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History 323 The Middle Ages

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Historical Questions Related to Early Christianity ... his ministry about the age of 30. God the Father and the Holy Spirit bless Jesus. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History 323 The Middle Ages


1
History 323The Middle Ages
  • Early Christianity in the Roman Empire

2
Historical Questions Related to Early Christianity
  • In a search to find the historic Jesus and the
    rise of Christianity, several important questions
    emerge
  • Who was Jesus and what was his ministry?
  • What culture did Jesus and his followers emerge
    from?
  • How did Christianity spread and who were the
    earliest Christian converts?
  • How did Christianity become such a successful
    religious movement by the 4th century A.D. ?

The Hebrew Y'Shua or Yeshua (Yahweh is
Salvation), as it was written in documents
during the time of Jesus. (Jesus is the Greek
way of writing Joshua.)
3
Historic Developments in Judaism
  • By the First Century A.D. there were four major
    groups of significance in Judaism in and around
    Jerusalem
  • SadduceesJewish temple priests who were closely
    allied with the political authorities. No belief
    in the afterlife
  • PhariseesJewish teachers of the law. They
    believed in eternal life and a system of
    punishment and rewards in the afterlife
  • ZealotsArmed Jews who wanted to overthrow Roman
    rule by military force and violence
  • Essenesspiritual ascetics who withdrew from
    society to avoid its evils and to contemplate
    God. They awaited the coming of the messiah
    intensely, purified themselves through baptismal
    washing, focused on a call to repentance, and a
    mystical reunion with God

4
Sources to find the historic Jesus
  • The Christian Gospels in the New Testament are
    primary sources for the historian. They were
    written between 65 A.D. and 110 A.D. and give
    important information about the life of Jesus and
    how different Christian communities were
    understanding him
  • In the end, many of the issues in these Gospels
    require a personal faith commitmentthere are
    things that an historian cannot prove or
    disprove. These are the case in all
    religionsyou must decide if you think what Jesus
    said makes sense. As Jesus asks his disciple
    Peter himselfWho do you think I am, Peter?
  • The Bible is a religious document that is about
    deep ultimate questions. The kind of questions
    that Gilgamesh asked, the kind of questions that
    Plato and Socrates asked. The kind of problems
    that Odysseus faced.

5
Sources to find the historic Jesus
  • Gospels in the New TestamentMatthew, Mark, Luke,
    and John
  • Example The Book of Matthew was written for Jews
    who were becoming Christians in an area of strong
    Pharisaic influence.
  • In the First Century, such communities were in
    Tiberius and Sephoras in Galilee (Israel) or
    Antioch. The setting is clearly after the 70
    A.D. destruction of the Temple, and the community
    is clearly divided.
  • Matthew is speaking to a people who are
    struggling with religious changewhat do we do
    now? How do we continue to be authentic Jews in
    a time of persecution?
  • Matthews example is that Jesus is the promised
    messiahthe Christ foretold in the Old Testament.
    He begins his gospel, uniquely, with a long
    genealogy to link Jesus up to David through
    Joseph.
  • The Jesus that appears in this Gospel has strong
    words to say to Sadducees and Phariseeshe
    complains that they are following the letter over
    the spirit of the law.

6
Sources to find the historic Jesus
  • Other gospels were for different communitiesJohn
    was for Greeks, not Jews
  • The gospels Matthew, Mark (65 A.D.), and Luke
    seem to rely on an earlier source which has never
    been discovered. This Q Gospelthe Sayings of
    Jesusmay have been oral (like Homer) or written,
    and was not narrative but a collection of sayings
  • Q may have been Greek or Aramaic. We can tell
    this was there because of the similarity of words
    used in the Gospels
  • But the format of Q would probably have been like
    the Gospel of Thomas, another ancient text not
    included in the Bible but useful for historians
    and scholars

