Trinity History 2: Arius

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Trinity History 2: Arius"

Transcription

1 Trinity History 2: Arius by Sean Finnegan Did Jesus have a beginning or has he always existed? This simple question was at the heart of the controversy that broke out between Christians in Egypt in the early fourth century. Alexander, the powerful bishop of Alexandria, began teaching Jesus was eternal like the Father while a number of his clergy strongly disagreed with him, arguing that the Son was begotten, and thus had a beginning. Before long, the dispute in Egypt spilled over into the surrounding regions of the eastern half of the Roman Empire and continued to escalate until the Roman government officially endorsed one perspective while outlawing all others in A.D Although most informed Christians are taught that it was Arius that caused all the trouble, in fact, the historical record reveals a quite different perspective. To better understand what happened back then, we need to acquaint ourselves with Arius and the early years of the struggle, before the emperors started getting involved.

2 Born around A.D. 256 in Libya, Africa, Arius was a highly intelligent and devout Christian. Very little about his early life survives, and what we know was written by his enemies. Epiphanius calls him unusually tall, and said he wore a downcast expression but admits he was pleasant in his speech forever winning souls (Pan ). 1 Another historian, Socrates of Constantinople, said Arius was possessed of no inconsiderable logical acumen (H.E. 1.5). 2 Essentially, Arius was remarkably brilliant, extremely disciplined, and very persuasive. He may have studied under Lucian of Antioch for a time. When he was in his late forties, he was ordained a deacon by Peter, the bishop of Alexandria. Peter s successor Achillas made him a presbyter when Arius was in his mid-fifties whereupon he began pastoring a church in the Baucalis district in Alexandria. By the time the controversy with Alexander broke out, he was already sixty-two years old and highly respected by everyone. This is evidenced by the fact that when he was excommunicated, seventy virgins, seven presbyters, and twelve deacons immediately left with him (Pan , 5). Arius is typically painted as an outsider who endeavored to push upon the Christians of his time progressive ideas about God and Christ based on his philosophical sensibilities. Nothing could be further from the truth of the matter. Arius had already given his life in service to the church. He was not young and impulsive, nor was 1 Epiphanius of Salamis, Panarion: Books 2 and 3 (Sects 47-80, De Fide), trans. Frank Williams (Leiden, Brill 1994). 2 Socrates Scholasticus, Ecclesiastical History, trans. A. C. Zenos in the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Second Series), vol 2 (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson 1999).

3 he progressive or liberal. His concern was to retain the faith he had received and that was already accepted, especially by his own bishop, Alexander. In a letter to Alexander after his banishment, Arius claimed that his faith was received from our forefathers and learned from you as well. He goes on to detail the faith he learned from Alexander that there is one God, the only ingenerate, the only eternal, who alone is without beginning, the only true God He has begotten him [Christ] not in appearance but in truth and brought him into being by his own will (Pan ). He continues, But God is before all as a unit and the first principle of all. And thus he is also before Christ, as we have learned from you when you have preached in the church (Pan ). So, Arius clearly did not think he was inventing anything new and had no problem saying so right to the man who was persecuting him. So what happened? How did Arius end up fired by his overseer? Apparently at some big meeting of Alexander s, he made a public declaration. Socrates reports the following: He [Alexander], in the fearless exercise of his functions for the instruction and government of the church, attempted one day in the presence of the presbytery and the rest of his clergy, to explain, with perhaps too philosophical minuteness, that great theological mystery the unity of the Holy Trinity. (H.E. 1.5) Upon hearing Alexander s exposition, Arius thought Alexander was teaching Sabellianism (an idea that the Son was the Father, popularized by Sabellius a century

4 earlier (H.E. 1.5). Before long, word of Arius disagreement got back to Alexander who asked Arius to meet with him (Pan 3.5). Once it was clear that he could not convince Arius, Alexander called together a council of presbyters and some bishops to officially examine him (in A.D. 318). 3 Arius and many others (including some bishops) refused to sign the confession of orthodoxy, so the council, led by Alexander, publicly excommunicated nearly one hundred of their brothers and sisters in Christ. Upon this devastating turn of events, some of them travelled to other areas to seek help. The only way they could hope to regain fellowship with their home churches was to convince enough other bishops to confront Alexander. Quite a few bishops responded including Eusebius of Caesarea, the famous church historian, and the influential Eusebius of Nicomedia. Because Arius did not have the benefit of institutional support in his native Alexandria and the government was still uninvolved in Christian matters, his only recourse was to persuasion. He distilled his faith statement down to a short slogan, There was when he was not and popularized this truth as much as he could. Arius was no fool: he knew he had Scripture and logic on his side, and he was not about to submit to Alexander s heavy-handed tactics just because he held the title bishop. Arius only theological work that partially survives is called the Thalia, which means Festivity. He wrote it sometime between A.D. 318 and 3 For a more detailed chronology see R.P.C. Hanson s ninepoint outline. R.P.C. Hanson, The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God (Grand Rapids, Baker Academic 2007), pp

5 321, during the tumultuous years leading up to the council of Nicea in A.D Here is how it begins: In accordance with the faith of the elect of God, God s sage servants Holy and orthodox, who had received God s holy Spirit, I learned these things from participants in wisdom, Skillful, taught by God in every way and wise. In their steps came I, stepping with the same opinions, The notorious, the one who suffered much for God s glory; Having learned from God I myself know wisdom and knowledge. God then himself is in essence ineffable to all. He alone has neither equal nor like, none comparable in glory; We call him Unbegotten because of the one in nature begotten; We raise hymns to him as Unbegun because of him who has beginning. We adore him as eternal because of the one born in time. The Unbegun appointed the Son to be the beginning of things begotten, And bore him as his own Son, in this case giving birth. He has nothing proper to God in his essential property, For neither is he equal nor yet consubstantial

