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Constantine the Great and Christianity

During the reign of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great (306–337 AD), Christianity began to transition to the dominant religion of the Roman Empire. Historians remain uncertain about Constantine's reasons for favoring Christianity, and theologians and historians have often argued about which form of early Christianity he subscribed to. There is no consensus among scholars as to whether he adopted his mother Helena's Christianity in his youth, or, as claimed by Eusebius of Caesarea, encouraged her to convert to the faith he had adopted.

Constantine's vision and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in a 9th-century Byzantine manuscript.

Constantine ruled the Roman Empire as sole emperor for much of his reign. Some scholars allege that his main objective was to gain unanimous approval and submission to his authority from all classes, and therefore he chose Christianity to conduct his political propaganda, believing that it was the most appropriate religion that could fit with the imperial cult. Regardless, under the Constantinian dynasty Christianity expanded throughout the empire, launching the era of the state church of the Roman Empire.[1] Whether Constantine sincerely converted to Christianity or remained loyal to paganism is a matter of debate among historians.[2] His formal conversion in 312 is almost universally acknowledged among historians,[1][3] despite that it was claimed he was baptized only on his deathbed by the Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia in 337;[4][5][6] the real reasons behind it remain unknown and are debated also.[2][3] According to Hans Pohlsander, professor emeritus of history at the University at Albany, SUNY, Constantine's conversion was just another instrument of realpolitik in his hands meant to serve his political interest in keeping the empire united under his control:

The prevailing spirit of Constantine's government was one of conservatism. His conversion to and support of Christianity produced fewer innovations than one might have expected; indeed they served an entirely conservative end, the preservation and continuation of the Empire.

— Hans Pohlsander, The Emperor Constantine[7]

Constantine's decision to cease the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire was a turning point for early Christianity, sometimes referred to as the Triumph of the Church, the Peace of the Church or the Constantinian shift. In 313, Constantine and Licinius issued the Edict of Milan decriminalizing Christian worship. The emperor became a great patron of the Church and set a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor within the Church and raised the notions of orthodoxy, Christendom, ecumenical councils, and the state church of the Roman Empire declared by edict in 380. He is revered as a saint and isapostolos in the Eastern Orthodox Church, Oriental Orthodox Church, and various Eastern Catholic Churches for his example as a Christian monarch.

Before Constantine edit

The first recorded official persecution of Christians on behalf of the Roman Empire was in AD 64, when, as reported by the Roman historian Tacitus, Emperor Nero attempted to blame Christians for the Great Fire of Rome. According to Church tradition, it was during the reign of Nero that Peter and Paul were martyred in Rome. However, modern historians debate whether the Roman government distinguished between Christians and Jews prior to Nerva's modification of the Fiscus Judaicus in 96, from which point practising Jews paid the tax and Christians did not.[8]

Christians suffered from sporadic and localized persecutions over a period of two and a half centuries. Their refusal to participate in the imperial cult was considered an act of treason and was thus punishable by execution. The most widespread official persecution was carried out by Diocletian beginning in 303. During the Great Persecution, the emperor ordered Christian buildings and the homes of Christians torn down and their sacred books collected and burned. Christians were arrested, tortured, mutilated, burned, starved, and condemned to gladiatorial contests to amuse spectators.[9] The Great Persecution officially ended in April 311, when Galerius, senior emperor of the Tetrarchy, issued an edict of toleration which granted Christians the right to practice their religion, although it did not restore any property to them.[10] Constantine, caesar in the Western Empire, and Licinius, caesar in the East, also were signatories to the edict.[11] It has been speculated that Galerius' reversal of his long-standing policy of Christian persecution has been attributable to one or both of these co-caesars.[12]

Constantine's Conversion edit

It is possible (but not certain) that Constantine's mother, Helena, exposed him to Christianity. In any case, he only declared himself a Christian after issuing the Edict of Milan.[13][14] Writing to Christians, Constantine made clear that he believed that he owed his successes to the protection of the High God alone.[15]

Vision of Apollo edit

 
Jugate gold multiple issued by Constantine at Ticinum in 313, showing the emperor and the god Sol, with Sol also depicted in his quadriga on Constantine's shield.[16]
 
Follis issued by Constantine at Lugdunum c.309–10, with Sol holding a globe and wearing a radiate crown. Constantine is described as SOLI INVICTO COMITI, 'Companion of Sol Invictus'

In 310 a panegyric, preserved in the Panegyrici Latini collection and delivered at Trier for the joint occasion of the city's birthday and Constantine's quinquennalia, recounted a vision apparently seen by the emperor while journeying between Marseille and Trier.[17] The panegyricist recounts that the god Apollo appeared to Constantine in company with Victoria and together presented him with three wreaths representing thirty years of power.[17] This vision was perhaps in a dream experienced by the emperor while practising incubation at the shrine of Apollo Grannus in Grand, Vosges.[17] Eusebius was aware of this vision, or reports of it, and refers in his own Panegyric of Constantine of 336 to "tricennial crowns"[18] bestowed by the hand of God in Christianity on Constantine, "augmenting the sway of his kingdom by long years".[19][17]

Battle of Milvian Bridge edit

Eusebius of Caesarea and other Christian sources record that Constantine experienced a dramatic series of events sometime between his father Constantius I's death in 306 and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge on 28 October 312.[17] The battle secured Constantine's claim to the title of augustus in the West, which he had assumed unilaterally when his father died.[17] According to the Eusebius' Life of Constantine, Constantine saw a vision of "a cross-shaped trophy formed from light" above the sun at midday.[17]

 
The Emblem of Christ Appearing to Constantine, as imagined by Rubens (1622). Constantine's army sees a chi-rho in the daytime sky.

About the time of the midday sun, when the day was just turning, he said he saw with his own eyes up in the sky and resting over the sun, a cross-shaped trophy formed from light, and a text attached to it which said, "By this conquer." (τούτῳ νίκα) Amazement at the spectacle seized both him and the whole company of soldiers which was then accompanying him on a campaign he was conducting somewhere, and witnessed the miracle.

— Eusebius of Caesarea, Vita Constantini, 1.28.2

The Greek words "Ἐν Τούτῳ Νίκα" (in this sign, conquer) are often rendered in a Latin version, "in hoc signo vinces" (in this sign, you will conquer).[20] According to Eusebius, Constantine also had a dream that same night.[17] In the dream,

the Christ of God appeared to him with the sign which had appeared in the sky, and urged him to make himself a copy of the sign which had appeared in the sky, and to use this as a protection against the attacks of the enemy.

— Eusebius of Caesarea, Vita Constantini, 1.29

Writing his Church History shortly after 313, Eusebius makes no mention of this story in that work and does not recount it until composing his posthumous biography of Constantine decades afterwards.[17] Life of Constantine was written by Eusebius after Constantine had died, and Eusebius admitted that he had heard the story from Constantine long after it had happened. Lactantius, writing 313–315 and around twenty years before Eusebius's Life, also does not mention a vision in the sky.[17] Instead, Lactantius mentions only that Constantine's dream took place on the eve of the climactic battle on the Pons Milvius across the Tiber, with the crucial detail that the "sign" was marked on the Constantinian soldiers' shields.[17] According to Lactantius:

 
Constantine's dream in a 9th-century Byzantine manuscript
 
Medallion issued by Constantine at Ticinum in 315, with chi-rho on the emperor's crest and Romulus and Remus and the Lupa on his shield.
 
