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Ch 500 Lecture 2 Historical Developments 100-312. Dr. Ann T. Orlando. Outline for Lecture. Roman Imperial History 1-300 AD Judaism in this period How Christianity spread; early centers of Christianity Christian Responses to Persecutions Background to Readings
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Ch 500 Lecture 2Historical Developments 100-312 Dr. Ann T. Orlando Lecture 2
Outline for Lecture • Roman Imperial History 1-300 AD • Judaism in this period • How Christianity spread; early centers of Christianity • Christian Responses to Persecutions • Background to Readings • Pagan authors: Tacitus, Pliny the Younger, Trajan • Christian authors: Paul, Ignatius of Antioch, Justin Martyr Lecture 2
First Century Roman Emperors • Julio-Claudian Emperors (31 BC to 68 AD) • Starts with Augustus, ends with Nero’s suicide • Consolidation of Empire won by Augustus • Succession hereditary; intra-family rivalries, often deadly • After Augustus, increasingly demonic emperors; Nero worst of all • Flavian Emperors (Vespasian and his sons Titus and Domitian) • Destruction of Jerusalem Temple, 70 • Vespasian built the Coliseum • Domitian was particularly ruthless against enemies, real and imagined • NB Nero and Domitian were the only emperors that the Senate of Rome did NOT declare gods Lecture 2
Second CenturyRoman Emperors • The Five ‘Good’ Emperors: The Antonines (98-180) • Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, Marcus Aurelius • Good because the Empire prospered with excellent government • Until Marcus Aurelius, each Emperor adopted a suitable successor rather than relying on a son • But not so good for Christians; continued practice of sporadic persecution • Also not so good for Judaism; Trajan and Hadrian both pursued wars against Jews Lecture 2
Third Century: Period of Unstable Rule • Commodus (Marcus Aurelius’ son): Cruel, greedy, stupid • Fought ‘gladiators’ in the arena • Tried to have Rome renamed after himself; • Cheated the army • Murdered in 192 • Set the pattern for grasping generals to murder and succeed predecessors • Financial Problems • Increased problems with tribes along the Danube and Persian Empire • Of note for Christians: Decius (249-251) encouraged Empire-wide persecutions • Poor leadership continued until Diocletian (284-305) • Very strong ruler • Worst persecution of Christians occurred during his reign • Another period of instability after Diocletian retires and before Constantine the Great (312) Lecture 2
Roman Blood Sports • Roman Society was fond of blood sports. • Typical day in Coliseum: • Morning: animal fights (including devouring prisoners) • Lunch: prisoner executions • Afternoon: gladiators, including mock naval battles • Most important events were gladiatorial combats Lecture 2
Judaism(s) During Jesus’ LifetimeEnd of Second Temple Period • Before and during Jesus’ life there were many types of Judaism in Palestine (Josephus describes this): • Pharisees: upholders of the Law (Torah) • Sadducees: from aristocracy and high priests, did not believe in resurrection of dead; closely associated with Temple • Essenes: disgusted with impurities in Temple; left for desert ; Dead Sea Scrolls usually associated with them • Zealots: ‘terrorists’ against Roman occupation • Diaspora Jews not living in Palestine but scattered around Mediterranean; • Greek Jews (Hellenists in Acts of Apostles); Septuagint (LXX) Greek translation of Bible c. 200 BC in Alexandria • Jews in Rome; ordered to leave Rome by Claudius in 44 CE • Jews in Mesopotamia who did not return after the exile in 6th C BC, but flourished under Persian rule Lecture 2
Concentration of Jewish Settlements in First Century darkwing.uoregon.edu/~atlas/europe/static/map11.html Lecture 2
Development of Rabbinic Judaism • During the First War with Rome 66-73 AD, the Sadducees, Essenes and Zealots were destroyed • In 117 AD the Emperor Trajan destroyed the Hellenistic Jewish community in Alexandria; after this the Greek (or Hellenistic) Jews seemingly either converted to Christianity or rabbinic Judaism • Second Palestinian War, Emperor Hadrian, Bar Kochba rebellion, 132-135; after this war, Romans did not allow Jews into Jerusalem • The Pharisees were the group out of which rabbinic Judaism grew in the 2cd and 3rd C AD. • Reestablished contact with the Mesopotamian Jews and their theology; • Rejected use of Greek philosophy and parts of the OT written in Greek, not Hebrew • Hellenistic (Greek) Jewish theology was taken over, preserved and used by early Christian theologians, especially in Alexandria • Philo of Alexandria, contemporary of Jesus and Paul; extensive use of allegory and Platonic philosophical concepts in his OT commentaries Lecture 2