6 with him. 4 This poem goes on, but Arius primary point derives from a rock-solid confession in the fact that the Father begat the Son. Arius said, If the Father begat the Son, he that was begotten had a beginning of existence: and from this is evident that there was a time when the Son was not (H.E. 1.5). Arius grounded this belief on biblical, grammatical, and logical grounds. Although his opponents, even today, sometimes accuse him of twisting Christian doctrine to fit with Greek philosophy, R.P.C. Hanson, the author of a massive near thousandpage book on the subject, writes: It is not just to dismiss him [Arius] as one wholly preoccupied with philosophy. The very fact of his eclecticism suggests that he has some ultimate purpose for which he is using the tools of philosophy, but which itself is not philosophical but theological. He was in his way attempting to discover or construct a rational Christian doctrine of God, and for this his chief source was necessarily not the ideas of Plato or Aristotle or Zeno, but the Bible. 5 Naturally, Alexander was enraged by Arius efforts to popularize his message in Alexandria and abroad. As a result he sent a circular letter to seventy bishops (Pan ), slandering his enemy. The tone of Arius Thalia and Alexander s letter could not be more opposite. 4 J. Stevenson, A New Eusebius: Documents Illustrating the History of the Church to ad 337, trans. Stuart Hall, ed. J. Stevenson, rev. ed. W. H.C. Frend. (London: SPCK 1987). 5 Hanson, p. 98.

7 Rather than focusing on the issue, Alexander lambasted Arius calling him wretched, deranged, cantankerous, idiotic, ignorant, and impious. Alexander thundered, Christ s undivided cloak, which the executioners did not even wish to divvy up, they have dared to rip apart. 6 Alexander was intent to exculpate himself while accusing Arius of divisiveness. However, it was Alexander s rash excommunication of Arius and the others that caused their outreach. In fact, before this time, many Christians who disagreed on this matter had no problem getting along. By making belief in the eternality of the Son a requirement for fellowship, Alexander began the polarization process that eventually ripped the church apart. Upon receiving the letter, some bishops refused Arius and his friends fellowship while others continued supporting them. Before long (A.D. 319), Eusebius of Nicomedia and a number of other bishops held another council in Bithynia (northern Turkey) at which Arius was vindicated as orthodox. They sent a letter to Alexander demanding Arius restoration. Around this time, Eusebius of Caesarea wrote to Alexander protesting how he was treating Arius. A couple of years later (between A.D. 321 and 322), Eusebius of Caesarea called for a second council in Palestine at which Arius was once again supported, and Alexander once more was entreated to reinstate Arius. After this, the whole issue was tabled for a while because the eastern emperor, 6 Kirchengeschichte Theodoretus, ed. Léon Parmentier and Günter Christian Hansen. Berlin: Akademie Verlag, (Translated by Andrew S. Jacobs in Christianity in Late Antiquity c.e. Oxford University Press, 2004, pp )

8 Licinius, banned the meeting of bishops. But, once Constantine defeated Licinius in A.D. 324 and became the sole emperor of both east and west, the issue came before him. Constantine wrote to Alexander and Arius urging them to reconcile. He condemned Alexander for asking his presbyters what each one thought on an inexplicable passage of the Bible that is improper for discussion (H.E. 1.7). He reproves Arius for rashly answering rather than burying his thoughts in silence. Essentially, Constantine argued that such subjects are too complicated to handle and that they are of least importance. In one sense, Constantine was right it is far better to deal with doctrinal differences within the church through respectful and patient investigation rather than dividing over them and thereby destroying the witness of unity to the world. However, in another sense he was dead wrong; this issue was not unimportant. Alexander s theological speculation had nudged the church down a trajectory that would culminate in a full-blown Trinity doctrine, complete with so many abstract conceptualizations that few could adequately explain it. As one might imagine, Constantine s letter was completely ineffective in persuading Alexander to lift the ban on Arius. Even if Constantine s initial foray into this controversy proved entirely ineffective, he was not one to give up easily. Where was this all heading? Will the bishops in the north successfully convince Alexander to readmit Arius? Will the emperor ignore the issue and focus on other matters? Will the question of whether or not the Son is eternal blow over? The answer to all of these questions

9 is a resounding No! Alexander remained unyielding as ever, the emperor decided to stick his nose right into the issue, and the eternality question continued to fester and divide Christians for at least sixty more years. Next time, we will turn our attention to Constantine and the world-wide council of bishops he called at Nicea to decide on the issue once and for all (or so he thought). We should not, therefore, imagine Arius as a renegade priest, willfully flouting orthodox theology to spread subversive ideas about the Trinity. Bart Ehrman 7 In Alexandria he [Arius] represented not only a conservative theology, but also a conservative understanding of his presbyteral role vis-à-vis the bishop, and a traditional Alexandrian confidence in the authority of the inspired contemplative and ascetic teacher. Rowan Williams 8 7 Bart D. Ehrman and Andrew S. Jacobs, Christianity in Late Antiquity C.E. (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2004), Rowan Williams, Arius: Heresy and Tradition (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2002), p. 233.

Trinity History 3: Council of Nicea by Rev. Sean Finnegan

Trinity History 3: Council of Nicea by Rev. Sean Finnegan Trinity History 3: Council of Nicea by Rev. Sean Finnegan In a.d. 313, Alexander (the bishop of Alexandria in Egypt) fired and excommunicated Arius (one of his presbyters) because he challenged Alexander

More information

The Simplistic Accounts Arius and Arianism The Council of Nicea, 325 AD Anti-Nicene and Pro-Nicene Movements Athanasius Strategy The Council of

The Simplistic Accounts Arius and Arianism The Council of Nicea, 325 AD Anti-Nicene and Pro-Nicene Movements Athanasius Strategy The Council of Mako A. Nagasawa The Simplistic Accounts Arius and Arianism The Council of Nicea, 325 AD Anti-Nicene and Pro-Nicene Movements Athanasius Strategy The Council of Constantinople, 381 AD Arianism After 381

More information

This article is also available in Spanish.

