Total Pageviews

Monday, June 23, 2014

A Very Brief History of the Church:Part 7

"I will build my church; and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it."Matt:16:18


 From the very beginning of the Church there has been discussions with in the church attempting to understand what God has, is and will yet do in and by Jesus. Understanding the work of Christ has come ,at times, little by little. Often among varies groups there would arise differences of opinion as to whom was give the place as the custodians of the truth of the Gospel message and the authority to proclaim that message.


Gnosticism

As peoples entered the Church   they would bring into it some of their past ideas and would attempt to merge their ideas with the understanding of who Jesus is and what they should believe about him. Often these past ideas were drawn from the mystery religions that they had been apart of.

These ideas are generally referred to as Gnostic, with means "knowledge", this "knowledge" almost always carried with it a claim to have unique understanding that others did not have or access to a  alternate tradition which they and only they had and were the caretakers and defenders of.
 This Gnostic thought taught beliefs  which the main body of the Church did not embrace.

Many Gnostic teachers claimed to have "epistles" written by the Apostles or other  documents such as the Psudopigrapha,  which the Church at larger did  not have, or they  claimed that they had the "key" to truly understanding the Scriptures which gave them special understanding and insight that the Church did not accept and  sought to suppress.

 Often Gnostic teachers would have highly edited copies of the Gospels or Epistles to give support to their ideas some would uses only certain parts of the Gospels.

Some Gnostic teachers said that Jesus was not really God eternally , but rather a man who earned the right to become the Son of God. Others taught that Jesus was not a man at all,  but rather some sort of image of "projection" , that Jesus left no footprints in the dust when he walked.

Others believed that Jesus was a man who became "possessed" by a "divine spirit" who then abandoned him while he was upon the cross.

Another Gnostic teaching presented Jesus as a created "God" and therefore less than God the Father.

Some taught that God is a "family"  or that God is two separate "divine" God beings and or  that the Holy Spirit is not God, but rather just a power which flows out from God.

Other Gnostic teachers had an intense interest in angels seeing them in elevated roles greater than Scripture assigned them.

 The Apostles Creed

This interjection of Gnostic thought compelled the Church to define what it as a whole understood regarding Jesus Christ and the Salvation he had brought.This defining of the accepted or Orthodox beliefs of the Church came to be embodied in what is known as the Apostles Creed. The earliest forms of the Apostles date back to just as the Apostolic period of the Church was coming to an end.

Roots of the Creed 

In the primitive Church baptisms were generally, but not always, conducted once a year. New converts were baptized on Resurrection Sunday (Easter) after a time of reflection and prayer; usually this was a fourty day period of time which gave rise to what became the Lenten Season in the Spring of the year.

 As new converts  came to and then entered the water for the Sacrament of Baptism, they were asked questions before being  immersed beneath the water,  affirming that they believed and accept all that Jesus had accomplished on their behalf. 

 These questions were the root of the Apostles Creed. The minister would ask each one the following questions.

Do you believe in God the Father Almighty?

Do you believe in Christ Jesus,the Son of God, who was born of the Holy Spirit and Mary the virgin, who was crucified under Pontius Pilate , and died and rose again at the third day, and ascended to Heaven and sat at the right of the Father, and will come to judge the quick and the dead?

Do you believe in the Holy Spirit , the Holy Church and the resurrection of the flesh. 

 The Apostles Creed became the safe guard  and defined  Orthodox Christian teaching , as long as what was being taught or preached conformed to the Creed it could be accepted as sound Orthodox teaching.

If the candidate affirmed that they believed and accepted  these things,  the elders would then immersed them as confirmation and  they then were now apart of the communion of the Church.


The Creed

Over the centuries the Apostles Creed has stood the test of time, it has had only minor changes in the wording to accommodate each of the Christan Church bodies which  uses it, but the intent always has remained and proven to keep teaching Orthodox to what has come down through the ages from the earliest times.

 I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth.

I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord. He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary. He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died and was buried. He descended to the dead. On the third day he rose again. He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy all-embracing Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.

  Marcion

Marcion grew up in a Christian family his father was a Bishop in the town of Sinope in Pontus. Marcion grew to have  a deep disliking for the Jewish people and the "material world" . His view of Christianity was hostile toward the Jewish people and this world. Marcion's dislike of the Jews was linked to his view that the "material world" was evil.

Around 144 AD Marcio traveled to Rome and began to teach his doctrine. After a time he developed a following of disciples who embraced his teachings. The Church leadership at that time saw that Mrcion's doctrine was not compatible with what was accepted Christian  Orthodoxy.

