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4.1 ROLE OF THE MEDIEVAL CHURCH. After the Quiz. When finished with the vocab quiz, look at the picture on the blue handout 4.1 A. On the BACK of the slide, complete Level1 and Level 2. DO NOT write on the front of the paper. . Slide 4.1 A Foundations of the Medieval Church. Jesus :
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After the Quiz • When finished with the vocab quiz, look at the picture on the blue handout 4.1 A. • On the BACK of the slide, complete Level1 and Level 2. DO NOT write on the front of the paper.
Slide 4.1 AFoundations of the Medieval Church Jesus: • Used parables to explain message of the love and morality • Christians believed in his miracles • Crucified • Apostles spread Christianity throughout eastern Mediterranean • Peter brought Christianity to Rome
Slide 4.1 AFoundations of the Medieval Church The Bible: • Gospels (stories of Jesus’ life) written 100 years after his death • Old Testament + New Testament = Christian Bible
Slide 4.1 AFoundations of the Medieval Church Priests: • Early leader St. Paul and Apostles were first “priests” • Over time, only specially trained men could administer the sacraments
Slide 4.1 AFoundations of the Medieval Church Sacraments: • Baptism • Confirmation • Eucharist • Reconciliation • Marriage • Ordination • Last Rites See pg. 28 in your notebook for the list
How do you get to heaven?Pg. 30 in notebook • On page 30 of your notebook, draw a picture demonstrating how to get to heaven according to the Catholic Church. • Be sure to use the 7 sacraments by name • Include a picture of each sacrament.
4.1B Salvation • Salvation = saving • Salvation was gained through • 1. following the beliefs of the church • 2. performing good deeds • 3. living a moral life • Christians believed that salvation would help their souls enter heaven and live in paradise forever without desires or needs
Totally an accident typing but left up here for a laugh. s/b RESULT 4.1B Damnation • Damnation was the reslut of living life of sin (turning away from God) • Souls that were damned were believed to be banished to hell • Hell was ruled by Lucifer who was cast out of heaven for showing false pride • Medieval view of hell: souls tortured by fire and demons
4.1C The Characteristics of Life in a Monastery A Community Set Apart from Society • Monasticism = life led by monks and nuns • Monk=Greek for “living alone” • Nun=French from nonne originally Egyptian for “virgin” • Nuns and monks wanted to avoid war, sickness, sin, corruption, and wanted to serve God and fellow Christians
4.1C The Characteristics of Life in a Monastery A Life Guided by Rules • St. Benedict renounced wealth, founded Italian monastery in A.D. 529 • Wrote “The Rule”, a set of rules for monks to life by • Duties: work, study, pray • Vows: chastity, poverty, and obedience
4.1C The Characteristics of Life in a Monastery A Life of Work • Self-sufficient tasks: farming, cooking, sewing, building, etc. • Charitable tasks: hospitals, refuge for homeless, food for poor, lodging for travelers, and sacraments
4.1C The Characteristics of Life in a Monastery A Life in a Monastery or Convent • Led by an abbot who was elected by his monk brothers; convents led by an abbess • Bound by the abbey church • Dormitory where monks slept • Refectory where monks ate • Library and scriptorium where monks wrote