Late Roman sarcophagus with a combined cross and wreathed chi-rho.

Constantine was advised in a dream to mark the heavenly sign of God on the shields of his soldiers and then engage in battle. He did as he was commanded and by means of a letter X turned sideways, with the top of its head bent around (transversa X littera, summo capite circumflexo), he marked Christ on their shields (Christum in scutis notat). Armed with this sign, the army took up its weapons.

— Lactantius, De Mortibus Persecutorum, 44.5–6
 
Follis issued by Constantine at Constantinople in 337, with a chi-rho on a labarum.

It is unclear from these sources what Constantine saw and what was marked on his army's shields.[17] Eusebius's description of the daytime vision suggests a cross-shaped (either Τ or †) symbol, whereas Lactantius's description suggests a staurogram (⳨), although the crux ansata (☥) or the Egyptian hieroglyph ankh (𓋹) have been proposed as interpretations as well.[17] All of these symbols were used by Christians in the 3rd and 4th centuries. Eusebius concurs with Lactantius that a new device was added to Constantine's soldiers' shields but does not connect this with the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, saying only that the "sign of the saving trophy" was marked, but not specifying when.[21][17] Sometime after 317, Eusebius was permitted by Constantine, probably either in 325 or in 335, to see a standard that was made according to the emperor's dreamt instructions during the civil war.[17] He described it as:

A tall pole plated with gold had a transverse bar forming the shape of a cross. Up at the extreme top a wreath woven of precious stones and gold had been fastened. On it two letters, imitating by its first characters the name "Christ," formed the monogram of the Saviour's title, rho being intersected in the middle by chi ... From the transverse bar, which was bisected by the pole, hung suspended a cloth ... But the upright pole ... carried the golden head-and-shoulders portrait of the Godbeloved Emperor, and likewise of his sons.

— Eusebius of Caesarea, Vita Constantini, 1.31.1–2

This later description of Eusebius's, written after 324, suggests a more elaborate symbol than does Lactantius's earlier text, involving the Greek letters rho (Ρ) and chi (Χ) ligatured as the chi rho (☧), a monogram of Ancient Greek: χριστός, romanized: khrīstós, lit.'anointed', referring to Jesus.[17] Possibly Eusebius's description refers to a chi-rho inside the loop of an ankh.[22]

Following the battle and the defeat and death of Maxentius, Constantine became the undisputed emperor in the West and performed an adventus, a ceremonial entrance to the city.[17] Arriving inside Rome's walls he ignored the altars to the gods prepared on the Capitoline Hill and did not carry out the customary sacrifices to celebrate a general's victorious entry into Rome, instead heading directly to the imperial palace.[15] This is probably because the traditional Roman triumph, concluding with the sacrifice to Jupiter Optimus Maximus at his temple on the Capitoline, was traditionally celebrated after victory over Rome's enemies, rather than after the conquest of the city by a claimant in a civil war.[23] The Arch of Constantine, for which numerous reliefs from earlier monuments depicting prior emperors sacrificing to various gods were re-carved with the face of Constantine, does not have an image of Constantine sacrificing to Jupiter, although he is shown sacrificing to Apollo and to Hercules.[23]

Edict of Milan edit

In 313 Constantine and Licinius announced "that it was proper that the Christians and all others should have liberty to follow that mode of religion which to each of them appeared best,"[24] thereby granting tolerance to all religions, including Christianity. The Edict of Milan went a step further than the earlier Edict of Serdica by Galerius in 311, returning confiscated Church property. This edict made the empire officially neutral with regard to religious worship; it neither made the traditional religions illegal nor made Christianity the state religion, as occurred later with the Edict of Thessalonica of 380. The Edict of Milan did, however, raise the stock of Christianity within the empire and reaffirmed the importance of religious worship to the welfare of the state.[25] Most influential people in the empire, especially high military officials, had not been converted to Christianity and still participated in the traditional religions of Rome; Constantine's rule exhibited at least a willingness to appease these factions. The Roman coins minted up to eight years after the battle still bore the images of Roman gods.[20] The monuments he first commissioned, such as the Arch of Constantine, contained no reference to Christianity.[15][26]

Patronage of the Church edit

 
Hagia Eirene was the first church commissioned by Constantine in Constantinople and burned down in the Nika riots. The present structure is 6th century.

The accession of Constantine was a turning point for early Christianity. After his victory, Constantine took over the role of patron of the Christian faith. He supported the Church financially, had a number of basilicas built, granted privileges (e.g., exemption from certain taxes) to clergy, promoted Christians to high-ranking offices, returned property confiscated during the Great Persecution of Diocletian,[27] and endowed the church with land and other wealth.[28] Between 324 and 330, Constantine built a new city, New Rome, at Byzantium on the Bosporos, which would be named Constantinople for him. Unlike "old" Rome, the city began to employ overtly Christian architecture, contained churches within the city walls, and had no pre-existing temples from other religions.[29]

 
Map of the Church and Empire in the East under Constantine (c. 330 AD).

In doing this, however, Constantine required those who had not converted to Christianity to pay for the new city.[28] Christian chroniclers tell that it appeared necessary to Constantine "to teach his subjects to give up their rites ... and to accustom them to despise their temples and the images contained therein,"[30] This led to the closure of temples because of a lack of support, their wealth flowing to the imperial treasure;[31] Constantine did not need to use force to implement this.[28] It was the chronicler Theophanes who added centuries later that temples "were annihilated", but this was considered "not true" by contemporary historians.[32]

Constantine respected cultivated persons, and his court was composed of older, respected, and honored men. Men from leading Roman families who declined to convert to Christianity were denied positions of power yet still received appointments; even up to the end of his life, two-thirds of his top government were non-Christian.[citation needed] Constantine's laws enforced and reflected his Christian attitudes. Crucifixion was abolished for reasons of Christian piety but was replaced with hanging, to demonstrate the preservation of Roman supremacy. On March 7, 321, Sunday, which was sacred to Christians as the day of Christ's resurrection and to the Roman Sun God Sol Invictus, was declared an official day of rest. On that day markets were banned and public offices were closed,[33] except for the purpose of freeing slaves.[34] There were, however, no restrictions on performing farming work on Sundays, which was the work of the great majority of the population.[35]

Some laws made during his reign were even humane in the modern sense and supported tolerance, possibly inspired by his Christianity:[36] a prisoner was no longer to be kept in total darkness but must be given the outdoors and daylight; a condemned man was allowed to die in the arena, but he could not be branded on his "heavenly beautified" face, since God was supposed to have made man in his image, but only on the feet.[37] Publicly displayed gladiatorial games were ordered to be eliminated in 325.