 Jehovah

Marcion saw  that the "world" was evil , therefore it could not have been created by a perfect loving God , but rather that the world was either created by and "evil god" or an "ignorant god".


Marcion reasoned that  the Father of Jesus, being full of love  and grace and wanting a "spiritual world"  could there fore not be the "God" of the Old Testament, who was  Jehovah. Jehovah created this world and put humanity in it .Jehovah either did this out of ignorance or out of evil.

  So if the "God" of the Jews, created this evil world therefore  Jehovah being evil is therefore worshiped by evil people, the Jews.

In Marcion's view Jehovah was a cruel and vindictive "God" who wanted to extract punishment as often as he could.

Marcion believed that the Father of Jesus was above Jehovah and out of pity for humanity the Father sent Jesus to set us free from Jehovah's control.

He believed how ever that Jesus was not really born  that Marcion said this would have put Jesus under Jehovah's control .Jesus rather "appeared" on the earth as a man.

This Jehovah, according to Marcion,  chose the People of Israel, the Jews, whereas the Father of Jesus wanted all people to love him.  The Jews  in turn wrote the Old Testament Scriptures about their relationship with this "God" Jehovah , Marcion therefore  rejected the Old Testament evil or at best flawed.

Scripture 

Marcion having rejected the Hebrew Scriptures made what he considered a list of canonical writings,
which were made up of Paul's writings  and Luke's account of the life of Jesus, he also explained that any reference to the, or quotes from the Hebrew Scripture in the Epistles or his accepted writings was due to the conspiratorial editing done by Judizers.

Marcion's list of canonical writings, which he favored, also led the  Christian Church to begin the dislodge(s) that would lead to the canonical councils which resulted in the  confirmation and recognition of the compilation of what we now consider to be the authorized body writings that speak for God to humanity, the Holy Bible. This process was over many years and often was arrived at by what was mutual  consensus.

Marcion,(left),  bringing   "Scriptures"  to the Apostle John

 Prior to the assembling of the "Cannon" when anyone talked about Scripture they meant the Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament. The translation which most were  familiar with was the Septuagint that is the "Work of the Seventy Translators", even the Apostles quoted from the Septuagint, reflecting it's wide uses in the even some synagogues.

Marcion's church was far from being a small isolated  group with it's own esoteric doctrine that lingered on the fringe of the Church, it grew to considerable size and established it's own  hierarchic with Bishops overseeing congregation in many places.

Marcion's church had some influence with some people even in the Church.  There are early Christian
traditions that the aged Apostle John confronted Marcion himself, and that the three Johnaine epistles  were to address Marcion's doctrine that some may have embraced.
 
Montanus

Marcion was not the only un-Orthodox  teacher during the early years of the Christian Church , there was Montanus. Montanus had been a pagan priest who had come in contact with Christian teaching and became converted in 155 AD .

Montanus after his conversion claimed that the Holy Spirit entered him and gave him prophecies. Along with Montanus  there were two woman who joined him, they were Priscilla and Maximilla, they too claimed to receive prophecies.

Some began to follow and believe Montanism which declared that with his ministry came the inauguration of  a "new age". This" new age" which  had arrived  would introduce a greater  "spiritual and moral piety" to those who followed Montanus.

Montanus began to influence some in then Church, even Tertullian, who fought to combat heresy in the Church,  would become a Montanist. It may have been the high moral standard that appealed to Tertullian.
 He eventual, found that the high promises of Montanism were unworkable and  of  left the Montanus movement disappointed and  founded a group and started a work of his own

The Church as a whole resisted Montanus' preaching, as he claimed that he regarded himself as the bringer of the "new age" and that they, and all who came before him,  were invalided. In essences he was declaring his ministry as the "One True Church" .

Marcion's, Montanus' and others, challenge to  the  Christian Church had the effect of causality, that  is the Church had to determine what it believed and created a statement to give affirmation of that belief, as well,  these challenge sparked the discussion that led to the canonization of the Holy Bible.

To Be Continued....

Rev.Todd Crouch, Pastor 

The Fountain of Life Church a Congregation of Grace Communion
2101 Old National Pike.
Washington, Pennsylvania.   www.gcfountainoflife.org
The Fountain of Life is heard  on the RKP Radio Network 1710 and 1670 AM in Washington and North Franklin ,and 1790 AM  in the Arden Fair Grounds area of Washington Pennsylvania, and on 1710 AM in Bentleyville and Monongahela, Pennsylvania. And online around the world at www.rkpradio.com

No comments:

Post a Comment