Early Christian Attitudes Toward Children - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Early Christian Attitudes Toward Children

Description:

Family names common use (12th century) and produced new freedom. New political states ... Began to debate education for girls. Children's crusades (1212) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:77
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: erikag
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Early Christian Attitudes Toward Children


1
Early Christian Attitudes Toward Children
  • The child as the model of faith
  • Jesus statements shocked followers
  • Suggested childs spirit is the very essence of
    religious life
  • Ideal of a society of service rather than
    dominance
  • Most positive assessment of children
  • Changes of original view - now only exceptional
    children are noteworthy

2
Early Christian Attitudes Sympathetic View of
Child
  • Led to more humane treatment
  • Focus on successful parenting
  • Church banned infanticide (318 A.D., 374 a.D.)
  • Other laws to revive family life - keeping slave
    families together, encouraging adoption
  • Effect of laws/edicts dubious
  • Christian education

3
Early Christian Attitudes Contradictory View -
Infant Depravity
  • Original sin every individual inherits the guilt
    of Adams original rebellion against god and also
    inherits a tendency toward personal rebellion
  • Why contradictory views?
  • Baptism originally represented new start of
    family life
  • Used as a substitute for Jewish circumcision
  • Original sin developed to explain existing
    practice of baptism

4
Early Christian Attitudes Contradictory View
Nature of Children
  • Debating the nature of children (400 A.D.)
  • Pelagius infants born innocent
  • St. Jerome protective of girls innocence
  • St. Augustine everyone guilty of Adams sins
  • Implications for children at the time
  • Unknown but . . .
  • Church decided in favor of St. Augustine
  • And . . . developed concept of limbo
  • Lose, lose situation for children

5
Fall of Rome in 5th Century A.D. Revival of
Family Authority
  • Germanic family
  • Tribal
  • Emphasized affection w/in family (not ) (EX
    dowry as insurance)
  • Family loyalty
  • Church survived and attempted to control families
  • Punish infanticide
  • Unwanted children given to the church oblates
  • Marriage laws
  • Laws discriminating against illegitimate children

6
Fall of Rome Education
  • Decreased need for education
  • Missionary bishops -- first to implement formal
    education (included Latin, music, astronomy)
  • Severe physical discipline
  • Most children (except upper class boys) remained
    in oral culture
  • King Alfred (900 A.D.) Encouraged all freeborn
    boys to learn to read English
  • Boys become apprenticed at 7 years (until 14 when
    he would work as a journeyman)

7
Civilization Begins Again Holidays Associated
With Children
  • St. Nicholas day (12/6) 12th century feast of
    patron saint of children and scholars
  • Holy Innocents Day (12/28)
  • Christmas was associated with children because it
    was between these two childrens holidays
  • Epiphany (1/6) originally commemorated Jesus
    baptism but eventually was associated with
    childhood

8
Civilization Begins Again Social Changes
  • Market economy (nuclear family evident by 900
    A.D.)
  • Family names common use (12th century) and
    produced new freedom
  • New political states
  • Church searching for a balance
  • Marriage formalized
  • Tried to prohibit the payment of a dowry from
    husband
  • Insisted that divorce be handled in the courts
    (not by parents)

9
Civilization Begins Again Sentimentalism About
Childhood
  • Represented by Madonna and child images
  • Practical child-rearing books
  • Written by churchmen
  • Urged parents to pay more attention and be more
    strict in their care
  • Nursing own infants was encouraged
  • Directions on where the child should sleep
  • Discrepancy with actual practice

10
Civilization Begins Again
  • Changing in schooling
  • Broaden scope of education (not just training
    priests)
  • Europes first universities in Paris
  • Began to debate education for girls
  • Childrens crusades (1212)
  • Nicholas of cologne and Stephen of Cloyes
  • Exaggerated role of children
  • Disaster by all accounts
  • Many folk tales arose from this time period (Pied
    Piper, Snow White, Hansel Gretel)

11
End of Middle Ages I
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com