 
4th-century sardonyx cameo of Constantine crowned by the Tyche of Constantinople
 
Gold 1½ solidus multiple issued by Constantine at Thessaloniki in 327, with Constantine looking skywards and an armoured emperor carrying spear and a tropaion with bound captives

Early Christian Bibles edit

According to Eusebius, in 331 Constantine had commissioned him to deliver fifty volumes of scriptures for the churches of Constantinople, which were to be bound in leather and easily portable.[38] Only three or four churches are known certainly to have existed in Constantine's reign, but others appear to have been planned or established, for which the scriptures were commissioned.[38] The volumes were likely gospel books containing the Canonical Gospels of the Four Evangelists rather than complete Bibles with the entire Biblical canon, which were very rare in antiquity.[38]

Athanasius (Apol. Const. 4) recorded around 340 Alexandrian scribes preparing Bibles for Constans. Little else is known. It has been speculated that this may have provided motivation for canon lists, and that Codex Vaticanus and Codex Sinaiticus are examples of these Bibles. Together with the Peshitta and Codex Alexandrinus, these are the earliest extant Christian Bibles.[39]

Church construction edit

According to Socrates Scholasticus, Constantine commissioned the construction of the first Church of Hagia Irene in Constantinople, on the site now occupied by the Justinian church of the same name.[38] It commemorated the peace won by Constantine and Crispus's victory over Licinius and Licinius II at the Battle of Chrysopolis in 324; its name, the Church of the Holy Peace (Ancient Greek: Ἁγία Εἰρήνη, romanizedHagía Eirḗnē, lit.'Holy Peace') recalled the Altar of Peace (Latin: ara pacis) built by Augustus, the first deified Roman emperor.[38] Two other large churches were dedicated to Saint Mocius and to Saint Acacius; both worthies had supposedly been martyred in Byzantium during the Diocletianic Persecution.[38] The Church of St Mocius was supposed to have included parts of a former temple of Zeus or Hercules, though it is unlikely that such a temple existed on the site, which was without the walls of the Constantinian city as well as of erstwhile Severan Byzantium.[38] According to Eusebius, Christian liturgies were also performed in Constantine's Mausoleum, the site of which became the Church of the Holy Apostles; although Eusebius does not mention any Byzantine church by name, he reports that Christian sites were numerous inside the city and around it.[38] Later tradition ascribed to Constantine the foundations in Constantinople of the Church of Saint Menas, the Church of Saint Agathonicus, the Church of Saint Michael at nearby Anaplous, and the Church of Hagios Dynamis (Ancient Greek: Άγιος Δύναμις, romanizedHagíos Dynamis, lit.'Holy Power').[38]

Christian emperorship edit

Enforcement of doctrine edit

The reign of Constantine established a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor in the Church. Emperors considered themselves responsible to the gods for the spiritual health of their subjects, and after Constantine they had a duty to help the Church define and maintain orthodoxy.[40] The Church generally regarded the definition of doctrine as the responsibility of the bishops; the emperor's role was to enforce doctrine, root out heresy, and uphold ecclesiastical unity.[41] The emperor ensured that God was properly worshiped in his empire; what proper worship (orthodoxy) and doctrines and dogma consisted of was for the Church to determine.[42]

Constantine had become a worshiper of the Christian God, but he found that there were many opinions on that worship and indeed on who and what that God was. In 316, Constantine was asked to adjudicate in a North African dispute of the Donatist sect (who began by refusing obedience to any bishops who had yielded in any way to persecution, later regarding all bishops but their own sect as utterly contaminated). More significantly, in 325 he summoned the First Council of Nicaea, effectively the first ecumenical council (unless the Council of Jerusalem is so classified).[43] The Council of Nicaea is the first major attempt by Christians to define orthodoxy for the whole state. Until Nicaea, all previous Church councils had been local or regional synods affecting only portions of the Church.

Nicaea dealt primarily with the Arian controversy. Constantine was torn between the Arian and Trinitarian camps. After the Nicene council, and against its conclusions, he eventually recalled Arius from exile and banished Athanasius of Alexandria to Trier.

Just before his death in May 337, it is claimed that Constantine was baptised into Christianity. Up until this time he had been a catechumen for most of his adult life. He believed that if he waited to get baptized on his death bed he was in less danger of polluting his soul with sin and not getting to heaven. He was baptized by his distant relative Arian Bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia or by Pope Sylvester I which is maintained by the Catholic Church, the Coptic Orthodox Church, the Antiochian Orthodox Church, the Greek Orthodox Church, the Russian Orthodox Church, the Serbian Orthodox Church, upon by many other Eastern Orthodox, Nestorian Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox Churches.[44][45][46][47][48][49] During Eusebius of Nicomedia's time in the imperial court, the Eastern court and the major positions in the Eastern Church were held by Arians or Arian sympathizers.[50] With the exception of a short period of eclipse, Eusebius enjoyed the complete confidence both of Constantine and Constantius II and was the tutor of Emperor Julian the Apostate.[51] After Constantine's death, his son and successor Constantius II was an Arian, as was Emperor Valens.

 
Raphael's The Baptism of Constantine.

Suppression of other religions edit

Constantine's position on the religions traditionally practiced in Rome evolved during his reign. In fact, his coinage and other official motifs, until 325, had affiliated him with the pagan cult of Sol Invictus. At first, Constantine encouraged the construction of new temples[52] and tolerated traditional sacrifices;[15] by the end of his reign, he had begun to order the pillaging and tearing down of Roman temples.[53][54][55]

Beyond the limes, east of the Euphrates, the Sasanian rulers, perennially at war with Rome, had usually tolerated Christianity. Constantine is said to have written to Shapur II in 324 and urged him to protect Christians under his rule.[56] With the establishment of Christianity as the state religion of the Roman Empire, Christians in Persia would be regarded as allies of Persia's ancient enemy. According to an anonymous Christian account, Shapur II wrote to his generals:[57][58]

You will arrest Simon, chief of the Christians. You will keep him until he signs this document and consents to collect for us a double tax and double tribute from the Christians … for we Gods[59] have all the trials of war and they have nothing but repose and pleasure. They inhabit our territory and agree with Caesar, our enemy.

