The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation

(Rick Simeone) #1
o Already in the 4th century, then, the lines of what would be
called “caesaropapism”—the merging of imperial and religious
power—were established.

Internal Stresses
• The challenge of being a state religion put severe internal stress on
Christianity. Despite the impressive institutional and intellectual
developments it had accomplished in the 2nd and 3rd centuries, it
remained ill-prepared for the task of providing the glue for a society.
o Starting as a sect with a distinct countercultural disposition,
it was eschatologically oriented: This world is not permanent
or even necessarily valuable. There is much in this religion
that argues against stability and good order: Celibacy is better
than marriage, poverty than wealth, humility than arrogance,
obedience to God over obedience to humans.


o The canonical writings of Christianity are far from providing
a consistent code of behavior even for religious matters, much
less directions for a civilization to organize itself.

o In the 2nd and 3rd centuries, radical impulses continued to
flourish under the name of Christianity, despite the efforts to
shape a centrist orthodoxy.

•    Especially in the East, where imperial rule remained more stable,
the precedents of pagan culture provided much of the form for the
Christian empire.
o The basic forms of Greek paideia—though suffused with
biblical content—remained consistent: logic, philosophy,
rhetoric, and the plastic arts.

o As the imperial religion, Christianity was a Greco-Roman
religion, with only vestigial connections to Judaism. Even
Scripture was in Greek and interpreted through Greek rhetoric.

•    The increased instability of the empire in the West, in turn, would
force Christianity both to engage new cultural realities and to forge
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