7
Divine Origins of Jesus in Art
15th century Italian painting of the Annunciation
of Mary depicts the moment when the Holy Spirit
enters Marys womb
8
The Baptism of Jesus in Art
Mosaic Baptism of Jesus shown in a Ravenna church
(500s) in Italy. Jesus is baptized by John in
the River Jordan and begins his ministry about
the age of 30. God the Father and the Holy
Spirit bless Jesus.
9
Jesus Seder meal or Last Supper
Coptic art of the early Christian church
10
Jesus death via crucifixion
11
The Apostle Paul
  • The earliest New Testament books were written by
    Paul, a Jewish convert to Christianity who went
    of several missionary voyages from about 30 A.D.
    to 64 A.D.
  • Paul at first persecuted early Christians, and
    participated in the stoning of Stephen
  • Pauls conversion on the road to Damascus
    becomes the model for Christians who leave their
    past life behind and become new creations in
    Christ
  • Paul participates in a major apostolic conference
    in Jerusalem in the 40s that is recorded in Acts.
    Differences about the significance and ministry
    of Jesus are discussed
  • Begins missionary trips. NT Book First
    Thessalonians probably a letter related to the
    second voyage, c. 49 A.D. and is therefore the
    Bibles oldest book
  • No one knows where or when Paul died, but it may
    have been in Rome around 64 A.D.

12
The Apostle Peter
  • Peter was an important disciple of Jesus who
    (with eleven other men) were the helpers and
    first followers of Jesus
  • Peter is identified by Jesus as an important
    leader of the Jesus Movement
  • And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock
    I will build my church, and the gates of Hades
    will not prevail against it.
  • -- Matthew 1618-19
  • Peter speaks to Jews gathered from around the
    Roman Empire in Jerusalem after Jesus death and
    resurrectionthe Pentecost story.
  • Peter and Paul have differences about the
    missionary strategy of the young Christian Church
  • Peter writes letters to Christian groups that can
    be found in the New Testament
  • Roman Catholics see Peter as the first pope
  • Peter dies in Rome as a martyr

13
Early representations of Peter and Paul
A tomb inscription from the hidden catacombs
beneath Rome. This Christian tomb shows Peter
(Petrus) and Paul (Paulus) on the left and a
Latin inscription which reads Asellus who had
lived 5 years, 8 months and 23 days.
14
Early Christian Art in Rome
Tomb, Roman catacombs Here Christian parents
have dedicated an epitaph to their 20-year old
son who lives in peace. The figure to the left
represents the resurrection of Lazarus, the most
common image found in the catacombs, reflecting
the belief of early Christians in Jesus as the
author of eternal life.
15
The Roman Empire at its height
16
The missionary journeys of Paul
17
Ancient building site in Corinth
18
The Spread of Christianity
  • Important questions for early Christian leaders
  • Who was Jesus? Human, divine, or some
    combination?
  • Must all new Christians come from a Jewish
    background?
  • Must all Christians follow Jewish Law (the
    Torah)? Dietary laws, circumcision, etc.
  • To what extent can non-Jews become Christians?

19
The Spread of Christianity
  • According to Rodney Stark, early Christianity
    probably grew at a 40 growth rate. Thus a table
    of Christian growth would probably look like
    this

20
The Spread of Christianity (Stark)
  • People would have been attracted to Christianity
    because early Christianity
  • Had a superior theology, which offered a
    compelling explanation for lifes difficulties
    and promised eternal life
  • Emphasized charity and good works, which made
    life much better for Christianitys adherents and
    those in surrounding communities
  • Was especially favorable to women, who were
    extremely marginalized in Roman society
  • Appealed to many Hellenistic Jews and these Jews
    represented most early converts
  • Appealed to middle and upper class Romans in the
    cities, where most conversions took place
  • Had higher costs and benefits than competing
    pagan religions and Judaism (no ethnic
    requirement, fewer free riders)

21
The Spread of Christianity
  • It is also important to note how diverse early
    Christianity was.
  • As an underground movement, worship took place
    primarily in homes, and Christians were not
    typically high-level officials before the 4th
    century
  • Thus Christianity became diverse in the Roman
    Empire and different ideas about Jesus and
    appropriate worship and theology emerged
  • Consider the communities of Jerusalem, Antioch,
    Egypt, Greece, Italy, etc.
  • Consider the office of bishop as it developed in
    various locations as well
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