The Patristic Period - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

The Patristic Period

Description:

... (possibly Clement in Phil 4:3) ... Marius Mercator(5th C) Marius Victorinus(5th C) Minucius Felix(fl. 160-300) Optatus(4th C) Pacian(310-392 ... 14 15, Austin ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1337
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: DarrellS
Category:
Tags: patristic | period | phil

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Patristic Period


1
The Patristic Period
St. Michaels Catholic Academy Department of
Theology Created by Mr. DESullivan Austin, TX
February 2009
2
Who decided all this stuff?
3
THE APOSTOLIC PERIOD (A.D. 30-100)
  • This period
  • actually witnessed Jesus and his teachings.
  • was impacted by Jesus death and message.
  • experienced the wanderings of the apostles.
  • saw the first Christian communities formed.
  • concluded with the last book of Scripture.
  • planted the seeds of Christianity.

4
THE APOSTOLIC FATHERS (A.D. 30-100)
  • St. Clement
  • St. Ignatius
  • St. Polycarp
  • Author(s) of the Didache
  • Author of the Epistle of Barnabas

SUB-APOSTOLIC (Other Early Christian Writers)
  • St. Justin Martyr
  • St. Irenaeus
  • St. Cyprian

5
THE AGE OF THE FATHERS (A.D. 100-800)
  • Also known as the Patristic Period
  • The fourth and fifth century Fathers
  • Were among the most important in Church history
  • helped address heresy
  • dealt with the collapse of the Roman Empire
  • framed basic Christian doctrines
  • Monasticism and Church hierarchy developed.
  • Note Not all Church Fathers have been men

6
THE EARLY PATRISTIC PERIOD
  • This is the era
  • after the deaths of the apostles.
  • when the New Testament canon was established AD
    50 to AD130
  • Rome became Christian.
  • Christianity became Roman.

3rd century Jesus as the Good Shepherd. Ceiling
of Catacomb of Callixtus in Rome.1
7
LATIN FATHERS OF THE CHURCH
  • Irenaeus(130-202)
  • Isidore(560-636)
  • Jerome(340-420)
  • Julius I(regn. 337-352)
  • Lactanius(250-325)
  • Leo the Great(regn. 440-461)
  • Marius Mercator(5th C)
  • Marius Victorinus(5th C)
  • Minucius Felix(fl. 160-300)
  • Optatus(4th C)
  • Pacian(310-392)
  • Pamphilius(240-309)
  • Paulinus(354-431)
  • Peter Chrysologus(406-450)
  • Phoebadius( 392)
  • Prosper of Aquitaine(400-463)
  • Rufinus(345-410)
  • Salvian of Marseilles(400-480)
  • Sircius(regn. 384-399)
  • Ambrose (340-397)
  • Arnobius (284-305)
  • Augustine (354-430)
  • Benedict (480-543)
  • Caesarius (470-543)
  • John Cassian (360-435)
  • Celestine I (regn. 422-432)
  • Clement of Rome (c. 88-97)
  • Cornelius (regn. 251-253)
  • Cyprian (190-258)
  • Damasus (regn. 366-384)
  • Dionysius(regn. 259-268)
  • Ennodius (473-521)
  • Eucherius of Lyons(d 449)
  • Fulgentius (468-533)
  • Gregory of Elvira(320-392)
  • Gregory the Great (regn. 590-604)
  • Hilary of Poitiers(315-367)
  • Hippolytus (170-236)

8
GREEK FATHERS OF THE CHURCH
  • Germanus(634-733)
  • Gregory of Nazianzus(325-389)
  • Gregory of Nyssa(331-394)
  • Gregory Thaumaturgus(213-270)
  • Hermas(fl. 90-150)
  • Ignatius of Antioch(50-107)
  • Isidore of Pelusium(360-435)
  • John Chrysostom(347-407)
  • John Climacus(525-605)
  • John Damascene(676-770)
  • Justin Martyr(100-165)
  • Leontius of Byzantium( 543)
  • Macarius the Great(300-390)
  • Maximus(580-662)
  • Melito(2nd C)
  • Methodius( 311)
  • Nilus the Elder of Ancyra( 430)
  • Origen(185-253)
  • Anastasius(700)
  • Andrew of Crete(650-740)
  • Aphraates(4th C)
  • Archelaus(282)
  • Athanasius(296-373)
  • Athenagoras(2nd C)
  • Basil the Great(329-379)
  • Caesarius of Nazianzus(330-369)
  • Clement of Alexandria(160-215)
  • Cyril of Jerusalem(315-386)
  • Cyril of Alexandria(375-444)
  • Didymus the Blind(313-398)
  • Diodore of Tarsus(390)
  • Dionysius the Pseudo-Areopagite (fl.500)
  • Epiphanius of Salamis(315-403)
  • Eusebius(260-340)
  • Eustathius of Antioch(fl. 325)
  • Firmillian(268)
  • Gennadius I(458-471)