— Shapur II, A History of Christianity in Asia: Beginnings to 1500

Constantinian shift edit

Constantinian shift is a term used by some theologians and historians of antiquity to describe the political and theological aspects and outcomes of the 4th-century process of Constantine's integration of the imperial government with the Church that began with the First Council of Nicaea.[60] The term was popularized by the Mennonite theologian John H. Yoder.[61] The claim that there ever was a Constantinian shift has been disputed; Peter Leithart argues that there was a "brief, ambiguous 'Constantinian moment' in the fourth century," but that there was "no permanent, epochal 'Constantinian shift'."[62]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Wendy Doniger (ed.), "Constantine I", in Britannica Encyclopedia of World Religions (Encyclopædia Britannica, 2006), p. 262.
  2. ^ a b Noel Lenski (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine (Cambridge University Press, 2006), "Introduction". ISBN 978-0-521-81838-4.
  3. ^ a b Jones, Arnold Hugh Martin (1978) [1948]. Constantine and the Conversion of Europe (1962 ed.). University of Toronto Press (reprint 2003) [Macmillan: Teach Yourself History, 1948, Medieval Academy of America: Reprint for Teaching, 1978]. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-8020-6369-4.
  4. ^ Hans A. Pohlsander, The Emperor Constantine (Routledge, NY 2004), pp. 82–84. ISBN 0-415-31938-2; Lenski, "Reign of Constantine" (The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine), p. 82.
  5. ^ Gonzalez, Justo (1984). The Story of Christianity. Vol. 1. Harper Collins. p. 176. ISBN 0-06-063315-8.
  6. ^ "Eusebius of Nicomedia". Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2018-12-18.
  7. ^ Pohlsander, The Emperor Constantine, pp. 78–79.
  8. ^ Wylen, Stephen M., The Jews in the Time of Jesus: An Introduction, Paulist Press (1995), ISBN 0-8091-3610-4, Pp 190-192.; Dunn, James D. G., Jews and Christians: The Parting of the Ways, A.D. 70 to 135, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing (1999), ISBN 0-8028-4498-7, Pp 33-34.; Boatwright, Mary Taliaferro & Gargola, Daniel J & Talbert, Richard John Alexander, The Romans: From Village to Empire, Oxford University Press (2004), ISBN 0-19-511875-8, p. 426.
  9. ^ Bomgardner, D. L. The Story of the Roman Amphitheatre. New York: Routledge, 2000. p. 142.
  10. ^ Lactantius, De Mortibus Persecutorum ("On the Deaths of the Persecutors") ch. 35–34.
  11. ^ Galerius, "Edict of Toleration", in Documents of the Christian Church, trans. and ed. Henry Bettenson (London: Oxford University Press, 1963), 21.
  12. ^ H. A. Drake, Constantine and the Bishops: The Politics of Intolerance (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000), 149.
  13. ^ Brown, Peter (18 December 2012). The Rise of Western Christendom: Triumph and Diversity, A.D. 200–1000. Making of Empire. Vol. 3 (10th Anniversary Revised ed.). John Wiley & Sons (published 2012). ISBN 978-1118338841. Retrieved 2012-08-08. Constantine was not a young convert. He was over 40 and an experienced politician when he finally declared himself a Christian. He had had time to take the measure of the new religion and the difficulties which emperors had experienced in suppressing it. He decided that Christianity was a religion fit for a new empire.
  14. ^ Peter Brown, The Rise of Christendom 2nd edition (Oxford, Blackwell Publishing, 2003) p. 61.
  15. ^ a b c d Peter Brown, The Rise of Christendom 2nd edition (Oxford, Blackwell Publishing, 2003) p. 60.
  16. ^ Holloway, R. Ross (2004). Constantine & Rome. Yale University Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-300-10043-3.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Bardill, Jonathan; Bardill (2012). Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age. Cambridge University Press. pp. 159–170. ISBN 978-0-521-76423-0.
  18. ^ Eusebius, In Praise of Constantine, 6.1
  19. ^ Eusebius, In Praise of Constantine, 10.7
  20. ^ a b R. Gerberding and J. H. Moran Cruz, Medieval Worlds (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004) p. 55.
  21. ^ Eusebius, Vita Constantini, 4.21
  22. ^ Bardill, Jonathan; Bardill (2012). Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age. Cambridge University Press. pp. 192–193. ISBN 978-0-521-76423-0.
  23. ^ a b Bardill, Jonathan; Bardill (2012). Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age. Cambridge University Press. pp. 94–97. ISBN 978-0-521-76423-0.
  24. ^ Lactantius, De Mortibus Persecutorum ("On the Deaths of the Persecutors") ch. 48.
  25. ^ Constantine and Licinius, "The 'Edict of Milan'", in Documents of the Christian Church, trans. and ed. Henry Bettenson (London: Oxford University Press, 1963), 22.
  26. ^ J.R. Curran, Pagan City and Christian Capital. Rome in the Fourth Century (Oxford, 2000) pp. 70–90.
  27. ^ R. Gerberding and J. H. Moran Cruz, Medieval Worlds (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004) pp. 55–56
  28. ^ a b c MacMullan 1984:49.
  29. ^ R. Gerberding and J. H. Moran Cruz, Medieval Worlds (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004) p. 56
  30. ^ quoted after MacMullan 1984:49.
  31. ^ MacMullan 1984:50.
  32. ^ MacMullan 1984: 141, Note 35 to Chapter V; Theophanes, Chron. a. 322. pp. 108, 117
  33. ^ Corpus Juris Civilis 3.12.2 accessed 20 April 2016
  34. ^ Carson, Don A. From Sabbath to Lord's Day. Wipf & Stock Publishers/Zondervan. pp. 252–98. ISBN 978-1579103071.
  35. ^ MacMullen 1969; New Catholic Encyclopedia, 1908; Theodosian Code.
  36. ^ Norwich, John Julius, A Short History of Byzantium. Alfred A. Knopf, 1997, p. 8. ISBN 0-679-77269-3.
  37. ^ Miles, Margaret Ruth, The Word Made Flesh: A History of Christian Thought. Blackwell Publishing, 2004, p. 70, ISBN 1-4051-0846-0.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bardill, Jonathan; Bardill (2012). Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age. Cambridge University Press. pp. 251–55. ISBN 978-0-521-76423-0.
  39. ^ The Canon Debate, McDonald & Sanders editors, 2002, pp. 414–15, for the entire paragraph
  40. ^ Richards, Jeffrey. The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476–752 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979) pp. 14–15.
  41. ^ Richards, Jeffrey. The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476–752 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979) p. 15.
  42. ^ Richards, Jeffrey. The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476–752 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979) p. 16.
  43. ^ Pre-Ecumenical councils include the Council of Rome (155), Second Council of Rome 193, Council of Ephesus (193), Council of Carthage (251), Council of Iconium 258, Council of Antioch (264), Council of Elvira 306, Council of Carthage (311), Council of Ancyra 314, Council of Arles (314) and the Council of Neo-Caesarea 315.
  44. ^ "St. Sylvester, Pope".
  45. ^ "The Departure of St. Silvester, Pope of Rome". St. Takla Haymanout Coptic Orthodox Website. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  46. ^ "January 2014 – St. Sylvester, Pope of Rome".
  47. ^ "V. Rev. Fr. Thaddaeus Hardenbrook. Emperor Constantine the Great (306–337). The Importance of His Faith in the History of the Church".
  48. ^ "Emperor Constantine the Great (306–337): The Importance of His Faith in the History of the Church".
  49. ^ Velomirovic, Nikolai “St. Constantine, Equal to the Apostles” The Prologue of Ochrid. (Serbian Orthodox Church Diocese of Western America: May 21, 1999)
  50. ^ Drake, "Constantine and the Bishops", pp. 395.
  51. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Eusebius of Nicomedia" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  52. ^ Gerberding, R. and J. H. Moran Cruz, Medieval Worlds (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004) p. 28.
  53. ^ R. MacMullen, "Christianizing The Roman Empire A.D. 100–400, Yale University Press, 1984, ISBN 0-300-03642-6
  54. ^ "A History of the Church", Philip Hughes, Sheed & Ward, rev ed 1949, vol I chapter 6.[1] 2018-12-23 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ Eusebius Pamphilius and Schaff, Philip (Editor) and McGiffert, Rev. Arthur Cushman, Ph.D. (Translator) NPNF2-01. Eusebius Pamphilius: Church History, Life of Constantine, Oration in Praise of Constantine 2018-04-17 at the Wayback Machine quote: "he razed to their foundations those of them which had been the chief objects of superstitious reverence".
  56. ^ Eusebius, vita Constantini IV, 8–13
  57. ^ Moffett, Samuel H. (1992). A History of Christianity in Asia: Beginnings to 1500. p. 140.
  58. ^ "After Constantine". gnosis.org. Retrieved 2017-07-11.
  59. ^ In general, there is a "silence of the Perso-Arab and classical historians on any claim by Iranian kings to divinity". The Cambridge history of Iran: The Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanian ...: Volume 1, p. xxxiii.
  60. ^ Clapp, Rodney (1996). A Peculiar People. InterVarsity Press. p. 23. What might be called the Constantinian shift began around the year 200 and took more than two hundred years to grow and unfold to full bloom.
  61. ^ e.g. in Yoder, John H. (1996). "Is There Such a Thing as Being Ready for Another Millennium?". In Miroslav Volf; Carmen Krieg; Thomas Kucharz (eds.). The Future of Theology: Essays in Honor of Jurgen Moltmann. Eerdmanns. p. 65. The most impressive transitory change underlying our common experience, one that some thought was a permanent lunge forward in salvation history, was the so-called Constantinian shift.
  62. ^ Peter Leithart, Defending Constantine: The Twilight of an Empire and the Dawn of Christendom, p. 287.

