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The Spread of Christianity

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Title: The Spread of Christianity


1
The Spread of Christianity
  • Roman Politics
  • And
  • Christianity

2
Constantine
  • Born 280
  • Mother St. Helena responsible for churches
    and basilicas in Bethlehem and Jerusalem
  • He had a dream at the battle of Milvian Bridge
    in 312 he placed the Chi-Rho on the shields and
    banners of his men. If he did this he would win.
    He did!
  • Became Emperor of the Western Roman Empire

3
Edict of Milan
  • Constantine Western Roman Empire
  • Licinius Eastern Roman Empire
  • 313 Edict of Milan tolerated Christianity
  • All religious freedom
  • Favored the Christian Church
  • Clerics exempt from taxation
  • Property returned to the Christians
  • Persecution of Christians came to a hault

4
Constantine
  • 324 Constantine defeated Licinius
  • An absolute monarch who united the empire
  • Byzantium seat of government
  • Byzantium renamed Constantinople (Turkey)
  • Christianity a strong unifying force in the
    Empire
  • He was superstitious dream Chi-Rho

5
Constantine
  • Points of unity that Christianity offered
  • Monotheism
  • Ethical code that embraced all people
  • Hierarchical system of Church governing
  • Helped the empire maintain order and stability

6
Constantine
  • He became personally active in Church affairs
  • Because the theological rifts threatened the
    unity of the empire


  • Heresy
  • Arianism challenged Christs divinity, by
    convoking the first Ecumenical Council of Nicea
    in 325

7
Legalized Christianity
  • Emperor Theodosius I 380
  • Christianity became the official religion of the
    Empire
  • Evangelization became easier to the barbarians
    and the non-believers
  • Eight councils were held between the fourth and
    the ninth centuries in the eastern portion of the
    empire
  • All decrees of the councils had to be confirmed
    by the canons and the decrees of the Pope.

8
Church Administration
  • Five great patriarchates
  • Rome
  • Constantinople
  • Alexandria
  • Antioch
  • Jerusalem
  • Rome was preeminent because Peter had been the
    first bishop there and died there.

9
Church Administration
  • Church administration modeled the Roman style
  • Parishes and Diocese resembled the Roman
    political divisions.
  • Popes like Damasus, Leo the Great, and Gelasius
    asserted their power especially when there was a
    power vacuum in the Empire
  • (empire capital was moved to Constantinople)

10
Church and Pagan Religions
  • Adapted many features of the pagan religions
  • The use of candles and incense in liturgies
  • Promoted the veneration of the saints
  • Saints gave the faithful heroes to look up to and
    imitate
  • Saints helped keep many new converts from their
    worship of pagan gods.

11
Legalized Christianity and Challenges
  • Some emperors became defenders of the Church
  • Interfered in Church affairs
  • Caesaropapism combining the power of the
    secular government with the authority of the
    Church.
  • Eastern churchs more subject to the whims of the
    political rulers.
  • Western churchs more independent the Pope,
    weak Western emperors distance from Eastern
    capital.

12
Legalized Christianity and Challenges
  • Theological Debates
  • Eastern Church
  • 1. Alexandria in Egypt
  • 2. Antioch in Syria
  • Church fathers from the East debated core faith
    issues - Arianism

13
Arianism
  • Denied Jesus divinity
  • Arius a priest from Alexandria (250-336)
  • Influenced by Greek philosophy
  • Exalted belief in God
  • A human God was incomprehensible
  • Platos idea demiurge the creator of the
    material universe who was not identical with the
    supreme God.

14
Arianism
  • Arius believed was Christ was Gods greatest
    creature who was made before time.
  • He believed that Christ was an adopted son not
    divine.
  • This gave consequences for Christian teaching on
    salvation
  • Only God can effect Redemption
  • The Word of God was not God
  • Humans would not be Redeemed

15
Churches Response to Arianism
  • First Ecumenical Council of Nicea - 325
  • Condemned Arius teaching
  • Council spelled out clearly that Jesus is
    consubstantial with the Father
  • Christ possess the same nature as God the Father
  • At Mass Jesus divinity and equality to the
    Father We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ

16
The Church Respons to Arianism
  • Arianism was slow to die out after the council
  • St Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, defended the
    Church
  • He taught that Christ was made man that we may
    be made divine.
  • If Christ were not God then he would not be our
    Savior

17
The Church Responds to Arianism
  • St. Ambrose, bishop of Milan, would combat
    Arianism in the West.
  • Clashed with Empress Justina when she tried to
    establish an Arian Church in Milan.
  • Theodosius I, with Ambroses help, issued a
    series of edicts outlawing Arianism and paganism.

