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Catholic Church History 312

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Catholic Church History 312 900 AD Ann T. Orlando 13 Jan. 2005 Lecture 2 Introduction Review of Third Century Importance of Constantine Early Church Councils ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Catholic Church History 312


1
Catholic Church History312 900 AD
  • Ann T. Orlando
  • 13 Jan. 2005

2
Lecture 2Introduction
  • Review of Third Century
  • Importance of Constantine
  • Early Church Councils
  • Great Theologians
  • Augustine
  • Fifth and Sixth Century Events
  • Rise of Islam
  • Christian Response
  • Charlemagne
  • Ninth Century and Looking Forward to Middle Ages

3
Review of Third Century
  • Increased pressure on Rome from Persia and
    northern barbarians
  • Political instability murder and succession of
    generals as emperors
  • Empire-wide persecution of Christians
  • Martyrs
  • Greek for witness
  • Do not need to die to be considered a martyr,
    rather someone who suffered (imprisonment,
    slavery, torture) for faith
  • Martyrs were popularly considered people who
    could forgive sins, especially the sin of
    apostasy
  • Commemorative meals and liturgies held at tombs
    of martyrs (catacombs in Rome)

4
Political Situation at Beginning of Fourth
Century
  • Diocletian becomes emperor in 284.
  • Very strong ruler
  • Decides that best way to protect Empire is to
    divide it between two Augusti (East and West)
    supported by two Caesars (Augusti in waiting)
  • Although some of his family members were
    Christians, unleashes worst persecution of all
  • Manages to retire and force his co-Augutus,
    Maximian, to retire with him(305) and die in his
    own bed of natural causes
  • A few problems with Diocletians plan
  • Both Augusti and both Caesars headed their own
    armies and areas of influence
  • Except for Diocletian himself, the three other
    members of this tetrarchy saw this scheme as a
    stepping stone for them to take over the Empire
    when Diocletian died
  • When Diocletian retires, political intrigues and
    battles break about among the successors
  • Constantius, Augustus, controlled England and
    Gaul, father of Constantine
  • Severus, Caesar, ruled Rome
  • Maximius, Caesar in Greece
  • Galerius, Augustus, in East
  • When Constantius dies, his troops proclaim his
    son, Constantine, Augustus

5
Constantine the Great
  • Key battle in Constantines take over of entire
    Empire was battle of Milvian bridge over Tiber in
    Rome against Maxentius, son of Maximian in 312.
  • Constantine credits his victory to a vision he
    had in which he was told to go into battle with
    the Christian symbol
  • Troops carry chi-rho on their shields
  • By 314 Constantine has captured all of the Empire
    and officially declared that Christianity was to
    be tolerated (Edict of Milan)
  • Gives most of Rome to the Catholic Church
    (Vatican, St. Paul outside the Walls, Lateran)
  • Establishes Constantinople (on site of ancient
    Byzantium) as his new capitol
  • Builds Churches, with his mother Helen, in Holy
    Land (Church of Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem,
    Church of Nativity in Bethlehem)
  • Moves against the Donatists in North Africa
  • Calls Council of Nicea to decide between
    Athanasius and Arius on relation between Father
    and Son Council supports Athanasius and Son as
    one in being with the Father The Nicene Creed
  • Dies in 337 (after murdering his wife several of
    his sons whom he considered treacherous)
    baptized by an Arian bishop shortly before he
    dies

6
The Ecumenical Councils
  • Nicea I, 325, called by Constantine the Great
  • Condemned Arianism
  • Son of one substance with the Father
  • Nicene Creed
  • Constantinople I, 381, Called by Theodosius the
    Great
  • Affirmed divinity of Holy Spirit
  • Modified Creed what we have now
  • Ephesus, 431, called by Valentinian III
  • Condemned Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople
  • Jesus was not two separate persons, but one
    person both human and divine
  • Mary as Theotokos Mother of God
  • Chalcedon, 450, called by Empress Pulcharia at
    request of Pope Leo I (the Great)
  • Condemned monophysites single nature
  • Christ has two natures human and divine
  • Note Both Nestorianism and Monophysitism are
    still present in a few Eastern churches

7
Key Historical Events in 4th and 5th Centuries
after Constantine
  • Some of Constantine's successors in 4th C were
    Arians sent missionaries to barbarians north of
    Danube
  • Some of those barbarians attacked and sacked Rome
    in 410 AD
  • Center of power in Empire moved East to
    Constantinople
  • Increasingly West was under pressure from
    northern tribes last Roman emperor in Rome
    abdicated in 476
  • Note There was a Roman Emperor in East until
    1453
  • Church in West becomes only source of learning,
    order, justice