ChristianityEnd of First Century • Christianity spread through missionary activities to urban centers, especially with large Diaspora Jewish populations • Importance of the Septuagint - - Greek Old Testament • Remember, when Paul writes Romans, he is writing to a predominantly Jewish (Diaspora) Christian community that he did not found; he writes to introduce himself and his theology to Christians already in Roman • Christianity appeared to most outsiders (and some who considered themselves Christian) like another form of Judaism • Nero used Christians as scapegoats for fire in 64 AD • Jewish Christian community was small • Execution of Peter and Paul probably took place during this time • Rome quickly became the ‘capital’ city of Christianity • Place where Peter and Paul died • Capital of Empire • “No one” left in Jerusalem Lecture 2
ChristianitySecond Century • Further distancing from Judaism • Example: when to celebrate Easter: on Sunday or Passover? • Converts increasingly have no previous contact with Judaism • Important centers of large Christian communities and learning: Rome, Alexandria, Antioch • Christianity offers itself to everyone, including women and slaves • Notable for care of poor, widows, sick (ministry of deacons) • Notable because Christians are unconcerned with conventional societal patterns (Church more important than family) • Notable for willingness to die rather than sacrifice • But there is not one type of Christianity • One of earliest ‘heresies’ is docetism; Jesus only appeared to be human • Another contested issues is that God the Father of Jesus is not the Creator of OT • What literature written in 1st and 2cd C about Jesus is canonical • Who has authority to teach Lecture 2
ChristianityThird Century • Extensive persecutions; Christians seen as a threat to Empire, especially during reign of Decius and Diocletian • But this was also a period of great instability in Empire • Jews not considered a threat in the same way because of Roman respect for antiquity of Judaism • Under Decius (249 – 251) everyone required to sacrifice and receive a certificate that they had done so, a libelli • But in spite of persecutions, Christianity continues to grow and attract converts from many different levels of society Lecture 2
Early Spread of Christianitywww.studylight.org/se/maps/browse.cgi?st=170#132 Lecture 2
Christian Responses to Persecution • 1. Intellectual: Apologies written to justify Christianity to Roman authorities • 2. Facing torture and death without apostasy; often even looking forward to martyrdom eagerly as a proof of solidarity with Jesus • 3. But, if you believed that Jesus only appeared to be human (docetists), then there seemed little reason to be a martyr yourself • 4. Some did not have the courage when accused, and so apostatized and/or paid others for their libelli Lecture 2
1. Response to Persecution:Apologies • Type of literature that often had the form of a legal defense • It was intended for a highly educated pagan (i.e., philosophical) audience; often drew heavily on philosophical concepts to explain Christianity • Tried to establish antiquity and respectability of Christianity • It tried to show that Christianity was not to be feared, but encouraged good citizenship • St. Justin Martyr wrote two Apologies; Tertullian wrote an Apology Lecture 2
2. Response to Persecution:Martyrdom and Christianity • Martyr comes from Greek word for witness • Did not actually have to die to be a martyr, but to suffer for faith (slavery, prison, mines) • Note: Romans tried to avoid creating Christian martyrs; accused were given several opportunities to offer sacrifice • In 3rd Century, Roman authorities started issuing a receipt, or libellus to those who sacrificed; authorities also attacking Christianity as such, destroying Scripture Lecture 2
