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Christianity East and West

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Title: Christianity East and West


1
Christianity East and West
  • From the 4th to the 9th century Christians
    continued to live solitary lives, whether in the
    deserts or in monasteries on mountain tops, etc.
  • In 537 Hagia Sophia was built by Justinian in
    complete contrast to the simplistic designs to
    date.
  • Hagia Sophia means Holy Wisdom and it stood as
    the center of Christian life in the East until
    the 1400s. Its dome, the largest for its time,
    sits on 4 pillars 32 x 32 it is 260 x 270 or
    roughly 1.6 acres and is 210 feet to the top of
    the dome.
  • It was taken over by the Ottoman Turks in 1453
    and serves as a Muslim mosque now
  • From the 4th c on, churches were built as
    monuments to the faith of a community and as a
    gathering place for the town. It was the center
    of life for the community.

2
( 1 Contd)
  • As Christianity grew, more and more tribes were
    being assimilated. Often times, the people were
    forced to convert because their ruler did. Their
    faith was shallow and often was overshadowed by
    their traditions
  • The Church saw a need to become unified
  • The Church developed uniform practices and
    beliefs under the Bishop of Rome Peters
    successor
  • The Church formed One Body of Christ with the
    four marks of the Church being one, holy,
    catholic, and apostolic.

3
Major Christian Centers
  • The major cities of the empire (now Christian)
    became patriarchates, places under the control of
    a patriarch.
  • Rome, Alexandria, Constantinople, Antioch, and
    Jerusalem
  • Most of the Greek Church often recognized the
    patriarch of Rome as having a primacy of honor
    First among equals
  • The Eastern Churches started to draw away by
    remaining with Greek lang. and the West was
    turning to Latin. Soon both sides of the empire
    were unable to communicate with each other
  • In the East especially, Caesaro-papism was the
    norm. The Eastern emperor used his office to
    remove and name new patriarchs

4
( 2 Contd)
  • The East/West relations were also strained
    because of practicestype of bread used for the
    Eucharist, married priests, beards on priests
  • One of the biggest differences in the two
    Churches was the experience of the Liturgy. In
    the East, the Liturgy was a time when humans
    share in the divine life, a union of God and
    humans so to speak.
  • In the West, it was a celebration of the Paschal
    Mysterythe life, death and resurrection of
    Christ thus providing salvation for His people.

5
Christianity Meets Islam
  • It began in 610. Muhammad, a caravan driver,
    told everyone that God was speaking to him. Many
    people in Mecca were convinced he was telling the
    truth and formed a grouping called Muslims ---
    those submitting to the will of God.
  • To escape Mecca, In 622 the Muslims made a hijrah
    meaning flight to Yathrib renaming it Medina
  • The people of Medina welcomed them and accepted
    this as their new way of life. The religion was
    called Islam
  • 622 became the first year of the Islamic calendar
    because this was the first time they became a
    community.
  • Muslims saw the Christians and Jews as people of
    the Book followers of the Scriptures but that
    somewhere along the line they had corrupted the
    message

6
( 5 Contd)
  • Many Christians converted to Islam to avoid
    paying the high taxes charged to non-Muslims
  • For 5 years beginning around 700 the Muslims laid
    siege to Constantinople which did not fall, but
    the Muslims did manage to spread as far as Spain
  • The Muslims tried to invade France from Spain but
    Charles Martel, at the Battle of Tours, in 731
    managed to defeat the invading forces, thus
    saving all of Europe.

7
The Christian Experience
  • What difference did Jesus and His Church make
    between the 4th and the end of the 8th century?
  • One of the most extensively discussed concepts
    during this period was grace
  • Grace is Gods presence within us, or the
    participation in the life of God as freely given
    by Him helping us to live up to our vocation
  • We can participate in the life of God because
    Christ participated in our life as humans
  • Life was sacramentalized from birth to death
  • Even the seasons were sacramentalized and became
    the liturgical calendar the seasons of Advent,
    Christmas, Lent, the Triduum, Easter, and
    Ordinary Time

8
( 7 Contd-A)
  • Rogation Days --- Resulting from calamities in
    the French countryside in the early 500s
  • Days of prayer, and formerly also of fasting,
    instituted by the Church to appease God's anger
    at man's transgressions, to ask protection in
    calamities, and to obtain a good and bountiful
    harvest. Rogations were introduced by St.
    Mamertus, Bishop of Vienne, and were afterwards
    ordered by the Fifth Council of Orléans, which
    was held in 511
  • This type of activity shows that no aspect of
    life was outside Gods concern in the mind of the
    Christians, but this was one of those influences
    from the Roman tradition which had crept into
    Christian practices, where the legalistic and
    angry Roman gods had to be appeased.

9
(7 Contd-B)
  • It is from this point of view that Mary and the
    Saints became safer intercessors to appease the
    angry God. Mary and the multitude of Saints,
    became the advocates for humanity to talk to God
    for us.
  • Nick and Jared pay attention --- this answers
    your questions

10
The Christian Calendar
  • A 6th C Russian Monk, Dionysius Exiguus,
    attempted to fix the dates of the Christian holy
    days. He started with the idea of the beginning
    for the current Roman calendar as being the
    building of Rome. He concluded that Christ was
    born in the 753rd year after the beginning of
    Rome. He set the new year to begin January 1,
    754 on that calendar as the beginning of the
    Christian calendar. Hippolytus in the 2nd C had
    set the date of Christs birth as December 25th
    on the Roman calendar to coincide with the Roman
    holiday for Mithras (sun god). Dionysius simply
    agreed with his colleague. The calendar years he
    called anno Domini year of the Lord and
    anti-Christi before Christ Eventually this was
    accepted as the calendar used worldwide because
    of the European influence on trade, etc.
  • http//www.westarinstitute.org/Periodicals/4R_Arti
    cles/Dionysius/dionysius.html

11
Developments in the Church Practice
  • The seven sacraments as we know them did not
    officially exist until 1274 (Lyon II)
  • The sacrament of baptism was performed in a
    baptistry a building set aside specifically for
    this purpose
  • Basilicas rectangular shaped buildings with one
    rounded end where the altar would be placed.
    Originally the altar rail separated the people
    from the Liturgy/priest
  • The Liturgy was performed for the people rather
    than with the people which was changed by Vatican
    II
  • Also in the 600s from Gregory the Great we got a
    new form of chant (Gregorian Chant) vocal music
    with a very simple melody chords D, E, F, and G
  • http//www.christusrex.org/www2/cantgreg/cantus/pa
    ter_noster_A.mp3

12
(11 Contd- A)
  • The idea of celibacy was first started seriously
    in the 4th C but it never took until is was
    forced in 1123. The idea that spiritual
    fatherhood was superior to physical fatherhood
  • 1st Lateran Council in 1123 made it a policy
  • The East allowed marriage before ordination but
    bishops had to remain single.
  • Until the 7th C, if you did a major sin, you had
    to be reinitiated (re-baptized), a long public
    process overseen by a bishop taking years.
    Deathbed confessions were the rule of the day for
    this reason

13
( 11 Contd B)
  • St. Columban, an Irish monk, suggested the
    private confessions of the Irish monasteries and
    it was accepted in the 7th C by most of Europe
  • Today we know it as the Sacrament of
    Reconciliation
  • The sacrament of marriage came about mainly
    because as the public ceremony was now done more
    often by a priest or bishop rather than a local
    official, by the 8th C, a priests blessing
    became the norm. This developed into the full
    marriage ceremonies of today.
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