This article is also available in Spanish. The Council of Nicea Introduction This article is also available in Spanish. The doctrine of the Trinity is central to the uniqueness of Christianity. It holds that the Bible teaches that God eternally

More information

The Ancient Church. Arianism and the Nicene Creed. CH501 LESSON 08 of 24

The Ancient Church. Arianism and the Nicene Creed. CH501 LESSON 08 of 24 The Ancient Church CH501 LESSON 08 of 24 Richard C. Gamble, ThD Experience: Professor of Systematic Theology, Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary In our last lecture we began to look at another

More information

The Heresies about Jesus

The Heresies about Jesus The Heresies about Jesus What Arius believed and taught A letter from Arius (c. 250 336) to the Arian Eusebius of Nicomedia (died 341) succinctly states the core beliefs of the Arians: But we say

More information

Trinity Presbyterian Church Church History Lesson 4 The Council of Nicea 325 A.D.

Trinity Presbyterian Church Church History Lesson 4 The Council of Nicea 325 A.D. Trinity Presbyterian Church Church History Lesson 4 The Council of Nicea 325 A.D. Introduction At the end of the 1 st Century and beginning of the 2 nd Century: All the Apostles were dead; many had been

More information

Arius, What Were You Thinking? Ernest W. Durbin II

Arius, What Were You Thinking? Ernest W. Durbin II Arius, What Were You Thinking? Ernest W. Durbin II The Life and Thought of the Christian Church: Beginnings to about 1500 A.D. HCUS 5010 Walter Froese, Ph.D. November 22, 2004 1 ARIUS, WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?

More information

Athanasius in 30 minutes

Athanasius in 30 minutes Athanasius in 30 minutes Timeline 296? Athanasius born in Alexandria, Egypt 305-11 Terrible persecution in Egypt 312 Emperor Constantine converts to Christianity 318 Arius begins to teach that the Son

More information

KNOW YOUR CHURCH HISTORY (6) The Imperial Church (AD ) Councils

KNOW YOUR CHURCH HISTORY (6) The Imperial Church (AD ) Councils KNOW YOUR CHURCH HISTORY (6) The Imperial Church (AD313-476) Councils A. Introduction 1. The Imperial Church was the period of church history between these two significant events: The Edict of Milan in

More information

Who is Macedonius? He is known as the ENEMY OF THE HOLY SPIRIT He was a follower of Arius and because of that the Arians managed to make him Bishop of

Who is Macedonius? He is known as the ENEMY OF THE HOLY SPIRIT He was a follower of Arius and because of that the Arians managed to make him Bishop of Ecclesiastical History Part 3 By Sub-deacon: Bishoy Ibrahim Ecumenical Council of fc Constantinople ti Saint Mina Coptic Orthodox Church Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Who is Macedonius? He is known as the

More information

Kingdom Congress of Illinois Position Paper on Ekklesia Convocation: Convening for a Set Agenda

Kingdom Congress of Illinois Position Paper on Ekklesia Convocation: Convening for a Set Agenda An ekklesia convocation is not a casual gathering of the saints; it is convened with a predetermined agenda. Something specific is to be determined or accomplished. The community of called out ones convenes

More information

Who Was St. Athanasius?

Who Was St. Athanasius? Who Was St. Athanasius? By John La Boone Jesus became what we are that he might make us what he is. St. Athanasius of Alexandria Last time, I wrote about the Feed My Sheep food bank that is a mission of

More information

THE COUNCIL OF NICEA AND ATHANASIUS

THE COUNCIL OF NICEA AND ATHANASIUS THE COUNCIL OF NICEA AND ATHANASIUS The Development of the Doctrine of the Trinity THE COUNCIL OF NICEA I Texts collected in William Rusch, The Trinitarian Controversy (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980),

More information

Constantine, Nicea and Chalcedon. The Conversion of an Empire and Theological Clarifications

Constantine, Nicea and Chalcedon. The Conversion of an Empire and Theological Clarifications Constantine, Nicea and Chalcedon The Conversion of an Empire and Theological Clarifications Opening Question Does Christianity operate best at the margins of society among the poor, outcasts, and rejected,

More information

The Ancient Church. Period Between the Councils. CH501 LESSON 09 of 24

The Ancient Church. Period Between the Councils. CH501 LESSON 09 of 24 The Ancient Church CH501 LESSON 09 of 24 Richard C. Gamble, ThD Experience: Professor of Systematic Theology, Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary At the conclusion of our last lecture, we were discussing

More information

Doctrine of the Trinity

Doctrine of the Trinity Doctrine of the Trinity ST506 LESSON 09 of 24 Peter Toon, DPhil Cliff College Oxford University King s College University of London Liverpool University This is the ninth lecture in the series on the doctrine

More information

HISTORY OF THE CHURCH 2 Lesson 2: WHO IS JESUS? Randy Broberg, Maranatha School of Ministry Fall 2010

HISTORY OF THE CHURCH 2 Lesson 2: WHO IS JESUS? Randy Broberg, Maranatha School of Ministry Fall 2010 HISTORY OF THE CHURCH 2 Lesson 2: WHO IS JESUS? Randy Broberg, Maranatha School of Ministry Fall 2010 Da Vinci Code Attacks Divinity of Christ The notion that Jesus was divine was first proposed by Emperor

More information

The Time that Santa Slapped a Unitarian

The Time that Santa Slapped a Unitarian The Time that Santa Slapped a Unitarian Readings: The Risk of Birth (Christmas, 1973) by Madeleine L Engle The Figure on the Hill by Jeffrey Harrison Flying Over West Texas at Christmas by Billy Collins

More information

HISTORY OF THE CHURCH - LESSON 1: BEGINNINGS OF APOSTASY (A.D )

HISTORY OF THE CHURCH - LESSON 1: BEGINNINGS OF APOSTASY (A.D ) HISTORY OF THE CHURCH - LESSON 1: BEGINNINGS OF APOSTASY (A.D. 30-325) INTRODUCTION: For the next three months, we will study the history of the church. Such a study has the following worthwhile goals:

More information

Arius: A Classical Alexandrian Theologian

Arius: A Classical Alexandrian Theologian Grand Valley State University ScholarWorks@GVSU Honors Projects Undergraduate Research and Creative Practice Fall 2010 Arius: A Classical Alexandrian Theologian Matthew J. Thran Grand Valley State University

More information

Nicaea Council of 325 A.D.