9
DOCTORS OF THE CHURCH
  • Authors of eminent holiness and learning
  • Writings have advanced the cause of Christ
  • A title used since the Middle Ages
  • Originally used to refer to the Four Great
    Doctors of the Western Church
  • St. Ambrose
  • St. Augustine
  • St. Gregory
  • St. Jerome
  • And the Four Great Fathers of the East
  • Athanasius
  • Basil the Great
  • Gregory of Nazianzen
  • John Chrysostom

10
DOCTORS OF THE CHURCH(As of 1998)
  • St. Albert
  • St. Alphonsus Liguori
  • St. Ambrose
  • St. Anselm
  • St. Anthony of Padua
  • St. Athanasius
  • St. Augustine
  • St. Basil
  • St. Bede, the Venerable
  • St. Bernard of Clairvaux
  • St. Bonaventure
  • St. Catherine of Siena
  • St. Cyril of Alexandria
  • St. Cyril of Jerusalem
  • St. Ephraem of Syria
  • St. Francis de Sales
  • St. Gregory Nazianzus
  • St. Gregory the Great
  • St. Hilary of Poitiers
  • St. Isidore
  • St. Jerome
  • St. John Chrysostom
  • St. John Damascene
  • St. John of the Cross
  • St. Lawrence of Brindisi
  • St. Leo the Great
  • St. Peter Canisius
  • St. Peter Chrysologus
  • St. Peter Damian
  • St. Robert Bellarmine
  • St. Teresa of Avila
  • St. Therese of Lisieux
  • St. Thomas Aquinas

11
Four Early Church FathersYOU NEED TO KNOW(See
pages 84 88)
St. Michaels Catholic Academy Department of
Theology Created by Mr. DESullivan Austin, TX
February 2009
12
Four Early Church FathersYOU NEED TO KNOW(See
pages 84 88)
  • St. John Chrysostom (ca. 344-407)
  • St. Ambrose (ca.340-397)
  • St. Jerome (ca. 342-420)
  • St. Augustine (ca. 354-430)

13
St. John Chrysostom (ca. 344-407)
A 1000 year old Byzantine mosaic Cathedral of
Hagia Sophia in Constantinople (modern Istanbul)
14
St. John Chrysostom Biography
  • Born, raised and well-educated in Antioch
  • Permanently damaged his health through intense
    fasting and asceticism
  • Nicknamed Golden Mouth because he was an
    extraordinary preacher
  • Became a famous bishop of Constantinople
  • Among the most important Greek fathers

15
St. John Chrysostom Significance
  • Fought immoral lifestyles among the nobility
  • Pushed for financial reform among the clergy
  • Was exiled twice for his unwavering criticism of
    corruption and immorality
  • Left extensive and detailed writings behind
  • Recognized by early Greeks and Latins as a
    powerful witness to the Faith

16
St. John Chrysostom Quotation
  • Do not pay him (Christ) homage in the temple
    (when you are) clad in silk, only then to neglect
    him outside where he is cold and ill-clad. He who
    said "This is my body" is the same who said
    "You saw me hungry and you gave me no food", and
    "Whatever you did to the least of my brothers you
    did also to me"... What good is it if the
    Eucharistic table is overloaded with golden
    chalices when your brother is dying of hunger?
    Start by satisfying his hunger and then with what
    is left you may adorn the altar as well.
  • From In Evangelium S. Matthaei, hom. 503-4 PG
    58, 508-509
  • as quoted at Catholic Culture

17
St. Ambrose (ca.340-397)
Mosaic Church of St. Ambrogio in Milan, Italy.
18
St. Ambrose Biography
  • Became bishop of Milan through public demand
  • Originally rejected the position
  • Roman noble and governor of Milan at the time
  • Had to receive sacraments of initiation to be
    ordained
  • Once bishop he gave his wealth to the poor and
    became ascetic
  • Developed musical hymns for worship

19
St. Ambrose Significance
  • One of the most influential Latin Church figures
    of the fourth century
  • Left major writings about faith, sin, and grace
  • Fought against Arianism the belief that Jesus
    was not one with the Father nor fully divine
  • Virgin Mary as Mother of God a central teaching
  • Believed all people would achieve salvation

20
St. Ambrose Quotation
  • Women and men are not mistaken when they regard
    themselves as superior to mere bodily creatures
    and as more than mere particles of nature or
    nameless units in modern society. For by their
    power to know themselves in the depths of their
    being they rise above the entire universe of mere
    objects.... Endowed with wisdom, women and men
    are led through visible realities to those which
    are invisible
  • Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern
    World, 1415, Austin Flannery translation as
    quoted in Catholic Culture