Further reading edit

  • Eusebius, Life of Constantine, Introduction, translation, and commentary by Averil Cameron and Stuart G. Hall, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1999.
  • Ramsay MacMullen, Christianizing The Roman Empire A.D. 100–400, Yale University Press, 1984 ISBN 0-300-03642-6,

External links edit

  • The Full Text of the "Edict of Milan"

constantine, great, christianity, during, reign, roman, emperor, constantine, great, christianity, began, transition, dominant, religion, roman, empire, historians, remain, uncertain, about, constantine, reasons, favoring, christianity, theologians, historians. During the reign of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great 306 337 AD Christianity began to transition to the dominant religion of the Roman Empire Historians remain uncertain about Constantine s reasons for favoring Christianity and theologians and historians have often argued about which form of early Christianity he subscribed to There is no consensus among scholars as to whether he adopted his mother Helena s Christianity in his youth or as claimed by Eusebius of Caesarea encouraged her to convert to the faith he had adopted Constantine s vision and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in a 9th century Byzantine manuscript Constantine ruled the Roman Empire as sole emperor for much of his reign Some scholars allege that his main objective was to gain unanimous approval and submission to his authority from all classes and therefore he chose Christianity to conduct his political propaganda believing that it was the most appropriate religion that could fit with the imperial cult Regardless under the Constantinian dynasty Christianity expanded throughout the empire launching the era of the state church of the Roman Empire 1 Whether Constantine sincerely converted to Christianity or remained loyal to paganism is a matter of debate among historians 2 His formal conversion in 312 is almost universally acknowledged among historians 1 3 despite that it was claimed he was baptized only on his deathbed by the Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia in 337 4 5 6 the real reasons behind it remain unknown and are debated also 2 3 According to Hans Pohlsander professor emeritus of history at the University at Albany SUNY Constantine s conversion was just another instrument of realpolitik in his hands meant to serve his political interest in keeping the empire united under his control The prevailing spirit of Constantine s government was one of conservatism His conversion to and support of Christianity produced fewer innovations than one might have expected indeed they served an entirely conservative end the preservation and continuation of the Empire Hans Pohlsander The Emperor Constantine 7 Constantine s decision to cease the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire was a turning point for early Christianity sometimes referred to as the Triumph of the Church the Peace of the Church or the Constantinian shift In 313 Constantine and Licinius issued the Edict of Milan decriminalizing Christian worship The emperor became a great patron of the Church and set a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor within the Church and raised the notions of orthodoxy Christendom ecumenical councils and the state church of the Roman Empire declared by edict in 380 He is revered as a saint and isapostolos in the Eastern Orthodox Church Oriental Orthodox Church and various Eastern Catholic Churches for his example as a Christian monarch Contents 1 Before Constantine 2 Constantine s Conversion 2 1 Vision of Apollo 2 2 Battle of Milvian Bridge 2 3 Edict of Milan 3 Patronage of the Church 3 1 Early Christian Bibles 3 2 Church construction 4 Christian emperorship 4 1 Enforcement of doctrine 4 2 Suppression of other religions 5 Constantinian shift 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBefore Constantine editThe first recorded official persecution of Christians on behalf of the Roman Empire was in AD 64 when as reported by the Roman historian Tacitus Emperor Nero attempted to blame Christians for the Great Fire of Rome According to Church tradition it was during the reign of Nero that Peter and Paul were martyred in Rome However modern historians debate whether the Roman government distinguished between Christians and Jews prior to Nerva s modification of the Fiscus Judaicus in 96 from which point practising Jews paid the tax and Christians did not 8 Christians suffered from sporadic and localized persecutions over a period of two and a half centuries Their refusal to participate in the imperial cult was considered an act of treason and was thus punishable by execution The most widespread official persecution was carried out by Diocletian beginning in 303 During the Great Persecution the emperor ordered Christian buildings and the homes of Christians torn down and their sacred books collected and burned Christians were arrested tortured mutilated burned starved and condemned to gladiatorial contests to amuse spectators 9 The Great Persecution officially ended in April 311 when Galerius senior emperor of the Tetrarchy issued an edict of toleration which granted Christians the right to practice their religion although it did not restore any property to them 10 Constantine caesar in the Western Empire and Licinius caesar in the East also were signatories to the edict 11 It has been speculated that Galerius reversal of his long standing policy of Christian persecution has been attributable to one or both of these co caesars 12 Constantine s Conversion editIt is possible but not certain that Constantine s mother Helena exposed him to Christianity In any case he only declared himself a Christian after issuing the Edict of Milan 13 14 Writing to Christians Constantine made clear that he believed that he owed his successes to the protection of the High God alone 15 Vision of Apollo edit nbsp Jugate gold multiple issued by Constantine at Ticinum in 313 showing the emperor and the god Sol with Sol also depicted in his quadriga on Constantine s shield 16 nbsp Follis issued by Constantine at Lugdunum c 309 10 with Sol holding a globe and wearing a radiate crown Constantine is described as SOLI INVICTO COMITI Companion of Sol Invictus In 310 a panegyric preserved in the Panegyrici Latini collection and delivered at Trier for the joint occasion of the city s birthday and Constantine s quinquennalia recounted a vision apparently seen by the emperor while journeying between Marseille and Trier 17 The panegyricist recounts that the god Apollo appeared to Constantine in company with Victoria and together presented him with three wreaths representing thirty years of power 17 This vision was perhaps in a dream experienced by the emperor while practising incubation at the shrine of Apollo Grannus in Grand Vosges 17 Eusebius was aware of this vision or reports of it and refers in his own Panegyric of Constantine of 336 to tricennial crowns 18 bestowed by the hand of God in Christianity on Constantine augmenting the sway of his kingdom by long years 19 17 Battle of Milvian Bridge edit Main article Battle of the Milvian BridgeEusebius of Caesarea and other Christian sources record that Constantine experienced a dramatic series of events sometime between his father Constantius I s death in 306 and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge on 28 October 312 17 The battle secured Constantine s claim to the title of augustus in the West which he had assumed unilaterally when his father died 17 According to the Eusebius Life of Constantine Constantine saw a vision of a cross shaped trophy formed from light above the sun at midday 17 nbsp The Emblem of Christ Appearing to Constantine as imagined by Rubens 1622 Constantine s army sees a chi rho in the daytime sky About the time of the midday sun when the day was just turning he said he saw with his own eyes up in the sky and resting over the sun a cross shaped trophy formed from light and a text attached to it which said By this conquer toytῳ nika Amazement at the spectacle seized both him and the whole company of soldiers which was then accompanying him on a campaign he was conducting somewhere and witnessed the miracle Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 1 28 2 The Greek words Ἐn Toytῳ Nika in this sign conquer are often rendered in a Latin version in hoc signo vinces in this sign you will conquer 20 According to Eusebius