Nicaea Council of 325 A.D. Nicaea Council of 325 A.D. Many people today, even Catholics, do not know the Holy Roman Catholic Church was already in business several hundred years BEFORE Jesus, peace be upon him, was even born. It

More information

the first heresies of Christianity were not against Christ s Divinity but against his incarnation.

the first heresies of Christianity were not against Christ s Divinity but against his incarnation. Arianism & Jehovah s Witnesses Pastor Matt Richard www.pastormattrichard.com Paging through the passages in scripture, such as 1 st, 2nd, and 3 rd John, you notice that the first heresies of Christianity

More information

"Two Things You Never Let Them See How You Make Them: Hot Dogs and Creeds.

Two Things You Never Let Them See How You Make Them: Hot Dogs and Creeds. Who s Who in Church History Lesson Three Athanasius and the Council of Nicea When Politics Meets Religion The Church of the Fathers: The Basic Plot Between the years AD 100 and AD 500 the Christian church

More information

Trinitarian Controversy 1 (318 to 381)

Trinitarian Controversy 1 (318 to 381) Trinitarian Controversy 1 (318 to 381) by Sean Finnegan (www.christianmonotheism.com) The Creed: Beautiful or Dreadful? - set to beautiful music (Mozart s Credo) - said weekly in many Catholic, Orthodox,

More information

10Syllabus. COS 222 Theological Heritage: Early & Medieval Steve O Malley, Instructor May 21 25, 2018

10Syllabus. COS 222 Theological Heritage: Early & Medieval Steve O Malley, Instructor May 21 25, 2018 10Syllabus COS 222 Theological Heritage: Early & Medieval Steve O Malley, Instructor May 21 25, 2018 Course Description This course is an introduction to the development of the Christian theological heritage

More information

INSTRUCTED EUCHARIST WEEK 2-3: Liturgy of the Word, Parts 1 & 2

INSTRUCTED EUCHARIST WEEK 2-3: Liturgy of the Word, Parts 1 & 2 INSTRUCTED EUCHARIST WEEK 2-3: Liturgy of the Word, Parts 1 & 2 The Procession & Opening Hymn At the very beginning of the service, all the people who are participating in the service the acolytes, the

More information

The Problem of Human Language Arius and Arianism The Council of Nicea, 325 AD Athanasius Logic The Council of Constantinople, 381 AD

The Problem of Human Language Arius and Arianism The Council of Nicea, 325 AD Athanasius Logic The Council of Constantinople, 381 AD Mako A. Nagasawa The Problem of Human Language Arius and Arianism The Council of Nicea, 325 AD Athanasius Logic The Council of Constantinople, 381 AD God is Father, Jesus is Son Then: There was a time

More information

HOW WAS ORTHODOXY ESTABLISHED IN THE ECUMENICAL COUNCILS?

HOW WAS ORTHODOXY ESTABLISHED IN THE ECUMENICAL COUNCILS? CHRISTIAN RESEARCH INSTITUTE PO Box 8500, Charlotte, NC 28271 Feature Article: JAF4406 HOW WAS ORTHODOXY ESTABLISHED IN THE ECUMENICAL COUNCILS? by Bradley Nassif This article first appeared in the CHRISTIAN

More information

ENVISIONING THE TRINITY

ENVISIONING THE TRINITY 1 ENVISIONING THE TRINITY THE SHAPING OF A DOCTRINE No one has ever claimed that the doctrine of the Trinity is easy to understand. So we may find it helpful at the outset to keep in mind several important

More information

On the Son of God His Deity and Eternality. On The Son of God. Mark McGee

On the Son of God His Deity and Eternality. On The Son of God. Mark McGee ! 1 of 13! On The Son of God By Mark McGee ! 2 of 13! Teaching Notes are Bible studies we taught before GraceLife Ministries began publishing articles online in 1995. Some were presented as sermons, others

More information

Contend Earnestly for the Faith Part 9

Contend Earnestly for the Faith Part 9 Contend Earnestly for the Faith Part 9 I now feel compelled instead to write to encourage you to contend earnestly for the faith that was once for all entrusted to the saints. Jude 1:3b NET Thomas hart

More information

(Notes Week 3) Dionysius of Alexandria (cir AD, served as bishop) Cyprian of Carthage (cir AD, served as bishop)

(Notes Week 3) Dionysius of Alexandria (cir AD, served as bishop) Cyprian of Carthage (cir AD, served as bishop) (Notes Week 3) Further Developments in The Third Century Origen is important in the development of the canon because of his many written works with thousands of citations from the accepted biblical texts.

More information

THE TRINITARIAN CONTROVERSY IN THE FOURTH CENTURY

THE TRINITARIAN CONTROVERSY IN THE FOURTH CENTURY THE TRINITARIAN CONTROVERSY IN THE FOURTH CENTURY THE TRINITARIAN CONTROVERSY IN THE FOURTH CENTURY BY DAVID BERNARD The Trinitarian Controversy In the Fourth Century by David K. Bernard 1993, David K.

