88
Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies

Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Chapter 4Church Fathers and Heresies

Page 2: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

PART I

Early Heresies

Page 3: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Heresy

• “A species of unbelief, belonging to those who profess the Christian faith, but corrupt its dogmas”. (St. Thomas Aquinas)

Page 4: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Heresies…

• Deny or alter some part or parts of the Deposit of Faith

Page 5: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Material Heresy

• Results from a mistake

• Misjudgment, ignorance of the truth, etc.

• Needs immediate correction

Page 6: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Formal Heresy

• Willingly choosing to keep doctrines that are contradictorily to those of the Church

• Keeping doctrines that have been condemned as being false

Page 7: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Material Heresy Examples

• Jesus was a sinner• Mary was not a Virgin • God created Christ

Page 8: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Formal Heresy Examples

• Rejection of the Eucharist • Teaching that Jesus didn’t

overcome death by way of the Resurrection

• Rejecting the Church’s teaching on Sunday Obligation

Page 9: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Gnosticism

• Secret knowledge• Demiurge (creator

god) • Rejected MOST of

the NT• “The Kingdom of

God is within you.” (Gospel of Thomas)

Page 10: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Gnosticism: View of Jesus

• Jesus was merely a “messenger”

• Jesus entrusted one disciple with secret teachings

• Denied or limited the real humanity of Christ

• Jesus not born: “appeared”

Page 11: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Gnosticism’s Ethics

• Rejected ethical teachings of the Church

• Body = nature of evil: 1. self mutilation of the body

2. No possible way good soul can be damaged by actions of the body

Page 12: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Ridiculed by Church Fathers

• “My God made heaven and earth, and you cannot point to a measly vegetable yours has produced over all these centuries!”

Tertullian

Page 13: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Gnosticism: The Final Overview

• What: Gnosticism

• Who: Simon Magnus

• Where: Judea/ Roman Empire

• When: Birth of Christianity – Present day

• Central Belief: Salvation may be achieved through knowledge

• View of Christ: Christ was NOT human

Page 14: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Marcionism (144-400s)

• Founded by Marcion • Demiurge (god of the

OT/Jealous god) • Jesus sent to destroy the

OT god/Demiurge

Page 15: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Marcion: Founder of Marcionism

• Father was a Bishop • Was a wealthy shipbuilder• Survived Empire’s “put down”

of Jewish uprising• Excommunicated as a heretic

Page 16: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Marcionism

• Jesus did not have a true human body/was not from God

• Rejected the OT• Christian life must

be freed from material reality

Page 17: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Marcionism Differed from Gnosticism

• Did not claim possession of secret knowledge

• No unique scripture • No divine beings

(pleroma)

Page 18: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Church’s Rejection of Marcionism

• Rejected Monotheism

• Rejected creation was good

• Rejected the true humanity of Jesus (death on Cross was payment to the creator god)

Page 19: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Marcionism: the Final Overview

• What: Marcionism

• Who: Marcion

• When : 144-400s AD

• Where: Rome

• Central Belief: God of Jesus Christ sent to destroy the Demiurge

• View of Christ: Jesus was NOT truly human

Page 20: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Manichaeism (250s –1000s)

• Elaborate brand of Gnosticism

• Founded by Mani

• Goal was to share a secret knowledge that led to liberation

Page 21: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Mani

• Persian • Condemned to death • Viewed self as a

spiritual leader (Buddha, Jesus)

• Provided path to true freedom

Page 22: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Manichaeists Believed …

• Satan had stolen light particles from the brains of men/women

• Goal was to liberate humanity from Satan

• In living an ascetic life

• Jesus was/is NOT Divine

Page 23: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Manichaeism: The Final Overview

• What: Manichaeism

• Who: Mani

• When: 250s-1000s

• Where: Persia/India (Roman Empire)

• Central Belief: Man can be liberated from Satan through a secret knowledge

• View of Christ: Jesus was NOT Divine (only a human spiritual leader)

Page 24: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Montanism (156-200)• Were they an early women’s rights group? • A form of monasticism? • A strange group waiting for the end of the

world? • … a little bit of all of these.

Page 25: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Montanus

• Founder of Montanism• Began movement by

preaching • Originally a pagan priest • Excommunicated by the

Church (Turkey)• Had two female prophets

with him• Believed that the “end”

was at hand

Page 26: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Montanism

• TIME IS DIVIDED INTO THREE ERAS

• Age of the Father • Age of the Son • Age of the Holy Spirit

(final age)

Page 27: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Montanism

• New Heavenly movement would begin in Pepuza

• Canon of Scripture should NOT be closed

• “Charismatic” • Believed Church was

too soft on sinners

Page 28: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Montanism: The Final Overview

• What: Montanism

• Who: Montanus

• Where: Turkey/Rome/ Pepuza

• When: 156-200s

• Central Belief: A New heavenly kingdom would be revealed by the power of the Holy Spirit in Pepuza (the end was near)

• View of Jesus Christ: Jesus was Divine and human

Page 29: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Docetism (30s-100s)

• Branch of Gnosticism • “to appear” • Jesus’ humanity was merely an appearance

Page 30: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Docetism• Jesus was did not suffer the pain of the

Crucifixion and death• Preached that someone else switched

places with Christ before the Crucifixion• Christ escaped from it.

