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CHAPTER NINE. The Early Church: Jesus, True God and True Man. Letter to the Hebrews. - Although the letter shows an association with Paul with a reference to Timothy, St. Paul did not write the letter to the Hebrews. - Author is anonymous
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CHAPTER NINE The Early Church: Jesus, True God and True Man
Letter to the Hebrews - Although the letter shows an association with Paul with a reference to Timothy, St. Paul did not write the letter to the Hebrews - Author is anonymous -Written homily developing a theme of Christ as a high priest and the model of our faith • A priest’s role is to offer sacrifices • Jesus willingly sacrificed His life for us • Jesus offered the sacrifice on our behalf and offered Himself as the sacrifice
Letter to the Hebrews - Written for a local church whose faith was starting to become lifeless - Tries to encourage these Christians to persevere in their faith by pointing to Jesus • Jesus had been tempted and suffered, yet remained faithful - Christian vocation is a pilgrimage • Jesus is the guide • To achieve heaven we must imitate His obedience and His suffering
Catholic Epistles - Made up of seven NT Documents: James 2 John 1 Peter 3 John 2 Peter Jude 1 John
Catholic Epistles - Catholic means “universal” The letters are called Catholic because: 1.) They contain general advice that is helpful to all churches 2.) They were accepted by all Eastern and Western churches 3.) They help us understand better how the catholic or worldwide Church was developed
Catholic Epistles James - Actual author is unknown - Addressed to Jewish-Christians outside Holy Land -Gives much practical, Christ-inspired advice and encouragement on themes of Christian living • How to handle temptation • Power of prayer Key themes: • God’s preferential love for the poor • Need for rich people to care for the poor
Catholic Epistles 1 Peter - Pseudonymous writer; written by a disciple of Peter to communities in Asia Minor - Purpose was to boost the spirit of Gentile- Christian converts to bear witness to Christ in a largely pagan world - Resembles more of a sermon - Points to Jesus as the Suffering Servant - Gives the clearest NT teaching on suffering • Tells Christians not to return evil with evil
“But rejoice to the extent that you share in the sufferings of Christ, so that when his glory is revealed you may also rejoice exultantly” (1 Peter 4:13).
Catholic Epistles Jude and 2 Peter - 2 Peter borrows heavily from Jude - Letter of Jude denounces certain outsiders who have come into the Church • Warns these outsiders that they will be punished severely for engaging in acts of immorality that were most likely sexual in nature - 2 Peter is last NT work written - Major theological contribution concerns Christ’s Second Coming
Catholic Epistles 1 John - Style and teachings reveal intimate connection to John’s Gospel -1st letter is most important • Written to bolster the Johannine church threatened by a schism caused by false teachers 2 John - Reminds Christians to love one another - Warns against anyone who denies the doctrine of the Incarnation, calling them Antichrists
Catholic Epistles 3 John - Condemns Diotrephes who challenged the teachings of John the Elder and refused to receive his emissaries - Second and third letters show the early Church had its problems to work out, just as our current Church does
Revelation to John - Last book of the Bible - Also known as the Apocalypse - Because of its symbolic and imaginative language, it is the last read and understood book in the New Testament - Author is a prophet named John Patmos - Revelation is “unveiling” of the risen Jesus Christ
St. Jerome commented that Revelation contains as many secrets as it does words.
Revelation to John John Patmos wrote the book to: 1.) Encourage Christians to remain faithful during times of persecution, false teachings, and complacency 2.) For Christians to remain hopeful • Jesus already rescued us from sin and death by His death and resurrection • In the coming battle he will conquer the unholy trinity of Satan (the dragon), the beast of the sea (the emperor), and the beast of the land (the local authority)
Revelation to John Apocalyptic Literature - Contained visions given to a human usually by a heavenly being who takes him to a heavenly vantage point • Symbolic words, images, and numbers, pessimism about a world in the grip of a devil, but optimism about God’s final triumph - The message is disguised using symbolism so John could write about his enemies without them knowing it
Revelation to John - Basic message of apocalyptic writing: • God controls history and the outcome of events, not the present evil rulers or the forces of evil - Theme: Faithfully endure present difficulties until the Lord comes in his glory
Revelation to John Symbols 7 means “wholeness or perfection” 6 is associated with imperfection 666 is ultimate imperfection 12 signifies Israel, 12 apostles or or the Church
Revelation to John Symbols 1000 symbolizes an incalculable amount or eternity 144,000 symbolizes a new Israel
Revelation to John Symbols Black represents suffering Purple stands for royalty White symbolizes victory Red means war, violence, killing Pallor stands for death
Revelation to John Symbols - Babylon: An ancient city that persecuted the Jews, stands for the modern persecutor of the Christians, Rome - Dragon: Personification of evil, Satan - Horn: Power - Eyes: Knowledge
Revelation to John Symbols - Four horses • White: Conquering power • Red: Bloody war • Black: Famine • Green: Death
Revelation to John -In Revelation, Jesus is: • The Pantokrator - majestic, powerful ruler • God • The Alpha and the Omega (beginning and the end) • The root of David • The Lion and the Lamb • The judge of the living and the dead • The word of God
Christology of Early Church - Christology deals with who the person of Jesus Christ is. The New Testament demonstrates through various titles who Jesus is: Lamb of God Christ, the Messiah Lord Savior of Humanity Unique son of God Bread of Life Good Shepherd Light of the World
Christology of Early Church - Mistakes were sometimes made while wrestling with the scriptural assertions of Jesus - Heresy: false teaching about some major point of Church doctrine - The Church refined its understanding of Jesus through writings of the Church fathers and teachings of the ecumenical councils
Christology of Early Church - Main Teachings of ecumenical or worldwide councils: 1.) Jesus is the only Son of God 2.) Jesus Christ is true God 3.) Jesus Christ is true God, God from God, Light from Light 4.) Jesus is “begotten, not made, one in Being with the Father”
Christology of Early Church 5.) All things were made through the Son 6.) There is only one person in Christ, the divine person 7.) Mary, by conceiving God’s Son, is truly the Mother of God 8.) There are two distinct natures in the one person of Christ
Christology of Early Church 9.) Jesus embodies the divine ways of God in a human way 10.) Jesus has a human intellect and a human will 11.) Jesus, God-made-man, is our Savior 12.) The Mission of Jesus and the Holy Spirit are distinct but inseparable
Vocabulary • Apologist • Ecumenical Council • Fathers of the Church • Parousia • Theotokos • Vulgate