More information

The Early Church Fathers. Introduction

The Early Church Fathers. Introduction The Early Church Fathers Introduction The Early church fathers are also referred to as church fathers or fathers of the church. They were influential and early theologians, great bishops and eminent Christian

More information

We believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and unseen.

We believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and unseen. The following is part of the definition of the Nicene Creed from the Episcopal Dictionary. It s dry as a bone. Nicene Creed - It was first issued by the Council of Nicaea in 325, but in the form used today

More information

Thinking About. The Deity Of Jesus Christ. Mark McGee

Thinking About. The Deity Of Jesus Christ. Mark McGee 1 of 12 Thinking About The Deity Of By Mark McGee 2 of 12 I am deeply concerned about the errors in teaching about. I m not surprised by the errors because they are simply the same lies Satan has been

More information

1. Canon Law is. 2. Goal of Canon Law is. 3. Types of Canon Law

1. Canon Law is. 2. Goal of Canon Law is. 3. Types of Canon Law Canon Law Code Life Canon Law: A Code for Life Part 2 Canon Law 1. Canon Law is A group of laws established by the Apostles and their successors to govern the Church and the life of Believer 2. Goal of

More information

MEETING WITH THE COPTIC-ORTHODOX CHURCH

MEETING WITH THE COPTIC-ORTHODOX CHURCH MEETING WITH THE COPTIC-ORTHODOX CHURCH By Jos M. Strengholt Abraham Center Lectures February-March 2008 The Church of St John the Baptist Maadi 1 1 THE COPTIC-ORTHODOX CHURCH AND THE ECUMENICAL COUNCILS

More information

Ecclesiastical History Part 2 Ecumenical Council of Nicea Saint Mina Coptic Orthodox Church Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Ecclesiastical History Part 2 Ecumenical Council of Nicea Saint Mina Coptic Orthodox Church Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Ecclesiastical History Part 2 Ecumenical Council of Nicea Saint Mina Coptic Orthodox Church Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Who is Arius? Arius was a ex-priest from Libya who became a heretic. What was his heresy?

More information

Contend Earnestly for the Faith Part 10

Contend Earnestly for the Faith Part 10 Contend Earnestly for the Faith Part 10 I now feel compelled instead to write to encourage you to contend earnestly for the faith that was once for all entrusted to the saints. Jude 1:3b NET The Ecumenical

More information

Imperial Church: Controversies and Councils

Imperial Church: Controversies and Councils Imperial Church: Controversies and Councils The Church Clarifies Creeds About Christ Randy Broberg Grace Bible Church 2002 1 "Christ Jesus... being in very nature God, [was] made in human likeness and

More information

Highlights of Church History: Week 5 February 4, 2018 Wellford Baptist Church

Highlights of Church History: Week 5 February 4, 2018 Wellford Baptist Church Highlights of Church History: Week 5 February 4, 2018 Wellford Baptist Church Main sources for this class: Gonzalez, Justo L.. The Story of Christianity: Volume 1: The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation.

More information

Constantinople. Alexandria Nitria Scetis

Constantinople. Alexandria Nitria Scetis Carthage Rome Athens Constantinople Antioch Alexandria Nitria Scetis Jerusalem Anthony's cave Paul's cave Tabennisi Thebes Desert Monasticism Forms Solitary Paul of Thebes (c. 250) Anthony (269) Clusters

More information

THE CHURCH S MIDDLE-AGED SPREAD HAD NO LOVE HANDLES. Lesson 6: The Dark Ages When The Scriptures Are Ignored, The Light Goes Out

THE CHURCH S MIDDLE-AGED SPREAD HAD NO LOVE HANDLES. Lesson 6: The Dark Ages When The Scriptures Are Ignored, The Light Goes Out THE CHURCH S MIDDLE-AGED SPREAD HAD NO LOVE HANDLES Lesson 6: The Dark Ages When The Scriptures Are Ignored, The Light Goes Out The Dark Ages Refers to the lack of light and understanding of Scripture

More information

History of the Sabbath Part 2

History of the Sabbath Part 2 History of the Sabbath Part 2 Why Study Sabbath History? We will better appreciate what we have We will better understand our future The Reign of Constantine 313 AD, he was established as ruler of the

More information

Alexander and Arius in Alexandria. Controversy Erupts. homoousios. Council of Nicea 325. A Battle At Night Positions Develop

Alexander and Arius in Alexandria. Controversy Erupts. homoousios. Council of Nicea 325. A Battle At Night Positions Develop THE TRINITY The War for the Trinity (based on Behr, V.2, Pt. 1, ch. 3) Controversy Erupts Pre-325 Council of Nicea 325 A Battle At Night 325-337 Alexander and Arius in Alexandria homoousios Positions Develop

More information

Who Decided what books?

Who Decided what books? How many of you have ever heard about the conspiracy to hide some writings so that the Bible would reflect what the rich people wanted? If you have ever watched the Da Vinci code, the tomb of Jesus, or

More information

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by:

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by: A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by: www.cainaweb.org Early Church Growth & Threats (49-312 AD) Patristic Period & Great Councils Rise of Christendom High Medieval Church Renaissance

More information

Church History I Age of Unification

Church History I Age of Unification IV. CHRISTOLOGICAL CONTROVERSIES A. Arianism 1. Basic issue was the nature of the Godhead 2. Sometimes called the Trinitarian controversy 3. Lasted for several centuries 4. Named for Arius (250-336), a

More information

New Testament Canon: The Early Lists

New Testament Canon: The Early Lists 3.6 New Testament Canon: The Early Lists By the end of the second century, lists began to appear specifying which Christian writings were to be considered Scripture by churches in line with the apostolic

More information

Well, it is time to move to the main theme of today s message: looking at two foundational creeds of the ancient church.