Martyrs • Real desire to prove the totality of Christian faith (e.g., Origen On Martyrdom) • Those who died were (still are) considered heroes of the faith • Pilgrimage to place of burial • Remembering their sacrifice in “Acts”; Peter (Quo vadis); Perpetua and Felicity; Justin Martyr • Those who suffered but did not die (also known as confessors) were popularly considered able to forgive sin of apostasy • Problem for 3rd C bishops Lecture 2
3. Response to Persecution:Docetists (Gnostics) • Heavily influenced by Platonism • Believed that Jesus was God, and therefore could not suffer • Physical was not important; one should try to rise above the physical to the spiritual • Martyrdom had little value • Knowledge (gnosis) of faith was a secret revealed by God to individual, not taught and open to all • Docetists were bitterly fought by ‘orthodox’ Christians, especially bishops Lecture 2
4. Christian Response to Persecution:Apostates (or Lapsed) • Very often, after persecution subsided, apostate wanted to return to Church • Some sought forgiveness from martyrs • Some Churches refused to allow them to return; Church only for pure: Donatists • Some wanted them to be rebaptized • Church needed a uniform policy Lecture 2
Early Papal Controversies • Issues of lapsed came to a head in Third Century • Two important papal controversies occur over this issue: • Early Third Century Pope St. Callistus (d. 223) vs. St. Hippolytus (d. 223) • Mid-Third Century Pope St. Stephen and St. Cyprian (d. 258) • Pope in these controversies is almost always more lenient than opposition Lecture 2
Callistus and Hippolytus • Callistus was a slave, but also a deacon, caring for Christian cemeteries in Rome (catacombs); he was sent to the mines; freedom bought by Roman Church • Hippolytus was well educated presbyter; ran a Christian school in Rome; opposed Callistus becoming Pope • Hippolytus became schismatic when Pope Callistus allowed lapsed and sinners to return to Church with appropriate penance • Eventually Hippolytus reconciled with Callsitus; both martyred Lecture 2
Cyprian and Stephen • Key figure was St. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, and his relation with Rome • Cyprian was Bishop of Carthage; disciple of Tertullian • In regards to lapsed, Cyprian wrote supporting primacy of Pope; Rome as principal church • Rome’s more lenient view of lapsed was correct against the Donatist (Novatian in particular) • However, Cyprian believed that schismatic needed to be rebaptized. This is opposed by Pope Stephen. Stephen’s position eventually accepted; Cyprian reconciled with Stephen’s successor, Pope Sixtus II Lecture 2
Introduction to Readings for This Week • Vidmar (25-45) • Remember that ‘Jewish’ persecution of Christians (Stephen, James) was Jew against Jew (25) • Marcion not a Gnostic (32) • Romans 13:1-7; basis for Christian citizenship in Empire; but also written before Roman persecutions • Tacitus (55-117) • Roman historian • No friend of Christianity, but even less so of Nero • Wrote of events leading to Trajan’s reign in Annuls Lecture 2
Readings (cont.) • Trajan and Pliny • Trajan, Emperor 98-117 • Pliny the Younger (61-112); • Uncle was Pliny the Elder, Roman statesman and naturalist; killed in 79 AD because he investigated eruption of Vesuvius too closely; • numerous of his letters have been preserved • Ignatius of Antioch d. 112 • Seven letters to churches in Asia Minor and Rome; among most important early Christian writings • Note importance of suffering (opposed to docetists) • Note importance of Bishop • Eucharistic references • Remember when he talks about being eaten by beasts, this is not metaphorical, but factual Lecture 2
Reading (cont) • Justin Martyr, • Justin had a Christian school in Rome; Justin martyred during the reign of the philosopher-Emperor, Marcus Aurelius ; he is now patron saint of philosophers • Read from First Apology this week and next • Why beginning and end, but not middle this week? Answer is in structure of work which is described in introduction (225-237) • Remember an apology is addressed to intellectual pagans (not Christians, like Ignatius) • Consider how Justin compares Christianity and pagan philosophy • How does Justin counter the charge that Christians are atheists? • How does Justin’s reference to Hadrian’s letter at the end compare with Trajan’s Letter? Lecture 2