    learning, the kindly master of the ch, the
    preserver of order.

116
The East-West Schism
  • A. The Holy Roman Empire
  • 2. The Reign of Charlemagne
  • b. The Carolingian Renaissance
  • When he died, he ruled all of modern France,
    Belgium, Holland, nearly half of modern Germany
    Austria-Hungary, more than half of Italy,
    northeastern Spain.
  • He expanded his kingdom as conqueror, but
    stabilized it as benefactor educator.
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