18
Council of Constantinople 381
  • Correct the heresy Macedonianism
  • Heresy - The Son created the Holy Spirit who was
    in turn subordinate to the Father and the Son.
  • The Council taught the divinity of the Holy
    Spirit
  • The Council did not address the relationship
    between the Son and the Holy Spirit
  • This would be a major factor in the schism
    between the Church in the East and the Church in
    the West.

19
Christological Debates
  • Theological debate focused on how Christ was both
    divine and human
  • Alexandrian school maintained that Christs
    perfect divinity penetrates his human nature an
    internal unity results
  • Antioch theologians stressed Christs perfect
    humanity as if his divinity indwelled in the man
    Jesus

20
Christological Debates
  • Nestorius, patriarch of Constantinople, refused
    to acknowledge that Mary could be the Mother of
    God.
  • Two persons in Christ
  • One divine
  • Only human
  • Mary was only Christotokos mother of the human
    Jesus
  • Theotokos Mary is God-bearer or Mother of God
  • Theotokos defended by St. Cyril of Alexandria

21
Christological Debates
  • St. Cyril taught Jesus was one divine person, the
    Second person of the Trinity.
  • Council of Ephesus 431 endorsed the position of
    St. Cyril and condemned Nestorianism.
  • After the death of St. Cyril theologians
    diagreed with the Ephesus Council
  • They preached that Christs human nature was
    absorbed into his divine nature

22
Monophysitism
  • Heresy Jesus Christ possessed only one nature-
    a divine nature. It denied that Christ was really
    a human being.
  • This Heresy took root in Egypt
  • Council of Chalcedon 451
  • Taught the doctrine of hypostatic union
  • Jesus Christ one divine person subsists in two
    natures, the divine and the human.
  • Pope Leo I wrote
  • Accordingly while the distinctness of both
    natures and substances was preserved, and both
    met in one Person, lowliness was assumed by
    majesty, weakness by power, mortality by eternity

23
Council of Chalcedon
  • The council fathers affirmed the teachings of the
    councils of Nicea, Constantinople, and Ephesus
  • The Third Council of Constantinople 681
  • convened to restate prior teachings
  • Christ is one divine person
  • Two distinct natures
  • one human one divine
  • Two distinct natures
  • two wills one divine and the other
  • human.

24
Christological Debates
  • West was beset with one major theological
    question
  • The interaction of divine grace and human freedom
  • Whether or not people can save themselves due to
    their own good efforts
  • That all people accept Christ as their Savior.
  • Pelagius, a monk teacher in Rome, he emphasized
    human freedom and the need to strive for personal
    holiness.
  • Pelagius eventually he held an exalted view of
    human nature, denying that the Original sin of
    Adam and Eve had been transmitted to humans.

25
Christological Debates
  • Pelagius argued that humans do not need divine
    assistance or grace as a help to achieve personal
    holiness or salvation.
  • He believed that humans could save themselves
    without Gods supernatural help.
  • St. Augustine of Hippo 354-420 was his major
    opponent.
  • St. Augustine explained that humans are born with
    fallen natures because of Original Sin and its
    effects.
  • He taught that Gods grace is absolutely
    necessary for personal salvation
  • Pelagianism was officially condemned at the
    Council of Ephesus (431)

26
Christological Debates
  • Pelagianism Heresy died out by the 6th century
  • Protestant Reformation of the 17th century
  • Relationship between good works, grace, and
    salvation
  • Commentators have observed that remnants of
    Pelagian self-reliance, with its denial of the
    need for Gods grace and help, appear in many
    21st century European and Americans.
  • Many self-sufficient contemporaries seem to rely
    on human ingenuity and the discoveries of
    science, technology, and medicine as the sources
    of their personal safety and salvation.

27
The Fall of Rome
  • 476 is the collapse of the Roman Empire in the
    West.
  • The Roman Empire can be traced to 27 BC.
  • Pegans blamed Christians and their God for the
    collapse.
  • Christians questioned how God could permit the
    deaths of innocents and the destruction of the
    center of civilization.

