Transcript Document

33 A.D. – 313 A.D.
Christianity spreads throughout the Roman
Empire EXTREMELY FAST!
1. Divine Assistance – help from J.C. and H.S.
2. Zeal of evangelists and converts
3. “Catholic” or universal – this religion is for all
4. Sense of unity
This quick expansion of the new religion causes Roman
and Jewish authority’s fear and suspicion.
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Baptism
Sunday as the Sabbath
Mass/Holy Eucharist (Body, Blood, Soul, and
Divinity)
Sacred Scripture used, not official Bible until 4th
c.
Non-violent
Against abortion and contraception
Taught love and equality
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Eucharist is at the heart of Christian worship.
Mass celebrations occurred within private
homes or in catacombs. Had to be secret due to
persecutions.
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Liturgy of the Word
Liturgy of the Eucharist
Some churches were built when tolerant Emperors
ruled, often destroyed under future persecutions
though.
 Different
people have different roles within the
Church which determine their level of leadership
and responsibility
 Based on Paul’s teaching that the different
members of the Body of Christ have different
functions
 From the early Church the roles and responsibilities
of bishops, priests, deacons and laypeople were
standard
 The formalities of the different roles developed
with time as need arose
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 Bishops
– name comes from Greek word for
supervisor, regional leaders under the authority of
the pope (the Bishop of Rome, called the 1st among
equals)
 Deacon/Deaconess – supported the ministry of the
Bishop especially related to taking care of people
with special needs
 Presbyters – name comes from the word for elder;
exclusive representatives of the bishop as Christian
communities grew (equivalent of modern day
priests)
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Same as Round Robin except each person has
20 seconds to answer an open ended question.
Describe a time you have been of seen someone
be “persecuted for their faith.
 Martyr
– Greek for “witness”
 First known Christian martyr: St. Stephen
 Feast
day: December 26th – immediately after
Christmas - a way of making us aware of the early
Church
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Early Christians expected to die for Christ.
Their love and zeal for Jesus and each other is
HUGE.
Immense suffering was endured in the name of
Christ.
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a program or campaign to exterminate, drive
away, or subjugate a people because of their
religion, race or beliefs.
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Remember the “Protomartyr” Stephen. Stoned to
death outside of Jerusalem.
• Christians are persecuted all over including Syria,
Greece, Asia Minor, and Europe (France and Spain).
The Roman persecution is perhaps the most
infamous.
 Romans tolerated Christianity (because of their
tolerance of Judaism) until it came into direct conflict
with the desires of the emperor
 Ex: Emperor worship
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64: Nero (scapegoat for his fire)“Christiani non Sint”
81: Domitian (1st “worldwide”)
98: Trajan (do not seek Christians – but
punish if reported and convicted)
138: Antonius Pius
161: Marcus Aurelius
193: Septimus Severus
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211: First Era of Peace
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250: Decius (Required public worship of Roman
gods) – Disappointing amount of apostates.
257: Valerian
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260: Second Era of Peace
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303: Dioceltian’s Great Persecution – very effective
ruler who divided the empire into sections called
dioceses as a way of controlling the empire’s
growing problems
313: Edict of Milan ends major Roman Persecutions
(next Chapter)
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Christians were not pagan
Christians believed in equality
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Romans feared slave rebellion
Emperors were not worshipped or seen as divine.
• Rumors and fallacies about Christianity also
sparked persecutions.
• Eucharist thought to be cannibalism
• Idea of “brothers/sisters” of Christ
thought to bring about incest.
I.UNITY - Created a profound unity among the
Christians and led to a more organized structure
II. MORE CHRISTIANS -Increased the number of
converts
People thought that there must be something to
the faith if these people were willing to die for it.
III. MORE PERSECUTIONS - Frustration grew
among the oppressors and set off more persecution
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An underground series of tunnels, chambers
and tombs dug by Christians to serve as burial
places, shrines, and places of worship.
Many martyrs and Christians were buried
within these underground cemeteries.
The following account was written by the Roman historian Tacitus in his
book Annals published a few years after the event. Tacitus was a young
boy living in Rome during the time of the persecutions.
"Therefore, to stop the rumor [that he had set Rome on fire], he
[Emperor Nero] falsely charged with guilt, and punished with
the most fearful tortures, the persons commonly called
Christians, who were [generally] hated for their enormities.
Christus, the founder of that name, was put to death as a
criminal by Pontius Pilate, procurator of Judea, in the reign of
Tiberius, but the pernicious superstition - repressed for a time,
broke out yet again, not only through Judea, - where the
mischief originated, but through the city of Rome also, whither
all things horrible and disgraceful flow from all quarters, as to a
common receptacle, and where they are encouraged.
Accordingly first those were arrested who confessed they were
Christians; next on their information, a vast multitude were
convicted, not so much on the charge of burning the city, as of
"hating the human race."
Gnosticism
 Marcionism (144-400’s)
 Manichaeism (250’s – 1000’s)
 Montanism (156-200’s)
 Docetism (30’s -100)
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“The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the
Church” – Tertullian.
St. Ignatius (50-107 A.D.) – First to use
“Catholic Church” – eaten by lions
St. Justin Martyr (100-165 A.D.)- Great
apologist of the faith- scourged and beheaded.
St. Irenaeus (130-202 A.D.)- Orthodox defender
of the Faith
St. Clement of Rome – His letters to the
Corinthians = first evidence of Papal Primacy.
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Read Greeting and Paragraph 1 as class.
Each member then reads 2 of the other
paragraphs to their team.
Questions to Answer (separate sheet)
1.
Apologetics- The
defense of the Faith.
Coming from the
Greek word apologia
meaning “defense.”
• St. Aristides
• St. Justin Martyr
• Tatian
• Athenagoras
• St. Thepophilus
• Minucius Felix
• Tertullian
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Gnosticism – thought to predate Christianity
but borrows and copies many rites and figures.
Believe that the Spirit is good and matter is bad“dualism.”
 Comes from Greek word gnosis meaning knowledge
 Denied the Incarnation (God Who is good could not
have taken on a body which is evil. Proved this with
“secret knowledge”
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(114) Simon Peter said to him, "Let Mary leave us,
for women are not worthy of life."
Jesus said, "I myself shall lead her in order to
make her male, so that she too may become a
living spirit resembling you males. For every
woman who will make herself male will enter the
kingdom of heaven." – Gospel of Thomas (Gnostic
literature).