The Church Fathers:
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There were many ways in which Christianity was made more
popular among Roman pagans. For instance, early mystery cults made the Romans
more prepared to accept something like Christianity once it made its
appearance. The Roman persecutions of Jews and Christians had the unintended
consequence of producing a vast and well-known list of saints and martyrs.
The Jews had also allowed Christians to use their synagogues. The conversion
of Constantine in the
early 4th century certainly had an effect on the growth of Christianity.
Furthermore, Jesus was a real man, not some mythical figure or hero -- he
commanded the faith of the dispossessed. And monasticism provided a religious
outlet for those men and women who abandoned Christianity was also a religion of the written word. It was a religion of
the book. The Jews gave the west its oral history in the thirty-nine books of
the Old Testament, written in Hebrew. And by the end of the second century,
Christianity had the twenty-seven books of the New Testament, written in
Greek. By the 5th century, complete editions of the Old Testament and New
Testament were rare, bulky and expensive. What was usually printed were
sections of the Bible: the first five books of the Old Testament (the
Pentateuch) and the book of Psalms, and the first four books of the New
Testament (the Gospels), the Epistles of St. Paul and the Acts of the
Apostles. What we need to take into account is the relationship between the church
and classical culture. By the 4th century, it is correct to speak of a
Christian literature that had developed around the interpretation,
reinterpretation and commentary of the Old and New Testament. The relationship
between the church and classical culture was tenuous at best. Christianity
had the effect of making a synthesis between the Hebrew and Greco-Roman
intellectual traditions. Christianity absorbed Hebrew monotheism and retained
the Old Testament as the Word of God. As Christianity evolved, however, it
also absorbed various elements of Greek thought -- and such an absorption
helps to explain why Christianity succeeded in converting more people of the
of the world of Late Antiquity. To many of the early Church
Fathers, classical philosophy was erroneous for the simple reason that it
did not emanate from divine revelation. It was secular and pagan. The early
Church Fathers complained that whereas Greek philosophers may have argued
over words, Christianity possessed the Word, true wisdom as revealed
by God. So, the early Church Fathers believed that studying Greek thought
would contaminate Christian morality and promote heresy. For the early Church
Fathers, there would be no compromise between Greek philosophy and Christian
revelation. The early Church Father, Tertullian
(150-225) once wrote that "with our faith, we desire no further belief.
For this is our faith that there is nothing which we ought to believe
besides." However, there were other Church Fathers who defended the value of
studying classical literature and philosophy. The classical Greeks could aid
in the moral development of children because the Greeks, though pagan, still
embraced a virtuous life. Knowledge of Greek thought helped Christians to
explain their beliefs logically and enabled them to argue intelligently with
critics of Christianity. It was Clement of Alexandria
(c.150-220) who brought reason to the support of faith by trying to make
Christianity more intellectually respectable. As Clement once wrote in his Stromata
(Miscellanies), "thus philosophy acted as a schoolmaster to the
Greek, preparing them for Christ, as the laws of the Jews prepared them for
Christ." Using the language and techniques of Greek philosophy, Christian
intellectuals changed Christianity from a simple ethical creed into a
theoretical system. From this "Hellenization
of Christianity," theology was born. Christ was depicted as the divine Logos
(reason) in human form. Roman Stoicism was incorporated into the belief that
all are equal and united in Christ.
Jerome grew up in
In 399, Augustine was elected Bishop of Hippo, one of the intellectual
centers of In The City of God, Augustine brings together the sacred history of
the Jewish people, the pagan history of the Greeks and Romans, and the
Christian expectation of future salvation. He quotes Herodotus,
Plato, Cicero, Seneca, Tacitus,
Aristotle, the
Old Testament, the New Testament as well as the interpretations and
commentaries of the Church Fathers. The City of God contrasts two cities: the City of Of course, Augustine did not believe that Christ, by his death, had opened
the door to heaven for every soul. Most of humanity remained condemned to
eternal punishment -- only a handful of souls had the gift of faith and the
promise of heaven. People could not overcome their sins -- moral and
spiritual regeneration came only from God's grace, and it was God who
determined who would be saved, and who would be damned (the notion of
predestination would appear again, with greater force, during the Protestant
Reformation of the 16th century). Although Augustine's influence was
impressive, the Church rejected his idea of predestination, that only a small
number of people would find salvation. Instead, the Church emphasized that
Christ had made possible the salvation of all. With Augustine, the
human-centered outlook of classical humanism gave way to a God-centered world
view. The fulfillment of God's grand design became the chief concern of human
endeavor. |