History of Christianity—2
The period of the ancient
church was a time of theological definition, a time of defining what they
believed and what they understood the Scripture to mean. Beginning in 600 and
the medieval church there would be a time of darkness that would descend upon
the church, and then a time of restoration in the Reformation church. The first
period we have been looking at, the period of the ancient church, was divided
into four periods: the period of the apostolic age—33-100, the period of the
apostolic fathers—100-150, the age of the apologists—150-300, and the age of
the theologians—300-600. We are now in the middle of this last period, the age
of the theologians.
There were three great
questions that they needed to answer during this time. First, who was Jesus before
He came? That was the area of controversy. Arius
taught that there was a time when Christ was not. The answer to Arianism was formulated in the Nicene creed.
But that did not win the battle. Athanasius just
after that was appointed bishop of
The second question that they
had to answer was: what was Jesus when He came? That was the issue of the
hypostatic union. How does the deity and humanity of Christ relate? Finally
they articulated in the fact that they were merged but not mixed, it was a
union of the two persons, the two substances, humanity and deity—the hypostatic
union of Christ, that He was fully God, undiminished deity, and completely man
or true humanity.
The third question was: what
did Jesus do when he came? This was the Pelagian
controversy, it involved an understanding of the doctrine of sin and grace, it
involved the nature of man and an understanding of what faith truly is. It
answers the question, how is a man saved? Does regeneration precede faith or
does it come after faith? How can a spiritually dead man even understand the
gospel? If he cannot understand the gospel how can he be regenerated without
already being saved? Is redemption chiefly a work of God or chiefly a work of
man?
Augustine was the bishop of
Hippo which is in
Let’s see how this is played
out within the context of the controversy. Augustine taught that Adam’s sin
affected the entire human race so that everyone was guilty. The effect is not
simply a disease, not just that man was weakened by sin, but that it is a
defect; man is born with a nature that can do noting but sin. Infants are
morally, spiritually and physically corrupt. Augustine did not teach this on
his own but in response to this British monk named Pelagius who came down from
Regarding predestination Pelagius
taught that God chose men because men chose God. Augustine said that
predestination is based on God’s love because in eternity past God specifically
chose who would be saved and who would not. What Augustine is basically saying
is that everybody deserves Hell; nothing demands that God save anybody, so God
chose to save a few. In Augustine’s theology he held to a doctrine called
double predestination: some were predestined to salvation and those would trust
Christ as their savior; that God chose some for heaven and some for Hell. That
is extreme Augustinianism. Pelagius’s doctrine was
that you were a sinner because you sinned. Augustine taught that you sinned
because you were born with a sin nature, and you were a sinner. Pelagius taught
that Adam was created mortal and that he would have died no matter whether he
had sinned or not; he taught that Adam’s sin only injured Adam and affected no
one else; he taught that the law would save as well as the gospel; he taught
that there were men before the time of Christ who lived without sin; he taught
recently born infants are in the same neutral state as Adam, so they could live
to; he taught recently born infants are in the same neutral state as Adam, so
they could live to perfection; he taught that the whole of mankind is not did
not die in the fall of Adam, nor does it resurrect in the resurrection of
Christ; he taught that man if he would could live without sin; he taught that
un-baptized infants would be automatically saved; he taught that the rich who
were baptized would have no merit, nor would they inherit the kingdom of God if
they did not renounce their possessions; he taught that sin consisted of
individual acts, not in a constitutional problem or a sin nature.
In a solution to this controversy
at the Council of Ephesus in 431 Pelagianism was condemned
as heretical. Historically it is this that creates a shift to Roman
Catholicism. The two extremes: Augustine taught that salvation is totally and causally
of God. He believed in double predestination. Pelagius taught that salvation
was totally and causally of man. John Cassianus came
long with his development and understanding. He said that salvation originates
in God but preceded by man. Man’s volition therefore
returns to its significant place. Each person must believe in Christ and
although God originates salvation man believes in Christ. He also denied
predestination of the unbeliever. That became standard dogma from 529 on. Then
another view came along which emphasized a cooperative work between man and
God: salvation originates in man and proceeds by man and God. That is clearly
wrong. Salvation originates ultimately in God and the foreknowledge of God.
This led to a works salvation: that man and God cooperate together, putting the
emphasis on human works. It is semi-Pelagianism that
slowly begins to work into the church. Even though in terms of the creeds semi-Augustinianism
was adopted it began to be watered down, emphasizing human works. The result
was Roman Catholic theology.
Now we come to the second
period in the church, the age of the medieval church—600-1500. There was a time
of decline organizationally and morally, as well as to some degree
theologically. In our perspective the whole period is a decline theologically. So when there are ups and down it has to do with the church in
terms of power and authority, and the morality of the church as opposed to
their theology. There is a decline from 600-950; there is a resurgence from 950-1200. One of the signs of it was when
Henry II was emperor of the
Four A’s to remember: Augustine,
Anselm, Abelard, Aquinas—four of the key people in the middle ages in Roman
Catholic theology.
The period of the medieval
church really begins in 600 with Gregory the Great. To back-track a little, in
the previous two or three centuries five major cities dominated Christianity in
the
He was born into an
aristocratic family in
Over the two or three hundred
years prior to this time many noblemen, wealthy people died and had left their
lands to the church, hoping they would get a little more forgiveness from God.