Page 31: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Docetism: The final overview

• What: Docetism

• Who: ? (unknown)

• When: 305 -1000s

• Where: Roman Empire

• Central Belief: Christ did NOT suffer the Crucifixion; Gnostic

• View of Jesus Christ: Christ was not fully human

Page 32: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

PART II

The Ecumenical Councils

Page 33: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Ecumenical Councils

• There has been 21 ecumenical councils

• All the Bishops of the world (under the Pope) meet to discuss issues facing the Church.

Page 34: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Types of Councils

• Diocesan (Synod)• Provincial • Plenary • Echumenical

Page 35: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Diocesan Council

• Meeting of the Bishops, laymen/laywomen, and representatives of the Clergy meet and discuss matters of the diocese.

Page 36: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Provincial Council • Meeting of the Archbishop with his suffragan bishops

Page 37: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Plenary Council

• Meeting of all Bishops within a single nation

Page 38: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Ecumenical • Meeting between the Bishops

and the Pope (their leader)

Page 39: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

PART III

Church Fathers

Page 40: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Characteristics of the Church Fathers

• Orthodoxy in doctrine• Holiness• Notoriety• Antiquity

• 320-462 ad

Page 41: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Patristics • The writings of the Church Fathers• Patrology – study of the Church Fathers

Page 42: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Doctor of the Church

• Title only given by the Pope to those whose development of theology is extraordinary

• St. Teresa of Avila • St. Catherine of Sienna • St. Therese of Lisieux • St. Hildegard of Bingen

Page 43: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Ambrose of Milan

• Governor of Milan • Anointed Bishop (was

only a Catechumen) • Defended the

independence of the Church from the State

• Did not get along with Emperor(s) because of high moral standards

Page 44: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Jerome • Translated the Hebrew Bible into Latin• Latin Vulgate - uniform Scripture for the

West • Most accurate translation of the Bible

Page 45: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. John ChrysostomHe who speaks GoldEN words

• Patriarch of Constantinople

• Combined the Biblical Meaning with practical application/ captured the deep spiritual meaning

• On the Priesthood: the morality of the priests.

Page 46: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. John Chrysostomthe Golden Mouthed

• Called for a moral reform among the Emperors and Bishops.

• He was twice banished by the Empress, but quickly returned from exile.

• In 407, he was forced into a Death March.

Page 47: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

PART IV

Heresies of the Fourth and Fifth Centuries

Page 48: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

The “Golden Age” of Church fathers

• Lack of persecution • Christians experienced a

renewed freedom

Page 49: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Alexandrian School

• Gave special status to the Divinity of Christ

Page 50: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Antiochene

• Antioch - Jesus’ followers were first called Christian.

• Focused more on literal and historical meanings of Scriptures.

Page 51: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Arianism • Jesus is neither God nor equal to the Father

Page 52: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Arianism

• Reduced the status of Jesus to being a creature of the Father

• Jesus, however, was above every other creature in dignity and perfection.

• Denied the Church’s teaching that the logos was coeternal with God.

Page 53: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Arians Instead Believed …

• That there “was when He was not”

• God created “The Word”

Page 54: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Arianism: The Final Overview• What: Arianism

• Who: Arius

• When: Fourth Century

• Where: Roman Empire/ Constantinople

• Central Belief: Jesus was not Divine, but anointed by God to the position of “Supreme ‘Human’ Being”

• View of Christ: Jesus was not Divine; was a Supreme “Human” Being

Page 55: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. helena d. 330 A.D.

• Mother of Constantine

• Archaeologist • True Cross• Manager • Stairs (Scala Santa) • Favored wide

spread of Christianity

• Influenced son

Page 56: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Constantine the Great 272 A.D. – 337 A.D.

• Conversion (Cross/battle) • Edict of Milan 313 A.D. • Empowered Christianity • Sincere? • First Christian Roman

Emperor • Saint in Orthodox Church

Page 57: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

The Council of Nicaea (325 AD)

• Convened by Constantine the Great

Primarily Addressed: • Arianism• Readmission of the

lapsed • Election of Bishops • Role of the office of the

Bishops

Page 58: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

The Council of Nicaea (325 AD)

• Failed to combat Arianism through Scripture alone

• Developed a Creed to combat Arianism

Page 59: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

What Developed

• Homoousians : identical (Orthodox)

• Homoiousians : similar(Arian)

Page 60: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

After the Death of Constantine

“The entire world woke from a deep slumber and discovered that it had

become Arian.” ~ St. Jerome

Page 61: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

The Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed

• Second Ecumenical Council of Constantinople (381).