Constantine also had a dream that same night 17 In the dream the Christ of God appeared to him with the sign which had appeared in the sky and urged him to make himself a copy of the sign which had appeared in the sky and to use this as a protection against the attacks of the enemy Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 1 29 Writing his Church History shortly after 313 Eusebius makes no mention of this story in that work and does not recount it until composing his posthumous biography of Constantine decades afterwards 17 Life of Constantine was written by Eusebius after Constantine had died and Eusebius admitted that he had heard the story from Constantine long after it had happened Lactantius writing 313 315 and around twenty years before Eusebius s Life also does not mention a vision in the sky 17 Instead Lactantius mentions only that Constantine s dream took place on the eve of the climactic battle on the Pons Milvius across the Tiber with the crucial detail that the sign was marked on the Constantinian soldiers shields 17 According to Lactantius nbsp Constantine s dream in a 9th century Byzantine manuscript nbsp Medallion issued by Constantine at Ticinum in 315 with chi rho on the emperor s crest and Romulus and Remus and the Lupa on his shield nbsp Late Roman sarcophagus with a combined cross and wreathed chi rho Constantine was advised in a dream to mark the heavenly sign of God on the shields of his soldiers and then engage in battle He did as he was commanded and by means of a letter X turned sideways with the top of its head bent around transversa X littera summo capite circumflexo he marked Christ on their shields Christum in scutis notat Armed with this sign the army took up its weapons Lactantius De Mortibus Persecutorum 44 5 6 nbsp Follis issued by Constantine at Constantinople in 337 with a chi rho on a labarum It is unclear from these sources what Constantine saw and what was marked on his army s shields 17 Eusebius s description of the daytime vision suggests a cross shaped either T or symbol whereas Lactantius s description suggests a staurogram although the crux ansata or the Egyptian hieroglyph ankh 𓋹 have been proposed as interpretations as well 17 All of these symbols were used by Christians in the 3rd and 4th centuries Eusebius concurs with Lactantius that a new device was added to Constantine s soldiers shields but does not connect this with the Battle of the Milvian Bridge saying only that the sign of the saving trophy was marked but not specifying when 21 17 Sometime after 317 Eusebius was permitted by Constantine probably either in 325 or in 335 to see a standard that was made according to the emperor s dreamt instructions during the civil war 17 He described it as A tall pole plated with gold had a transverse bar forming the shape of a cross Up at the extreme top a wreath woven of precious stones and gold had been fastened On it two letters imitating by its first characters the name Christ formed the monogram of the Saviour s title rho being intersected in the middle by chi From the transverse bar which was bisected by the pole hung suspended a cloth But the upright pole carried the golden head and shoulders portrait of the Godbeloved Emperor and likewise of his sons Eusebius of Caesarea Vita Constantini 1 31 1 2 This later description of Eusebius s written after 324 suggests a more elaborate symbol than does Lactantius s earlier text involving the Greek letters rho R and chi X ligatured as the chi rho a monogram of Ancient Greek xristos romanized khristos lit anointed referring to Jesus 17 Possibly Eusebius s description refers to a chi rho inside the loop of an ankh 22 Following the battle and the defeat and death of Maxentius Constantine became the undisputed emperor in the West and performed an adventus a ceremonial entrance to the city 17 Arriving inside Rome s walls he ignored the altars to the gods prepared on the Capitoline Hill and did not carry out the customary sacrifices to celebrate a general s victorious entry into Rome instead heading directly to the imperial palace 15 This is probably because the traditional Roman triumph concluding with the sacrifice to Jupiter Optimus Maximus at his temple on the Capitoline was traditionally celebrated after victory over Rome s enemies rather than after the conquest of the city by a claimant in a civil war 23 The Arch of Constantine for which numerous reliefs from earlier monuments depicting prior emperors sacrificing to various gods were re carved with the face of Constantine does not have an image of Constantine sacrificing to Jupiter although he is shown sacrificing to Apollo and to Hercules 23 Edict of Milan edit In 313 Constantine and Licinius announced that it was proper that the Christians and all others should have liberty to follow that mode of religion which to each of them appeared best 24 thereby granting tolerance to all religions including Christianity The Edict of Milan went a step further than the earlier Edict of Serdica by Galerius in 311 returning confiscated Church property This edict made the empire officially neutral with regard to religious worship it neither made the traditional religions illegal nor made Christianity the state religion as occurred later with the Edict of Thessalonica of 380 The Edict of Milan did however raise the stock of Christianity within the empire and reaffirmed the importance of religious worship to the welfare of the state 25 Most influential people in the empire especially high military officials had not been converted to Christianity and still participated in the traditional religions of Rome Constantine s rule exhibited at least a willingness to appease these factions The Roman coins minted up to eight years after the battle still bore the images of Roman gods 20 The monuments he first commissioned such as the Arch of Constantine contained no reference to Christianity 15 26 Patronage of the Church editSee also State church of the Roman Empire nbsp Hagia Eirene was the first church commissioned by Constantine in Constantinople and burned down in the Nika riots The present structure is 6th century The accession of Constantine was a turning point for early Christianity After his victory Constantine took over the role of patron of the Christian faith He supported the Church financially had a number of basilicas built granted privileges e g exemption from certain taxes to clergy promoted Christians to high ranking offices returned property confiscated during the Great Persecution of Diocletian 27 and endowed the church with land and other wealth 28 Between 324 and 330 Constantine built a new city New Rome at Byzantium on the Bosporos which would be named Constantinople for him Unlike old Rome the city began to employ overtly Christian architecture contained churches within the city walls and had no pre existing temples from other religions 29 nbsp Map of the Church and Empire in the East under Constantine c 330 AD In doing this however Constantine required those who had not converted to Christianity to pay for the new city 28 Christian chroniclers tell that it appeared necessary to Constantine to teach his subjects to give up their rites and to accustom them to despise their temples and the images contained therein 30 This led to the closure of temples because of a lack of support their wealth flowing to the imperial treasure 31 Constantine did not need to use force to implement this 28 It was the chronicler Theophanes who added centuries later that temples were annihilated but this was considered not true by contemporary historians 32 Constantine respected cultivated persons and his court was composed of older respected and honored men Men from leading Roman families who declined to convert to Christianity were denied positions of power yet still received appointments even up to the end of his life two thirds of his top government were non Christian citation needed Constantine s laws enforced and reflected his Christian attitudes Crucifixion was abolished for reasons of Christian piety but was replaced with hanging to demonstrate the preservation of Roman supremacy On March 7 321 Sunday which was sacred to Christians as the day of Christ s resurrection and to the Roman Sun God Sol Invictus was declared an official day of rest On that day markets were banned and public offices were closed 33 except for the purpose of freeing slaves 34 There were however no restrictions on performing farming work on Sundays which was the