The whole idea of penance had entered into the church by this time and people
thought they could buy some extra divine forgiveness and grace. So the church
had become fairly wealthy. Gregory administered all of those lands, received a
lot of revenue from those lands, so when the people had suffered from the plagues
and the floods he was able to distribute money to people, and his prestige and
power grew. When the barbarians again sought to invade it was Gregory, not the
emperor, who called up the army and went out to protect
Theologically he is very
significant. He had a semi-Pelagian view of man. He
believed that Adam’s fall weakened man but it didn’t destroy him; he was sick
but it was not a defect. What does that mean? If man is sick and it is not a
defect then man can do something to cooperate with God. So
works comes into the Roman church. Baptism remits sin. How are you
saved? By baptism into the church because man cooperates with
God. He introduced the whole concept of confession. What do you do about
post-salvation sin? You have to do penance. You pray to the saints; he introduced
the concept of the intercession of the saints. Of worshipping
holy relics, purgatory, the mass and transubstantiation.
Transubstantiation is at the core of Roman Catholic theology. This was
introduced by Gregory but it does not dominate the western church.
Many people ask when Roman
Catholicism began. It is a tough question to answer. In terms of a system, the
church and the power of the pope, it begins with Gregory, but it is not until
the 12th century when all of this works theology is finalized that
the Roman Catholic church officially adopts a works view of salvation.
In the doctrine of the Lord’s supper, in the early church they saw it as a
sacrifice of praise to God. This is clear from Clement of Rome, the Didache and Justin Martyr, the apostolic fathers. During
the next period of time it was viewed as a sacrifice that was both sacrificial
and praise. This appeared in the writings of Iranaeus,
Origen and Cyprian. The seed-bed is transubstantiation
as found in their writings. By the time of the Middle Ages Peter Lombard,
Thomas Aquinas, it is a sacrifice that is sacrificial praise, and meritorious. See
how it changes from just a sacrifice of praise to a sacrifice that is
sacrificial praise and meritorious. You gain merit before God from the Lord’s table by partaking in the elements.
So Gregory is important
because of his administration gifts and how he organizes the western church,
and also for the heretical doctrines such as transubstantiation, purgatory, prayers for the saints and his works-oriented salvation that
he introduces into the church.
The second thing that happened
in the Gregory period was that papal authority was expanded by two important
documents that surfaced. Many years later they were discovered to be forgeries
but were unknown to be forgeries at this time. The Donation of Constantine is a
donation of land that supposedly goes back to
Physically they began to
grow. The major loss during this time was in
After
Patrick died and within a century later from the strong church in
Two missionaries were sent
forth from the Celtic area. A man named Willibrord went to the Dutch and
another man by the name of Boniface who worked with Willibrord
for a while among the Frizians and then went to Saxons
in
Through all of these missionaries the church
expands and grows, and through this time more controversies developed. The first
was the Philiotes controversy. In one of the ancient
creeds is the statement: “We believe in God the Father, the Holy Spirit and the
Son, and the Holy Spirit who proceeds from the Father.” At the Synod of Toledo they wanted to add the phrase that the Holy Spirit
proceeded from the Father and the Son. The eastern church
had a view of the truth that once you wrote it, it could never be changed
again. They almost elevated it to the position of Scripture. The eastern church became so upset by the addition of this
clause at the Synod of Toledo that it was one of the major reasons that there
was a split between the east and the west. That would eventually come about in
the tenth century, at which time the Roman pope excommunicated the patriarch in
Then there was a period of resurgence
and the Roman church grew. During this time as the Roman church grows they incorporate
the northern European countries and send missionaries up into the north. One of
the motives of the Vikings was to send out the gospel. They sent out colonists
to
During this period of the
development of
The next point is the
division of the church. This is where they lose a lot over issues like when
Easter should be observed, the whole issue of papal authority, the Philiotes clause as well as
celibacy. In the eastern church pastors were to be
married but bishops were to be celibate. Because of these differences the east
split from the west in 1054, and then the
Then there was the rise of scholasticism. This was
the development of monasteries in
Two people of note during this time were Anselm,
the first person to really set forth a theology of the substitutionary
view of the atonement. In Anselm’s view God is righteous, sin is man’s problem;
man needs a substitute to die in his place, and that is why Christ died, to pay
a penalty—not to ransom man from Satan but to pay the penalty for man.
The next great figure in this period was Abelard.
He is really important for a number of reasons. Because of his teaching methods
in the cathedral schools it was really Abelard that is the founding father of
the whole university system. He instituted a whole system of dialectic and
question and answer in the classroom. He is also known for the love side in his
life. He fell in love with the daughter of a man he was tutoring. She became
pregnant. The uncle got mad at Abelard because of that and with some of his men
went after him and emasculated him. Abelard then went into a monastery and had
no more love interest after that. He is best known because he said that man’s
need was more a moral impetus; he wasn’t a sinner, he just needed a moral push.
So Christ died just as a good example. So Abelard introduces the example view
of Christ’s death.
The other important movements at this time were the
rise of monasticism, the rise of the various orders within the Roman Catholic
church—the Dominicans, the Farnciscans, the Augustinians;
these are their missionaries, teachers that go out; all beggars. From them an
education system was established throughout
Ultimately and theologically what we find here in
this time, in summary, is that man is viewed as a sinner but he could help God.
He does not have a defect; he is simply sick, not dead. So man works with God,
there is cooperating grace. Thomas Aquinas taught that life began at birth, it
didn’t begin at conception. This is known as creationism. The soul is imputed
to the new-born baby at the time of birth. In his writings Aquinas said: “It is
[can’t hear the word used] to believe that the material introduced the
immaterial, that the mortal introduced the immortal. How can the physical
produce a soul or a spirit?” In spite of Aquinas’s reasoning for that the Roman
Catholic church has rejected his views on that
particular point. But Aquinas taught that the church imparts grace, you are
only saved in the church, and that submission to the pope is necessary for
salvation. After you are saved, if you sin, you must perform penance and also
buy indulgences for people who have already died.