Well, it is time to move to the main theme of today s message: looking at two foundational creeds of the ancient church. Osaka International Church June 24 th, 2018 Bradford Houdyshel Title: The Nicene Creed: Foundational Statement on the Divinity of Christ and on the Holy Trinity Key verse: Colossians 1:15-20 The Son is

More information

The Third Council Of Constantinople A.D. Summary 117 years after the Second Council of Constantinople, the Emperor Constantine IV decided

The Third Council Of Constantinople A.D. Summary 117 years after the Second Council of Constantinople, the Emperor Constantine IV decided The Third Council Of Constantinople - 680-681 A.D. Summary 117 years after the Second Council of Constantinople, the Emperor Constantine IV decided it was time to call another General Council, especially

More information

The Council of Nicea

The Council of Nicea The Council of Nicea Called in the year 325 AD by the Roman Emperor Constantine. 318 Bishops attended. Coptic Patriarch Alexandros, who was joined by Deacon Athanasius. Four major orders of business 1)

More information

writings he made but sparing use of it. He was in fact less concerned with the formula than with the content.

writings he made but sparing use of it. He was in fact less concerned with the formula than with the content. SAINT ATHANASIUS Saint Athanasius (293-373 AD), bishop of Alexandria, and one of the most illustrious defenders of the Christian faith, was born probably at Alexandria in the year 293. Of his family and

More information

This article is also available in Spanish.

This article is also available in Spanish. The Council of Nicea Introduction This article is also available in Spanish. The doctrine of the Trinity is central to the uniqueness of Christianity. It holds that the Bible teaches that God eternally

More information

NESTORIAN THEOLOGY. 1) Theological Background

NESTORIAN THEOLOGY. 1) Theological Background 1) Theological Background NESTORIAN THEOLOGY a) The Christological question which formed the background to the Nestorian controversy: How are divinity and humanity joined together and related to each other

More information

History of Christianity

History of Christianity History of Christianity Christian history begins with Jesus of Nazareth, a Jew who was born in a small corner of the Roman Empire. Little is known of his early life, but around the age of 30, Jesus was

More information

Who do you say I am? The soteriological theology of St Athanasius

Who do you say I am? The soteriological theology of St Athanasius Who do you say I am? The soteriological theology of St Athanasius By Fr. John Athanasiou Introduction Humans are both rational and relational creatures who are endowed with intelligence and freewill. In

More information

A Brief Summary of the Faith by St. Maximus

A Brief Summary of the Faith by St. Maximus A Brief Summary of the Faith by St. Maximus Edited and Commentary by Deacon Mark Koscinski CPA D.Litt. St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church Adult Education Series 1 St Maximus the Confessor lived from c.

More information

Third-Century Tensions between philosophy and theology

Third-Century Tensions between philosophy and theology Third-Century Tensions between philosophy and theology Clement of Alexandria True theology does not contradict or cancel out Greek philosophy but fulfills it. (i.e. Can Christian theology work with science,

More information

Christianity: Growth of Christianity Notes**

Christianity: Growth of Christianity Notes** Name Period Date Christianity: Growth of Christianity Notes** Christianity begins when Jesus of Nazareth dies Twelve Apostles see him as the Messiah Twelve Apostles begin to spreads Jesus teachings Peter

More information

Running head: NICENE CHRISTIANITY 1

Running head: NICENE CHRISTIANITY 1 Running head: NICENE CHRISTIANITY 1 Nicene Christianity Brandon Vera BIBL 111-02 February 5, 2014 Prof. Robert Hill NICENE CHRISTIANITY 2 Nicene Christianity To deem that the ecumenical councils were merely

More information

The Ancient Church. The Cappadocian Fathers. CH501 LESSON 11 of 24

The Ancient Church. The Cappadocian Fathers. CH501 LESSON 11 of 24 The Ancient Church CH501 LESSON 11 of 24 Richard C. Gamble, ThD Experience: Professor of Systematic Theology, Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary In our last lecture, we began an analysis of the

More information

Epochs of Early Church History

Epochs of Early Church History Epochs of Early Church History I. Constantine A. Early Life 1. Constantine s birth was ca. 273, and he died in 337. 2. Constantine s father was Constantius I Chlorus, who, under Diocletian (245-313; emperor,

More information

The Evolution of God

The Evolution of God The Evolution of God 3. Fragments of the Apostolic Fathers By Tim Warner Copyright www.4windsfellowships.net T he earliest Christian writers whose works have survived, those known to have direct connections

More information

NAME DATE CLASS. Black Sea. Constantinople ASIA MINOR GREECE. Tarsus. Aegean Sea. Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem. Alexandria JUDAEA EGYPT

NAME DATE CLASS. Black Sea. Constantinople ASIA MINOR GREECE. Tarsus. Aegean Sea. Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem. Alexandria JUDAEA EGYPT Lesson 1 Early Christianity ESSENTIAL QUESTION What are the characteristics of a leader? GUIDING QUESTIONS 1. How did the Jews respond to Roman rule? 2. Why were the life and death of Jesus of Nazareth

More information

The Great East/West Split

The Great East/West Split The Great East/West Split By the 10 th century eastern churches increasingly saw the bishop of Rome as illegitimately setting himself as pope/father over all other bishops. The Eastern church believed

More information

Ecumenical Councils The First Ecumenical Council The Second Ecumenical Council The Third Ecumenical Council

Ecumenical Councils The First Ecumenical Council The Second Ecumenical Council The Third Ecumenical Council The First Ecumenical Council The Arian controversy arose during fourth century. Arius, an Alexandrian priest, taught that the Divine Logos, the Word of God Who became man - Jesus Christ - is not the divine