8
Great Theologians of 4th and 5th Centuries
  • Most of them were Bishops
  • All of them had important intellectual and
    spiritual relationships with women
  • Eastern (Greek) Theologians
  • Athanasius Bishop of Alexandria, On the
    Incarnate Word
  • Basil (Caesaria), Gregory Nazianzus
    (Constantinople), Gregory of Nyssa (Nyssa) the
    Cappadocians Basils Monastic Rule Theology of
    Trinity Gregory Nyssas Spiritual steps
  • John Chrysostom, Bishop of Constantinople
    Liturgy, preaching for poor rules for clergy
  • Western (Latin) Theologians
  • Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, established priority of
    Church over State with Theodosius translated
    many Greek works into Latin
  • Jerome, translated Bible from Greek and Hebrew
    into authoritative Latin version (Vulgate)
  • Pope Leo I the Great Two natures of Christ
    stopped Attila the Hun at gates of Rome
  • Patrick of Ireland established unique type of
    Christianity in Ireland monasteries, not
    bishops, provided Church leadership encouraged
    regular private confession

9
The Greatest of All in West Augustine (363 - 430)
  • Impact and authority that has lasted to today
    Doctor of Grace
  • In confronting three heresies, he set the
    direction for much of Western Christianity
  • His mother (Monica) was a devout Christian
    father baptized at the end of his life
  • Bishop of Hippo in North Africa
  • Dies in 430 with Vandals laying siege to Hippo
  • Please find time to read Augustines The
    Confessions

10
Augustine and Manichaeism
  • A type of gnosticism developed by Mani (Persian)
    mid-third century
  • Two gods,
  • OT associated with evil god
  • Created world evil
  • Believers have access to secret knowledge
  • Jesus not really human, did not really suffer on
    cross
  • Augustines response
  • Actually, he was a Manichean hearer
    (catechumen) for about 5 years see Book 3 of
    Confessions
  • The OT should be read on multiple levels,
    including allegorically
  • Neo-Platonism is the correct way to view evil
    the absence of good this preserves the goodness
    of all creation
  • Everyone has access to the good news

11
Augustine and Donatism
  • Donatists believed
  • Church of the pure
  • No penance
  • Efficacy of sacraments depended upon the purity
    of the minister
  • Augustine's response
  • Church is made of saints and sinners (mostly
    sinners)
  • The grace of Jesus grace is mediated by His
    Church, not individual ministers

12
Augustine and Pelagianism
  • Pelagius
  • English monk who believed that grace was the
    reward for our good works
  • By proper training of free will, we can save
    ourselves
  • Original sin did not fundamentally disrupt our
    relationship to God
  • Augustines response
  • Grace is Gods free gift
  • We cannot perform good works without Gods grace
  • Original sin fundamentally disrupted out relation
    with God that tear was repaired by Jesus Christ
  • Baptism is a necessary condition for salvation
    but not sufficient condition
  • God decides who will be saved or not
    (predestination) our of justice, God condemns
    most of us to hell
  • Church rejected Augustines view that people are
    predestined to hell at council of Orange,529

13
After Augustine in West
  • Retreat to monasticism
  • Benedict
  • Wrote rule for monks at Monte Cassino (c. 530)
  • Based on monastic rules developed by desert
    fathers in Egypt
  • Became the basis for Western monasticism
  • Pope Gregory the Great (d. 604)
  • Benedictine monk
  • Reformed clergy along monastic lines required
    priests to have some training encouraged
    celibacy encourage work with poor
  • Sent Augustine of Kent to England other
    missionaries to Germany to evangelize the
    northern barbarians

14
Rise of Islam
  • Muhammed was born 570 in 622 fled Mecca for
    Medina, died 632
  • Founded a religious and political movement aimed
    at uniting all Arab tribes.
  • By 716 all of North Africa, Sicily and the
    Iberian peninsula was under Muslim control
  • By 730 France and Constantinople were threatened

15
Western Christian Response
  • Charles Martel (Charles the Hammer) stopped the
    Muslim army at Tours in 732
  • Charles was ruler of tribe of the Franks,
    Catholics
  • Pope asked Charles and his son, Pippin, for
    assistance against Muslims and Lombards (another
    German tribe)
  • Pippin gave central Italy to the Pope in 754
    beginning of Papal States (lasted until 1848)

16
Charlemagne
  • Pippins son
  • Conquered much of northern Spain from Muslims
    (Song of Roland)
  • Defeated Saxons and forced their conversion to
    Catholicism
  • United Western Europe
  • Crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope in Rome
    Christmas Day 800
  • Note a problem there was already a Holy Roman
    Emperor in Constantinople

17
Impact of Charlemagnes Rule
  • Enforced Latin, Roman liturgy
  • Established centers of learning for clergy and
    monks (although he could not read)
  • Setup European-wide system of administration
  • Establish precedent of Western Holy Roman Empire
  • Special relationship between Pope and France

18
Next Week
  • Middle Ages
  • Monasticism
  • Scholasticism
  • Crusades
  • Relationship between Popes and Secular Rulers
  • Beginning of Reformation
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