28
Barbarian Invasions
  • Migration of Nations
  • Asiastic Huns migrated West
  • Benefits
  • Fertile lands
  • Economic opportunities
  • Protection from other warring tribes
  • Germanic Tribes
  • Benefits
  • trade with Roman
  • served as mercenaries in Roman armiesBarbarian
    Invasions
  • 4th Century, increases in population
  • Declining strength of the Roman armies
  • Pressure from the Huns,

29
Byzantine Empire
  • Emperor Justinian, 527-565
  • Married actress Theodora
  • Justinian had control Of Rome
  • He supervised the rebuilding of the Hagia Sophia
    (Holy Wisdom) church in Constantinople still
    stands today
  • He instituted a major reform of laws later
    became the basis of European law.
  • The Christian influence gave women and children
    more protection.
  • Punishment still reflected the times mutilation
    of the body for some crimes, repressive measures
    against non-Christians, including the Jews

30
Byzantine Empire
  • Justinians successor were weak.
  • Reluctant co operation between the Byzantine
    Emperors and the patriarchs of Constantinople and
    the Pope contributed to the schism between
    Eastern and Western Christianity in 1054.
  • Eastern Christianity vibrant liturgical life,
    exquisite art and music, a spiritual depth which
    resulted in hundreds of monasteries.
  • The Eastern Empire survived until 1453 under the
    Ottoman Turks.
  • Muslim, followers of the Islamic faith, shook the
    foundation of the Eastern Christianity

31
The Rise of the Papacy
  • Pope Leo the Great 440-461
  • Ability to use biblical, historical, and legal
    arguments to assert the primacy of the Pope among
    all bishops
  • Pontifex Maxium Highest Bridge Builder
  • Bishops looked to the Pope as supreme teacher,
    ruler, and judge in the Church
  • Pope Gregory the Great 590-604
  • Title Servant of the Servants of God
  • Reform of liturgy Gregorian chant
  • His authority stabilized the Church throughout
    Europe and promoted missionary activity

32
Conversion of Clovis
  • As the leader goes so goes the tribe
  • Clovis converted to Catholicism in 496
  • He forced the Goths to convert from Arian
    Christianity to accept the orthodox faith
  • Clovis and the Franks helped convert many of the
    barbarian tribes
  • Magyars became Catholic because of the conversion
    of their king, St. Stephen
  • Bohemians because of the baptism of St.
    Wenceslaus
  • Poles because of the conversion of the leader,
    Mieszko

33
Missionaries of the Era
  • St. Patrick 389-461
  • Apostle to Ireland
  • A Roman citizen in Britian
  • Son of Christian parents
  • Patrick was captured by Irish pirates at the age
    of 16
  • Made a bishop in 432 and returned to Ireland to
    convert most of the local Celtic kings
  • Established monasteries, continued
    evangelization, and education
  • Irish Christianity thrived and helped to preserve
    Christianity during the Dark Ages

34
Words of Wisdom
  • Pope Gregory the Greats words of instruction to
    St. Augustine
  • destroy as few pagan temples as possible only
    destroy their idols, sprinkle them with holy
    water, build altars and put relics in the
    buildings, so that, if the temples have been well
    built, you are simply changing their purpose.
    (Letters,XI,56)

35
Monasticism
  • A spiritual and social movement in which men and
    women withdrew from the world to live solitary or
    communal lives to attain personal holiness.
  • Monasticism derived from Greek word monos
    alone or single
  • Monasticism became an opportunity to live
    discipleship to it extreme.
  • It was called a bloodless martydom a way of
    witnessing to the faith and pursuing pure
    Christian holiness

36
Benefits of Monasticism
  • Economics
  • Good example of land management
  • Reestablish agriculture after the barbarian
    invasions
  • Spirituality
  • Respect for the liturgy
  • Value of daily prayer life
  • A countercultural response to Christianity that
    had grown tepid
  • Stability
  • Refuge to travelers
  • Centers of learning
  • Educated future Church leaders
  • Christianity
  • Kept alive and spread

37
Negative effects of Monasticism
  • Monastic asceticism self-mutilation to tame
    their weak human nature
  • St. Jerome praised celibacy so much that he ended
    up teaching that marriage is not a means to
    holiness, but a necessary evil
  • Religious life was the only true model of
    holiness
  • A healthy lay spirituality was neglected for
    centuries.

38
Rule of St. Benedict
  • Laughter
  • Obedience
  • Prayer
  • Respect
  • Temperance
  • Work

39
Fathers of the Church
  • St. John Chrysostom
  • St. Ambrose
  • St. Jerome
  • St. Augustine
  • From chapter 2
  • St. Clement of Rome
  • St. Ignatius of Antioch

40
Prayer
  • God is great and glory to you, O God.
  • Yours is the praise.
  • Blessed is your name, and exalted is your majesty
  • There is no deity to be worshiped but you.
  • I seek refuge in God from the evil one, the
    accursed.
  • Praise be to God, Lord of all that is
  • The compassionate, the merciful
  • Ruler on the day of reckoning
  • You alone do we worship, and you alone do we ask
    for help
  • Guide us on the straight path,
  • The path of those who have received your grace
  • Not the path of those who have brought down
    wrath,
  • Nor of those who wander astray.
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