More information

Sts. Peter & Paul Boulder

Sts. Peter & Paul Boulder Sts. Peter & Paul Boulder Weekly Bulletin Week of May 20th, 2018 Contact Info Sts. Peter & Paul Greek Orthodox Church 5640 Jay Rd. Boulder, CO 80301 Office: 303-581-1434 www.stspeterandpaulboulder.org

More information

NAME DATE CLASS. Black Sea. Constantinople ASIA MINOR GREECE Tarsus Sicily. Antioch Aegean Sea. Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem. Alexandria JUDAEA EGYPT

NAME DATE CLASS. Black Sea. Constantinople ASIA MINOR GREECE Tarsus Sicily. Antioch Aegean Sea. Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem. Alexandria JUDAEA EGYPT Lesson 1 Early Christianity ESSENTIAL QUESTION What are the characteristics of a leader? GUIDING QUESTIONS 1. How did the Jews respond to Roman rule? 2. Why were the life and death of Jesus of Nazareth

More information

CONSTANTINE THE GREAT (280 A.D. 337 A.D.)

CONSTANTINE THE GREAT (280 A.D. 337 A.D.) CONSTANTINE THE GREAT (280 A.D. 337 A.D.) CONSTANTINE The first Roman emperor to profess Christianity. He not only initiated the evolution of the empire into a Christian state but also provided the impulse

More information

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by:

A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by: A Pilgrim People The Story of Our Church Presented by: www.cainaweb.org Early Church Growth & Threats Patristic Period & Great Councils Rise of Christendom High Medieval Church Renaissance to Reformation

More information

St. Severus: Life and Christology

St. Severus: Life and Christology St. Severus: Life and Christology Overview Biography Christology Why is it so important? Some Theological Questions Whom are we Addressing in our Prayers? More Theological Questions Heresies Chalcedon

More information

Starter. Day 2: Nov. 29 or 30. What has been the impact of Christianity on the history of the world?

Starter. Day 2: Nov. 29 or 30. What has been the impact of Christianity on the history of the world? Starter Day 2: Nov. 29 or 30 What has been the impact of Christianity on the history of the world? THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE Essential Question: 1. What is the significance of the Byzantine Empire? What happened

More information

We Believe: The Creeds and the Soul The Rev. Tom Pumphrey, 10/24/10 Part One: We Believe: Origins and functions

We Believe: The Creeds and the Soul The Rev. Tom Pumphrey, 10/24/10 Part One: We Believe: Origins and functions We Believe: The Creeds and the Soul The Rev. Tom Pumphrey, 10/24/10 Part One: We Believe: Origins and functions The Apostles and Nicene Creeds are important elements in our regular worship of God. We stand

More information

FIRST COUNCIL OF EPHESUS

FIRST COUNCIL OF EPHESUS FIRST COUNCIL OF EPHESUS Spring 431 A. T. Jones, Ecclesiastical Empire, Chapter 9!1 !2 !3 BACKGROUND Roman Emperor Theodosius (379 395) made his empire Roman Catholic by decree and also by harsh repression,

More information

Three Cappadocians. by Joel Hemphill. The following is a statement of fact from history that cannot be refuted. In the year 350 A.D.

Three Cappadocians. by Joel Hemphill. The following is a statement of fact from history that cannot be refuted. In the year 350 A.D. Three Cappadocians by Joel Hemphill The following is a statement of fact from history that cannot be refuted. In the year 350 A.D., there was no Christian doctrine of the Trinity as later taught, anywhere

More information

COURSE PLAN SAINT ATHANASIUS

COURSE PLAN SAINT ATHANASIUS COURSE PLAN SAINT ATHANASIUS COURSE PLAN METHODOLOGY: Saint Athanasius by F.A. Forbes is represented by the abbreviation SA. Each weekly assignment is summarized in the first line of the week s daily course

More information

The Deity and Humanity of Jesus Christ

The Deity and Humanity of Jesus Christ The Deity and Humanity of Jesus Christ When Did Christians First Believe That Jesus Was Divine? DVC At Nicea Constantine Changed Jesus From Human to Divine At this gathering, Teabing said, many aspects

More information

And that is what we celebrate today on this feast of the Most Holy Trinity, God who though one is Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

And that is what we celebrate today on this feast of the Most Holy Trinity, God who though one is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Holy Trinity.09 Did you read in the paper or see on the television that President Obama gave a speech in Cairo, Egypt, last Thursday in which he said that as long as our relationship is defined by our

More information

Christianity W O R L D R E L I G I O N S

Christianity W O R L D R E L I G I O N S Christianity W O R L D R E L I G I O N S 3 1 0 6 Origins P A G E S 2 6 4-269 Christianity The world s most successful religion Over 2 billion people call themselves Christians (1/3 of the planet) Began

More information

For the Good of the Empire: The Basis of Decisional Thought at The Council of Niceae

For the Good of the Empire: The Basis of Decisional Thought at The Council of Niceae Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Senior Theses and Projects Student Works 4-1-2013 For the Good of the Empire: The Basis of Decisional Thought at The Council of Niceae Ian Waterhouse-Terrell

More information

The First Marian Dogma: Mother of God. Issue: What is the Church s teaching concerning Mary s divine maternity?

The First Marian Dogma: Mother of God. Issue: What is the Church s teaching concerning Mary s divine maternity? The First Marian Dogma: Mother of God ST. PETER CATHOLIC CHURCH + FAITH FACT + DECEMBER 2012 The incarnation is indeed a profound mystery as we celebrate Christmas, we must ponder this great mystery of

More information

The Christ Wars. A Simple Timeline of Heresies about Jesus

The Christ Wars. A Simple Timeline of Heresies about Jesus The Christ Wars A Simple Timeline of Heresies about Jesus 30 A.D. False Christ 54 And when he was come into his own country, he taught them in their synagogue, insomuch that they were astonished, and said,

More information

2. Early Calls for Reform

2. Early Calls for Reform 2. Early Calls for Reform By the 1300s, the Church was beginning to lose some of its moral and religious standing. Many Catholics, including clergy, criticized the corruption and abuses in the Church.

