o Tertullian’s writing established a technical theological lexicon
for later writers.
• In Gaul, Irenaeus (c. 130–c. 200) was of even greater significance
as a shaper of an orthodox tradition based in tradition and reason.
o Probably born in Smyrna, as a young boy, Irenaeus had met the
martyr Polycarp. He became a presbyter in Lyons, an important
Roman city in Gaul. After the martyrdom of Pothinus (c. 178),
in the persecution under Marcus Aurelius, he became bishop
of Lyons.
o Irenaeus was a conciliatory voice in relations with the
Montanists and, later, with the Quartodecimans of Asia Minor.
He resisted the effort to excommunicate them.
o He wrote an apologetic work (Demonstration of the Apostolic
Preaching), but his masterpiece was Adversus omnes haereses
(Against All Heresies), written in Greek in five books.
• Despite differences in location, language, and temperament,
Tertullian and Irenaeus—and many others—shared the conviction
that there was a “truth” to Christianity that was not a matter of
personal or individual experience but a matter of communal
teaching (orthodoxy) and moral behavior (orthopraxy). For them,
Christianity was inherently social and institutional in character.
A Threefold Definition of Christianity
• In Irenaeus’s Against Heresies, we can see the basic instruments
that were deployed in the effort to define Christianity in terms
of orthodoxy.
• Irenaeus himself conceived of Christianity in terms of Greco-
Roman philosophy and perceived and described other versions
of Christianity in the same terms. Thus, he describes “heresies”
(“parties”) in terms of philosophical schools, divided by
doctrinal differences.