Page 62: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Differences Between the NC and N Creed

• 2nd section = the Son. • 3rd section = the Holy

Spirit• last section = Church,

Baptism, forgiveness of sins, and the Resurrection.

• “from the substance of the Father” is absent in the later Creed.

Page 63: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Apollinarianism (360-381)

• Apollinaris refused to accept the Church’s Authority

Page 64: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Apollinarianism (360-381)

• Christ had a human body

• Denied that Christ had a human mind and will

• Christ did not live a COMPLETE human life as a man

• Word of God replaced rational soul

Page 65: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

ApollinarianismThe final Overview

• What: Apollinarianism

• Who: Apollinaris

• When: 360-381

• Where: Syria (Eastern Roman Empire)

• Central Belief: Denied existence of human mind and will in Christ

• View of Christ: Christ did not live a complete human life

Page 66: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Nestorianism (351-451)

• Christ was the unity of a Divine person and a full human person.

• Mary = Christotokos “the bearer of Christ”

Page 67: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Nestorianism: the final Overview

• What: Nestorianism

• Who: Nestorius

• When: 351 – 451

• Where: Antiochene

• Central Belief: Christ human and divine, but not fully human/divine

• View of Christ: Ditto.

Page 68: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Monophysitism (400s-600s)

• Reaction to Nestorianism

• Christ = ONE nature (Divine)

Page 69: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Monophysitism: The Final Overview

• What: Monophysitism

• When: 400s – 600s

• Where: Alexandrian School

• Who: ? Unknown

• Central Belief: Christ did not have two natures – only Divine nature existed

• View of Christ: Human nature absorbed by the Divine nature

Page 70: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Monothelitism

• Response to Monophysitism

• Emperor Heraclius/Patriarch Sergius

• Pope Honorius: “one will”

Page 71: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Monothelitism: The Final Overview

• What: Monothelitism

• Who: Emperor Heraclius

• When: 600s

• Where: Constantinople/ Eastern Roman Empire

• Central Belief: Christ had only One will. But two natures

• View of Christ: Ditto.

Page 72: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

 

Donastism (311-411)Sacramental Heresy

• Sacraments are invalid: 1. Priest/Bishop formally rejected the Faith2. Priest/Bishop in state of sin

Page 73: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Donastism

• Christ is the only true administrator of the Sacraments(Augustine)

Page 74: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Donastism: The Final Overview

• What: Donastism

• Who: ? (those who rejected the ordination of Bishop Caecillan )

• Where: Carthage (Roman Empire)

• When: (311-411)

• Central Belief: Sacraments are invalid if done by a lapsed priest or Bishop

• View of Christ: Jesus was human and Divine (Orthodox)

Page 75: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Pelagianism (late 300s-431):Dogmatic Heresy

• Man can be redeemed and sanctified without grace

• No Original Sin • Sacraments are

unnecessary

Page 76: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Pelagianism: The final Overview

• What: Pelagianism

• Who: Pelagius

• Where: Roman Empire

• When: 300s - 431

• Central Belief: Sacraments are unnecessary; Graces can be achieved by own human efforts

• View of Christ: Orthodox

Page 77: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Hilary • Latin Church Father • Athanasius of the

West • Fought Arianism • Heretics: followers of

Christianity who were trying to explain the same ideas, but in different terms

Page 78: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

THE THREE CAPPADOCIANS

Page 79: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Basil the Great • Community life is essential • Teachings = Greek Church legislation • Father of Eastern Monasticism • Fought Arianism • “if people only took what they needed,

there would be no rich or poor.”

Page 80: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Basil the Great

• Worked for clerical rights

• Saw that Priests were properly trained

• Provided for the spiritual and material needs of the laity

• Built a social system of hospitals and social service institutions

• Divine Liturgy

Page 81: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Gregory of Nazianzus

• Five Theological Orations = Third person of the Trinity

• Against Arianism • “Gregory Bishop”

Page 82: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Gregory of Nyssa

• Became monk after wife died • On Virginity• Attacked Arianism/ “Theotokos”

Page 83: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Pope St. Leo the Great d. 461

• Consolidated Papal Power (NT)

• Gained Papal Jurisdiction (West)

• “First Pope”(modern)

Page 84: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Augustine of Hippo

• Mother = Christian

• Father = pagan • Studied Law • Student of

rhetoric (Cicero) • Manichaeists

Page 85: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Augustine of Hippo

Found Difficult: - The Bible - Origin of

Evil

Left Manichaeism after questions went unanswered

Page 86: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Augustine of Hippo

• Youth –rebel – Stole pears for fun – Made stories up about women to gain

acceptance – Had an illegitimate child

• Great Conversion experience– “Tolle et lege”

• Castrated self –to win over flesh

Page 87: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

St. Augustine

“My heart will not rest until it rests in You.”

Page 88: Chapter 4 Church Fathers and Heresies. PART I Early Heresies

Augustine’s Most Important Works

• City of God • Confessions