More information

The Trinity The Pontifical College Josephinum Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies Deacon John Fulton, PhD

The Trinity The Pontifical College Josephinum Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies Deacon John Fulton, PhD Introduction The Trinity The Pontifical College Josephinum Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies Deacon John Fulton, PhD Belief in the Triune God Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is the essence of Christian belief.

More information

The First Church Schism

The First Church Schism The First Church Schism Outline Coptic Church Hierarchy Ecumenical Councils 2 nd Council of Ephesus Council of Chalcedon First Schism Oriental Orthodox Churches Coptic Church Hierarchy Local Council (Holy

More information

Now that the fences were established on the Trinity, the question causing controversy was how could divinity and humanity be united in one man?

Now that the fences were established on the Trinity, the question causing controversy was how could divinity and humanity be united in one man? Now that the fences were established on the Trinity, the question causing controversy was how could divinity and humanity be united in one man? Everyone agreed that Jesus was God incarnate, but they disagreed

More information

Table of Contents. Church History. Page 1: Church History...1. Page 2: Church History...2. Page 3: Church History...3. Page 4: Church History...

Table of Contents. Church History. Page 1: Church History...1. Page 2: Church History...2. Page 3: Church History...3. Page 4: Church History... Church History Church History Table of Contents Page 1: Church History...1 Page 2: Church History...2 Page 3: Church History...3 Page 4: Church History...4 Page 5: Church History...5 Page 6: Church History...6

More information

Christianity. The Basics I

Christianity. The Basics I Christianity The Basics I Goals Basic Background Story of John the Baptist Jewish Society Story of Jesus The Birth and Spread of Christianity Christianity Splits Background 2 billion followers 1 billion

More information

Chapter 11 Saints in our History The First 1000 Years

Chapter 11 Saints in our History The First 1000 Years Introduction to Chapter 11: Chapter 11 Saints in our History The First 1000 Years Almost 2000 years have elapsed since the founding of our Church at Pentecost. We ve seen the Church grow and spread throughout

More information

Renew the Study of Our Lutheran Confessions:*

Renew the Study of Our Lutheran Confessions:* THEOLOGICAL MONTHLY. VOL. VI. AUGUS'l', 1926. No.8. Renew the Study of Our Lutheran Confessions:* In the Church the Wor

More information

A Lawyer Rebuts The Da Vinci Code Part iii. By Randall K Broberg, Esq.

A Lawyer Rebuts The Da Vinci Code Part iii. By Randall K Broberg, Esq. A Lawyer Rebuts The Da Vinci Code Part iii By Randall K Broberg, Esq. Da Vinci Code Attacks On & Divinity of Jesus Jesus preached the kingdom of God, not himself. The historical Jesus and the Jesus of

More information

11/20 SBC MEN s Dy (Culmination of 2011 Season) 11/27 CONCLUSION (What Did/Do We Learn?!) KEY SCRIPTURES: 09/18 => Ephesians 5:25 5: /25 => A

11/20 SBC MEN s Dy (Culmination of 2011 Season) 11/27 CONCLUSION (What Did/Do We Learn?!) KEY SCRIPTURES: 09/18 => Ephesians 5:25 5: /25 => A TODAY S SCRIPTURE FOCUS: Romans 5:12-2121 THE BRIDE & BODY OF CHRIST Part IV 09/18 Introduction 09/25 Catholicism (Catholic & Orthodox Churches) 10/02 Protestantism (Lutheran Church) 10/09 Reformed (Presbyterian

More information

Our English Bible. Part 3 God s Faithful Scribe

Our English Bible. Part 3 God s Faithful Scribe Our English Bible Part 3 God s Faithful Scribe 02/15/14 Our English Bible - Part 3 2 The Age of Smyrna Revelation 2:8-11 02/15/14 Our English Bible - Part 3 3 Lucian of Antioch (c.240-312 A.D.) 02/15/14

More information

Sunday of the Holy Fathers

Sunday of the Holy Fathers Sunday of the Holy Fathers INTRODUCTION: This is the Sunday of the Holy Fathers. Today we commemorate the Holy Bishops who gathered together in Nicea (in present day Turkey) in 325 A.D. at the First Ecumenical

More information

Creeds and Heretics The Church Defines and Disciplines Randy Broberg

Creeds and Heretics The Church Defines and Disciplines Randy Broberg Creeds and Heretics The Church Defines and Disciplines Randy Broberg Early Theology More Sophisticated Than We Realize Chap 8: "He Himself took on Him the burden of our iniquities, He gave His own Son

More information

They met in a very pretty spot on the shores of a lake in Bythinia, what we would call Turkey. I don t know what hotel they were in

They met in a very pretty spot on the shores of a lake in Bythinia, what we would call Turkey. I don t know what hotel they were in This year, June the 19th is a Tuesday. You might say it ll be like any other Tuesday or, by the end of the talk, you may not. I don t if you have any exciting plans for the 19th where you ll be, what you

More information

How were the sixty-six books chosen to be in the Bible? Why these sixty-six? Why not a few more (or a few less)? Why these books and not others?

How were the sixty-six books chosen to be in the Bible? Why these sixty-six? Why not a few more (or a few less)? Why these books and not others? Week 4 Bible Canon Adapted from an article written by: Hal Seed, Lead Pastor, New Song Community Church http://www.biblestudytools.com/bible-study/topical-studies/who-decided-what-went-into-thebible.html

More information

Doctrine of the Trinity

Doctrine of the Trinity Doctrine of the Trinity ST506 LESSON 10 of 24 Peter Toon, DPhil Cliff College Oxford University King s College University of London Liverpool University I begin with a prayer prayed in my own church, the

More information