work of the great majority of the population 35 Some laws made during his reign were even humane in the modern sense and supported tolerance possibly inspired by his Christianity 36 a prisoner was no longer to be kept in total darkness but must be given the outdoors and daylight a condemned man was allowed to die in the arena but he could not be branded on his heavenly beautified face since God was supposed to have made man in his image but only on the feet 37 Publicly displayed gladiatorial games were ordered to be eliminated in 325 nbsp 4th century sardonyx cameo of Constantine crowned by the Tyche of Constantinople nbsp Gold 1 solidus multiple issued by Constantine at Thessaloniki in 327 with Constantine looking skywards and an armoured emperor carrying spear and a tropaion with bound captivesEarly Christian Bibles edit Main article Fifty Bibles of Constantine According to Eusebius in 331 Constantine had commissioned him to deliver fifty volumes of scriptures for the churches of Constantinople which were to be bound in leather and easily portable 38 Only three or four churches are known certainly to have existed in Constantine s reign but others appear to have been planned or established for which the scriptures were commissioned 38 The volumes were likely gospel books containing the Canonical Gospels of the Four Evangelists rather than complete Bibles with the entire Biblical canon which were very rare in antiquity 38 Athanasius Apol Const 4 recorded around 340 Alexandrian scribes preparing Bibles for Constans Little else is known It has been speculated that this may have provided motivation for canon lists and that Codex Vaticanus and Codex Sinaiticus are examples of these Bibles Together with the Peshitta and Codex Alexandrinus these are the earliest extant Christian Bibles 39 Church construction edit According to Socrates Scholasticus Constantine commissioned the construction of the first Church of Hagia Irene in Constantinople on the site now occupied by the Justinian church of the same name 38 It commemorated the peace won by Constantine and Crispus s victory over Licinius and Licinius II at the Battle of Chrysopolis in 324 its name the Church of the Holy Peace Ancient Greek Ἁgia Eἰrhnh romanized Hagia Eirḗne lit Holy Peace recalled the Altar of Peace Latin ara pacis built by Augustus the first deified Roman emperor 38 Two other large churches were dedicated to Saint Mocius and to Saint Acacius both worthies had supposedly been martyred in Byzantium during the Diocletianic Persecution 38 The Church of St Mocius was supposed to have included parts of a former temple of Zeus or Hercules though it is unlikely that such a temple existed on the site which was without the walls of the Constantinian city as well as of erstwhile Severan Byzantium 38 According to Eusebius Christian liturgies were also performed in Constantine s Mausoleum the site of which became the Church of the Holy Apostles although Eusebius does not mention any Byzantine church by name he reports that Christian sites were numerous inside the city and around it 38 Later tradition ascribed to Constantine the foundations in Constantinople of the Church of Saint Menas the Church of Saint Agathonicus the Church of Saint Michael at nearby Anaplous and the Church of Hagios Dynamis Ancient Greek Agios Dynamis romanized Hagios Dynamis lit Holy Power 38 Christian emperorship editEnforcement of doctrine edit The reign of Constantine established a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor in the Church Emperors considered themselves responsible to the gods for the spiritual health of their subjects and after Constantine they had a duty to help the Church define and maintain orthodoxy 40 The Church generally regarded the definition of doctrine as the responsibility of the bishops the emperor s role was to enforce doctrine root out heresy and uphold ecclesiastical unity 41 The emperor ensured that God was properly worshiped in his empire what proper worship orthodoxy and doctrines and dogma consisted of was for the Church to determine 42 Constantine had become a worshiper of the Christian God but he found that there were many opinions on that worship and indeed on who and what that God was In 316 Constantine was asked to adjudicate in a North African dispute of the Donatist sect who began by refusing obedience to any bishops who had yielded in any way to persecution later regarding all bishops but their own sect as utterly contaminated More significantly in 325 he summoned the First Council of Nicaea effectively the first ecumenical council unless the Council of Jerusalem is so classified 43 The Council of Nicaea is the first major attempt by Christians to define orthodoxy for the whole state Until Nicaea all previous Church councils had been local or regional synods affecting only portions of the Church Nicaea dealt primarily with the Arian controversy Constantine was torn between the Arian and Trinitarian camps After the Nicene council and against its conclusions he eventually recalled Arius from exile and banished Athanasius of Alexandria to Trier Just before his death in May 337 it is claimed that Constantine was baptised into Christianity Up until this time he had been a catechumen for most of his adult life He believed that if he waited to get baptized on his death bed he was in less danger of polluting his soul with sin and not getting to heaven He was baptized by his distant relative Arian Bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia or by Pope Sylvester I which is maintained by the Catholic Church the Coptic Orthodox Church the Antiochian Orthodox Church the Greek Orthodox Church the Russian Orthodox Church the Serbian Orthodox Church upon by many other Eastern Orthodox Nestorian Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches 44 45 46 47 48 49 During Eusebius of Nicomedia s time in the imperial court the Eastern court and the major positions in the Eastern Church were held by Arians or Arian sympathizers 50 With the exception of a short period of eclipse Eusebius enjoyed the complete confidence both of Constantine and Constantius II and was the tutor of Emperor Julian the Apostate 51 After Constantine s death his son and successor Constantius II was an Arian as was Emperor Valens nbsp Raphael s The Baptism of Constantine Suppression of other religions edit Main article Religious policies of Constantine the Great See also Christianization of the late Roman empire Constantine s position on the religions traditionally practiced in Rome evolved during his reign In fact his coinage and other official motifs until 325 had affiliated him with the pagan cult of Sol Invictus At first Constantine encouraged the construction of new temples 52 and tolerated traditional sacrifices 15 by the end of his reign he had begun to order the pillaging and tearing down of Roman temples 53 54 55 Beyond the limes east of the Euphrates the Sasanian rulers perennially at war with Rome had usually tolerated Christianity Constantine is said to have written to Shapur II in 324 and urged him to protect Christians under his rule 56 With the establishment of Christianity as the state religion of the Roman Empire Christians in Persia would be regarded as allies of Persia s ancient enemy According to an anonymous Christian account Shapur II wrote to his generals 57 58 You will arrest Simon chief of the Christians You will keep him until he signs this document and consents to collect for us a double tax and double tribute from the Christians for we Gods 59 have all the trials of war and they have nothing but repose and pleasure They inhabit our territory and agree with Caesar our enemy Shapur II A History of Christianity in Asia Beginnings to 1500Constantinian shift editConstantinian shift is a term used by some theologians and historians of antiquity to describe the political and theological aspects and outcomes of the 4th century process of Constantine s integration of the imperial government with the Church that began with the First Council of Nicaea 60 The term was popularized by the Mennonite theologian John H Yoder 61 The claim that there ever was a Constantinian shift has been disputed Peter Leithart argues that there was a brief ambiguous Constantinian moment in the fourth century but that there was no permanent epochal Constantinian shift 62 See also editConstantinianism Bishops of Rome under Constantine the Great Christian pacifism Labarum List of rulers who converted to Christianity