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Age of Catholic Christianity II 70-312 AD. Persecution. The Spread of Christianity. God Burning Conviction Need in the hearts of people Love for one another Persecution. Martyrdom. The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church -Tertullian. Martyr - Witness.
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Age of Catholic Christianity II 70-312 AD Persecution
The Spread of Christianity • God • Burning Conviction • Need in the hearts of people • Love for one another • Persecution
Martyrdom The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church -Tertullian Martyr - Witness
Reasons for Christian Persecution • Jewish Fears • Loss of membership in Synagogue • Loss of privileged status with Rome • Zealots disliked lack of nationalism
Reasons for Christian Persecution • Roman Politics • Christians believed in an incoming kingdom with Christ, not the emperor, as its head • Union of state and religion excluded Christians from political customs
Reasons for Christian Persecution • Social Reasons • Refusal to engage in sporting/theatrical events • Condemnation of the gladiatorial games • Christianity gave status to slaves and women
Reasons for Christian Persecution • Economic Reasons • Loss of profit for idol makers/pagan temples • Christians were scapegoats
Reasons for Christian Persecution • Religious Reasons • Christianity is Monotheist and exclusive • Holding of secret “Love Feasts” • Christians were strange atheists • Refusal to worship the Emperor
The Early Persecutions64-100 ADNero 64-68 AD • Nero liked to play dress-up, the lyre, sing, act, and get crazy • Nero fiddled while Rome burned • Burning of Rome • Christian torches • Peter and Paul executed
The Early Persecutions64-100 ADDestruction of the Temple • Many signs, portents, and prophecies occurred. • A group of hyper-zealous Jews rebelled • The Roman army put down the rebellion • Despite disruptions, Titus lead the assault on Jerusalem, was victorious and the temple was burned to the ground. • The loss of Jerusalem separated Christian from Jew and forced Christianity to de-emphasize Jerusalem and look elsewhere for leadership
The Early Persecutions64-100 ADDomitian 81-96 • Executed/exiled Christians as atheists including his family members • Exalted himself as “Lord and God” • Exiled John • Emphasized Emperor worship • Extremely paranoid and was murdered according to astrological prophecy
Imperial Policy in the early 2nd Century • Shown and evidenced by Pliny the Younger • Don’t seek out Christians • Limited mob violence • Allowed a respite and growth in Christian numbers
Persecution WorsensMarcus Aurelius 161-180 AD • Stoic Philosopher • Christians became scapegoats for all natural disasters or disease • Riots supported • Many Christians executed either by beheading or in the games • Justin Martyr was executed
Official Persecution Decius Trajan 249-251 AD • Desired to return to that “old time religion” • Published an edict requiring a return to paganism • First empire-wide persecution • Desired conversion not persecution
Official PersecutionDiocletian 284-305 • 260-303 Christians had a respite • Diocletian, a previously neutral emperor, writes 3 edicts calling for persecution • 303 Complete and systematic persecution of Christianity, the worst yet experienced • Persecution targeted the church infrastructure: buildings, bishops, and books
Official PersecutionGalerius • Prime force behind Diocletian persecutions • Ruled half of the Empire along with his nephew Maximin Daza, both under Diocletian • Issued an edict requiring all men women and children to sacrifice to the gods, and all food in the markets to be sprinkled with sacrificial wine. • Edict forced Christians to convert, die, or compromise
Positive Effects of Persecution • “Blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church” – Tertullian • Purification of the church • Spreading of the gospel • Canonization of scripture • Provided Apologia for the faith
Negative Effects of Persecution • People got dead • The problem of the lapsed • Creation of the Cult of the Martyrs • Lack of ability to leave a literary legacy