Title: Church Victorious:
1Chapter 3
- Church Victorious
- The Age of the Fathers
- 300-500 A.D.
2Tetrarchy
- Diocletian creates tetrarchy
- Eastern Western
- Augustus 1
- Caesar 2
- Each center had a Caesar controlling the region
- The four were supposed to rule together
3The New Roman Empire
4Power Struggles
- Diocletian and Maximian Diocletians
Self-Imposed Exile (305 CE) - Constantius and Galerius from Caesares to
Augusti - Constantius dies his son Constantine assumes
power as an Augustus - Constantines rise is contested by Maxentius son
of Maximian - Civil War begins between Constantine and Maxentius
5The Triumph of Constantine
- Battle at Milvian Bridge outside of Rome
October 28, 312 A.D. - Constantines Vision
- The Chi-Rho Monogram
In hoc signo vinces In this sign you will
conquer
6Battle of the Milvian Bridge
7Arch of Constantine
8Constantine
9Constantine as Sole Emperor
- Uneasy Peace between Constantine (west) and
Licinius (east) 312-314 A.D. - Licinius defeated at Adrianople (Balkans,
northwest of Byzantium) - Constantine extends Diocletianic program
- Sub-divisions of power
- Dichotomy between civil and military service
- Unwieldy bureaucracy
- Attempt to freeze society
10Legalization of Christianity
- Occurs in 313 A.D. with the Edict of Milan
- Judicial authority given to Bishops
- Lords Day becomes Holy Day (321 A.D.)
- Imperial Revenue subsidized the Church
- Constantine and Successors gradually increase
imperial support for Christianity
11Edict of Milan
- Observing that freedom of worship should not be
denied, but that each one should be given the
right in accordance with his conviction and will
to adhere to the religion that suits his
preference, we had already long ago given orders
to the Christiansto maintain the faith of their
own sect and worship. - Constantine and Licinius, 313 A.D.
12Constantine and the Beginnings of the Christian
Roman Empire
- Inauguration of Constantinople (Byzantium
Istanbul) as the New Rome (330 A.D.) - A Christian Empire Ecumenical Council at Nicaea
(325 A.D.)
134 Great Councils
- 4th and 5th centuries 4 major councils
- Ecumenical Council
- Meetings of bishops called by the magisterium
from which all decrees bind members of the Church - 4 Great Councils
- 325 Nicaea
- 381 Constantinople
- 431 Ephesus
- 451 Chalcedon
14325 A.D. Council of Nicaea
- Nicaea Northwest Asia Minor
- First Ecumenical Council
- Called by Constantine ratified by Sylvester I
- First major meeting of the Church since the
Council of Jerusalem - Reason
- Discussion of Arianism
- there was a time when he was not
- Rejection of the divinity of Christ
- Super creature / not God
15Nicaea (cont)
- Results
- Definition of the Father Son as homoousious
of the same substance - Coeternal, consubstantial, coequal
- Condemned Arius and Arianism
- First draft of Nicene Creed
- Key theologian
- St. Athanasius as a deacon would become bishop
and doctor of the Church
16381 A.D. Council of Constantinople
- Constantinople modern day Istanbul
- Second Ecumenical Council
- Called by Emperor Theodosius I
- Pope St. Damasus did not attend
- Eastern bishops only in attendance
- Reason
- Discussion of Apollinarianism
- Holy Spirit as a creature
17Constantinople (cont)
- Results
- Confirmed results of Nicaea
- Affirmed the deity of the Holy Spirit
- Condemned Macedonius and Apollinarianism
- Final draft of the Nicene Creed
- Key theologians
- St. Gregory Nazianzen (presiding bishop)
- St. Cyril of Jerusalem
18431 A.D. Council of Ephesus
- Ephesus south west Asia Minor
- Third Ecumenical Council
- Called by Theodosius II ratified by Pope
Celestine I - Reason
- Discussion of Nestorianism
- Role of Mary as Mother of God
19Ephesus (cont)
- Results
- Condemned Nestorianism and Nestorius
- Mary as the Mother of Jesus and of God
- Theotokos God-bearer
- Affirmed two natures in the one person of Christ
human and divine - Affirmed the condemnation of Pellagianism
- Key theologian
- St. Cyril of Alexandria, Doctor of the Church
20451 A. D. Council of Chalcedon
- Chalcedon north of Constantinople
- Forth Ecumenical Council
- Called by Emperor Marcian ratified by Pope Leo
the Great - Reason
- Discussion of Monophysitism
- One nature in Christ (divine)
21Chalcedon (cont)
- Results
- Condemned Eutyches and Monophysitism
- Declared Christs two natures unmixed, unchanged,
undivided, inseparable - Key theologian
- St. Leo the Great, Doctor of the Church
22Western Roman Empire Falls
- Major Causes
- Relocation of the capital to Constantinople
- Rome left as an imperial afterthought
- Weak Roman forces left to defend a large
territory - Visigoths
- Germanic tribe, first to lay siege to Rome
- Vandals
- Destructive nomadic tribe adopted Arianism
persecuted mainstream Christians - Huns
- A tribe originating in China one of the last
barbarian groups to invade Western Europe
23Aftermath
- Bishop of Rome as Emperor of the West
- The power vacuum allowed the bishop of Rome soon
called the Pope to assume more power and
authority - St. Damasus (366-384)
- First used the term Apostolic See to connect his
authority to that of the Apostles, specifically
St. Peter - Claimed that the East sent Sts. Peter and Paul
because Rome was destined to be the center of the
Church - Paved the way for Leo the Great to take over
24Leo the Great
- The Rising Influence of the Papacy
- The office of Pope became important due to Rome's
fall in 410 to the Visigoths - He provided leadership
- Put the papacy in the spotlight
- Became pope in 440
- Began to use the title "Pontifex Maximus"
(Highest bridge maker) - used by Roman emperors to show their role as high
priest in the pagan religion - Pope was an earlier title from the Greek "pappas"
father - Leo changed that due to his position as spiritual
father and state official. - Leo makes peace with Attila the Hun
25The Fathers of the Church
- Fathers of the Church
- Designation for Church leaders during the early
centuries of Christianity whose teachings
formulated Christian doctrine - Eastern Fathers
- St. Athanasius, Gregory of Nyssa, St. Basil, St.