Philip the Arab and ChristianityReferences edit a b Wendy Doniger ed Constantine I in Britannica Encyclopedia of World Religions Encyclopaedia Britannica 2006 p 262 a b Noel Lenski ed The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine Cambridge University Press 2006 Introduction ISBN 978 0 521 81838 4 a b Jones Arnold Hugh Martin 1978 1948 Constantine and the Conversion of Europe 1962 ed University of Toronto Press reprint 2003 Macmillan Teach Yourself History 1948 Medieval Academy of America Reprint for Teaching 1978 p 73 ISBN 978 0 8020 6369 4 Hans A Pohlsander The Emperor Constantine Routledge NY 2004 pp 82 84 ISBN 0 415 31938 2 Lenski Reign of Constantine The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine p 82 Gonzalez Justo 1984 The Story of Christianity Vol 1 Harper Collins p 176 ISBN 0 06 063315 8 Eusebius of Nicomedia Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 2018 12 18 Pohlsander The Emperor Constantine pp 78 79 Wylen Stephen M The Jews in the Time of Jesus An Introduction Paulist Press 1995 ISBN 0 8091 3610 4 Pp 190 192 Dunn James D G Jews and Christians The Parting of the Ways A D 70 to 135 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 8028 4498 7 Pp 33 34 Boatwright Mary Taliaferro amp Gargola Daniel J amp Talbert Richard John Alexander The Romans From Village to Empire Oxford University Press 2004 ISBN 0 19 511875 8 p 426 Bomgardner D L The Story of the Roman Amphitheatre New York Routledge 2000 p 142 Lactantius De Mortibus Persecutorum On the Deaths of the Persecutors ch 35 34 Galerius Edict of Toleration in Documents of the Christian Church trans and ed Henry Bettenson London Oxford University Press 1963 21 H A Drake Constantine and the Bishops The Politics of Intolerance Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2000 149 Brown Peter 18 December 2012 The Rise of Western Christendom Triumph and Diversity A D 200 1000 Making of Empire Vol 3 10th Anniversary Revised ed John Wiley amp Sons published 2012 ISBN 978 1118338841 Retrieved 2012 08 08 Constantine was not a young convert He was over 40 and an experienced politician when he finally declared himself a Christian He had had time to take the measure of the new religion and the difficulties which emperors had experienced in suppressing it He decided that Christianity was a religion fit for a new empire Peter Brown The Rise of Christendom 2nd edition Oxford Blackwell Publishing 2003 p 61 a b c d Peter Brown The Rise of Christendom 2nd edition Oxford Blackwell Publishing 2003 p 60 Holloway R Ross 2004 Constantine amp Rome Yale University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 300 10043 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Bardill Jonathan Bardill 2012 Constantine Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age Cambridge University Press pp 159 170 ISBN 978 0 521 76423 0 Eusebius In Praise of Constantine 6 1 Eusebius In Praise of Constantine 10 7 a b R Gerberding and J H Moran Cruz Medieval Worlds New York Houghton Mifflin Company 2004 p 55 Eusebius Vita Constantini 4 21 Bardill Jonathan Bardill 2012 Constantine Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age Cambridge University Press pp 192 193 ISBN 978 0 521 76423 0 a b Bardill Jonathan Bardill 2012 Constantine Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age Cambridge University Press pp 94 97 ISBN 978 0 521 76423 0 Lactantius De Mortibus Persecutorum On the Deaths of the Persecutors ch 48 Constantine and Licinius The Edict of Milan in Documents of the Christian Church trans and ed Henry Bettenson London Oxford University Press 1963 22 J R Curran Pagan City and Christian Capital Rome in the Fourth Century Oxford 2000 pp 70 90 R Gerberding and J H Moran Cruz Medieval Worlds New York Houghton Mifflin Company 2004 pp 55 56 a b c MacMullan 1984 49 R Gerberding and J H Moran Cruz Medieval Worlds New York Houghton Mifflin Company 2004 p 56 quoted after MacMullan 1984 49 MacMullan 1984 50 MacMullan 1984 141 Note 35 to Chapter V Theophanes Chron a 322 pp 108 117 Corpus Juris Civilis 3 12 2 https web archive org web 20130727022718 http www freewebs com vitaphone1 history justinianc html accessed 20 April 2016 Carson Don A From Sabbath to Lord s Day Wipf amp Stock Publishers Zondervan pp 252 98 ISBN 978 1579103071 MacMullen 1969 New Catholic Encyclopedia 1908 Theodosian Code Norwich John Julius A Short History of Byzantium Alfred A Knopf 1997 p 8 ISBN 0 679 77269 3 Miles Margaret Ruth The Word Made Flesh A History of Christian Thought Blackwell Publishing 2004 p 70 ISBN 1 4051 0846 0 a b c d e f g h i Bardill Jonathan Bardill 2012 Constantine Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age Cambridge University Press pp 251 55 ISBN 978 0 521 76423 0 The Canon Debate McDonald amp Sanders editors 2002 pp 414 15 for the entire paragraph Richards Jeffrey The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476 752 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1979 pp 14 15 Richards Jeffrey The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476 752 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1979 p 15 Richards Jeffrey The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476 752 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1979 p 16 Pre Ecumenical councils include the Council of Rome 155 Second Council of Rome 193 Council of Ephesus 193 Council of Carthage 251 Council of Iconium 258 Council of Antioch 264 Council of Elvira 306 Council of Carthage 311 Council of Ancyra 314 Council of Arles 314 and the Council of Neo Caesarea 315 St Sylvester Pope The Departure of St Silvester Pope of Rome St Takla Haymanout Coptic Orthodox Website Retrieved 24 June 2022 January 2014 St Sylvester Pope of Rome V Rev Fr Thaddaeus Hardenbrook Emperor Constantine the Great 306 337 The Importance of His Faith in the History of the Church Emperor Constantine the Great 306 337 The Importance of His Faith in the History of the Church Velomirovic Nikolai St Constantine Equal to the Apostles The Prologue of Ochrid Serbian Orthodox Church Diocese of Western America May 21 1999 Drake Constantine and the Bishops pp 395 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Eusebius of Nicomedia Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Gerberding R and J H Moran Cruz Medieval Worlds New York Houghton Mifflin Company 2004 p 28 R MacMullen Christianizing The Roman Empire A D 100 400 Yale University Press 1984 ISBN 0 300 03642 6 A History of the Church Philip Hughes Sheed amp Ward rev ed 1949 vol I chapter 6 1 Archived 2018 12 23 at the Wayback Machine Eusebius Pamphilius and Schaff Philip Editor and McGiffert Rev Arthur Cushman Ph D Translator NPNF2 01 Eusebius Pamphilius Church History Life of Constantine Oration in Praise of Constantine Archived 2018 04 17 at the Wayback Machine quote he razed to their foundations those of them which had been the chief objects of superstitious reverence Eusebius vita Constantini IV 8 13 Moffett Samuel H 1992 A History of Christianity in Asia Beginnings to 1500 p 140 After Constantine gnosis org Retrieved 2017 07 11 In general there is a silence of the Perso Arab and classical historians on any claim by Iranian kings to divinity The Cambridge history of Iran The Seleucid Parthian and Sasanian Volume 1 p xxxiii Clapp Rodney 1996 A Peculiar People InterVarsity Press p 23 What might be called the Constantinian shift began around the year 200 and took more than two hundred years to grow and unfold to full bloom e g in Yoder John H 1996 Is There Such a Thing as Being Ready for Another Millennium In Miroslav Volf Carmen Krieg Thomas Kucharz eds The Future of Theology Essays in Honor of Jurgen Moltmann Eerdmanns p 65 The most impressive transitory change underlying our common experience one that some thought was a permanent lunge forward in salvation history was the so called Constantinian shift Peter Leithart Defending Constantine The Twilight of an Empire and the Dawn of Christendom p 287 Further reading editEusebius Life of Constantine Introduction translation and commentary by Averil Cameron and Stuart G Hall Oxford Clarendon Press 1999 Ramsay MacMullen Christianizing The Roman Empire A D 100 400 Yale University Press 1984 ISBN 0 300 03642 6 External links editThe Full Text of the Edict of Milan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constantine the Great and Christianity amp oldid 1202835671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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