21
St. Jerome(ca. 342-420)
Saint Jerome in his Study Domenico Ghirlandaio
1480
22
St. JeromeBiography
  • Born in NE Italy (in Croatia today) but studied
    in Rome
  • Perhaps the most learned of the Church Fathers
  • Baptized at eighteen before traveling a lot
  • Became a strict monk and later a priest
  • Later served as Pope Damascus secretary

23
St. JeromeSignificance
  • Assigned by the Pope to translate the Bible into
    Latin
  • Went to Bethlehem and founded a monastery for men
    and women studying Scripture
  • Spent 23 years in a cave with others translating
    the Bible in Latin

24
St. JeromeSignificance
  • Result of work The Latin Vulgate
  • The official translation of the Catholic Church
    from the fourth century until modern times with
    commentaries
  • Also wrote against Pelagianism and Origenism

25
St. Jerome Quotation
  • I interpret as I should, following the command
    of Christ Search the Scriptures, and Seek and
    you shall find. Christ will not say to me what he
    said to the Jews You erred, not knowing the
    Scriptures and not knowing the power of God. For
    if, as Paul says, Christ is the power of God and
    the wisdom of God, and if the man who does not
    know Scripture does not know the power and wisdom
    of God, then ignorance of Scripture is ignorance
    of Christ.
  • A famous excerpt from Jerome's Commentary on
    Isaiah (Nn. 1.2 CCL 73, 1-3) and found at The
    Crosswords Initiative

26
St. Augustine(ca. 354-430)
Fresco painting by Sandro Botticelli Florence,
Italy
27
St. AugustineBiography
  • Born in Africa and raised an unbaptized Christian
  • Left Christianity and explored heretical
    religions
  • Craved knowledge studying extensively
  • Became a teacher in Rome and then Milan
  • Converted to Christ after a religious experience
  • Returned to Africa where his popularity led to
    becoming bishop of Hippo, in Algeria

28
St. AugustineSignificance
  • Considered the greatest of the Church Fathers
  • The most influential theologian after St. Paul
  • Profoundly influenced the medieval worldview
  • Defended faith against major heresies of the day
  • Many writings are still studied extensively today
  • Especially City of God and The Confessions

More
29
St. AugustineSignificance
  • Developed the concept of the Church as a City of
    God and sinful inhabitants as the City of Man
  • Stressed that the Church has sinners within it so
    must cooperate with Gods grace and work to be
    Gods love in the world
  • Framed the concepts regarding original sin and
    just war embraced to this day

30
St. Augustine Quotation
  • Too late have I loved you, O Beauty of ancient
    days, yet ever new! Too late I loved you! And
    behold, you were within, and I abroad, and there
    I searched for you I was deformed, plunging amid
    those fair forms, which you had made. You were
    with me, but I was not with you. Things held me
    far from youthings which, if they were not in
    you, were not at all. You called, and shouted,
    and burst my deafness. You flashed and shone, and
    scattered my blindness. You breathed odors and I
    drew in breathand I pant for you. I tasted, and
    I hunger and thirst. You touched me, and I burned
    for your peace
  • From the Confessions as found at American Catholic

31
Fall of Rome
  • See Page 76

32
(No Transcript)
33
Early Writings
  • Clement of Rome
  • 95/96 AD (possibly Clement in Phil 43)
  • From Rome to Corinth encouraging them to
    reinstate the church elders who have been forced
    out of office.
  • Examples of service to God (as Heb 11)
  • Examples of the view men of faith had of
    themselves (eg Moses, David)
  • Deals with problem of faction
  • Appointment of bishops, elders and deacons
  • Phil 11, 1 Tim 3, 2 Tim 22, Titus 17

34
Early Writings
  • Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch
  • 110AD 7 genuine letters written on journey to
    Rome
  • To follow leadership of those bishops appointed
    by the Apostles
  • Refutes the teaching that Jesus did not really
    suffer in the flesh and die.
  • Condemns those urging to adopt Jewish customs
  • Much debate about his views of Christ
  • Urges Roman believers not to intervene in his
    trial and martyrdom

35
Early Writings
  • Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna
  • 110AD Letter to Philippians (Ignatius has just
    left)
  • Response to Philippians asking advice on how to
    deal with an elder who has embezzled ecclesial
    funds
  • call them back as frail and wayward members so
    as to heal your entire body
  • Itinerant teachers who do not confess that Jesus
    came in the flesh is an antichrist, the firstborn
    of satan.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com