Gregory of Nazianzus, St. John Chrysostom - Western Fathers
- St. Ambrose, St. Augustine, St. Jerome, St.
Gregory the Great
26Augustine
- Bishop of Hippo (354-430 A.D.)
- Born in North Africa or Roman Africa
- Father Roman Official
- Mother Monica who was a Christian
- Augustine had a mistress and a son, Adeodatus
- Manichaean
- One God created good another created evil
- No one was responsible for his/her sins
27Augustine (cont)
- The Influence of Plato and Ambrose
- Plato argued that there existed a world beyond
what we see - the ideal realm where perfection
exists. DUALISM - having both body and spirit. - Romans 1313-14 141 - motivates Augustine to
convert to Christianity. - The Confessions, Augustine's Autobiography
- At 33, he is baptized by Ambrose
- Returned to North Africa and founded a monastery,
made a priest, 4 years later made a bishop.
28Augustine vs. Donatism
- Donatist-
- Donatus, Bishop of Carthage in North Africa
- Any apostate could never be forgiven
- Disloyal bishops did not perform real sacraments
- The validity of the sacrament rested solely on
the worthiness of the bishop - Augustine disagreed
- It did not allow for the God's grace to work
- Augustine gt A sacraments validity comes from
God working through weak and sinful people.
29Augustine vs. Pellagianism
- Pelagianism
- (named after monk Pelagius)
- Issue Grace or God's power vs. work/human
efforts for salvation - Pelagius said that people could be saved without
God's grace - We need to work hard enough
- Why? Because Pelagius reacted against moral
laxity that was rampant in the empire. - Augustine said we are separated from God due to
Original Sin as told in the story of Adam and
Eve. So . . . - Human nature tends to sin. But . . .
- God's grace helps us overcome the tendency to
sin.
30Augustine and the Fall of Rome
- The City of God
- 410, Rome falls to the Barbarian Goths. Once
again the Christians were blamed because their
God did not save the city. - Augustine responds with his greatest work, The
City of God - History ongoing struggle between two realms
- City of God and City of Man
31Monasticism
- Quest for holiness begun in North Africa
- Movement - great contribution to the Church and
society - Mono
- Greek word meaning alone, single
- Monasticism
- The movement of people away from the world to
pursue holiness - New way to live the Gospel
- Following example of Christ going into the
dessert
32St. Anthony of Egypt
- Regarded as the founder of monasticism
- Moved to Egypt in 270 A.D. after reading Lk.
1822 - Lived an ascetic lifestyle of simplicity and
devotion to God - Formed a monastic community
- Life story written by St. Athanasius of
Alexandria - Famous account detailing early monastic life
33St. Ambrose (339-397)
- Son of a Roman official became a governor of
northern Italy in Milan - In 374, the bishop of Milan died leaving a
vacancy - People shouted for Ambrose who was not even a
baptized Christian - Significant contribution to the preparation of
catechumens - Baptismal homilies still studied today
- Became the mentor to St. Augustine
- Largely responsible for Augustines conversion
34St. Jerome (331-420)
- Assigned the task of translating the Bible by
Pope Damasus at the age of 50 - Need for a Latin edition to compliment the common
language of the West - Took roughly 15 years to finish the task
- Vulgate
- Derived from the same Latin root as vulgar
which originally meant of the common people - Also responsible for establishing monasteries in
and around Jerusalem
35St. Basil the Great (329-379)
- Father of Eastern Monasticism
- Wrote a rule on how to live a life of prayer and
quiet with other people - Rule was needed because too many people were
doing excessive penance and fasting - Basil encouraged his followers to pray in
silence, serve the poor and sick, and study - In the eastern church his rule is still followed