fbpx
Wikipedia

History of early Christianity

Early Christianity (up to the First Council of Nicaea in 325) spread from the Levant, across the Roman Empire, and beyond. Originally, this progression was closely connected to already established Jewish centers in the Holy Land and the Jewish diaspora. The first followers of Christianity were Jews who had converted to the faith, i.e. Jewish Christians.

The Apostolic sees claim to have been founded by one or more of the apostles of Jesus, who are said to have dispersed from Jerusalem sometime after the crucifixion of Jesus, c. 26–36, perhaps following the Great Commission. Early Christians gathered in small private homes,[1] known as house churches, but a city's whole Christian community would also be called a church – the Greek noun ἐκκλησία (ekklesia) literally means assembly, gathering, or congregation[2][3] but is translated as church in most English translations of the New Testament.

Many early Christians were merchants and others who had practical reasons for traveling to North Africa, Asia Minor, Arabia, the Balkans and other places.[4][5][6] Over 40 such communities were established by the year 100,[5][6] many in Anatolia, also known as Asia Minor, such as the Seven churches of Asia. By the end of the first century, Christianity had already spread to Rome, Armenia, Greece and Syria, serving as foundations for the expansive spread of Christianity, eventually throughout the world.

Eastern Roman Empire

Jerusalem

 
The Cenacle on Mount Zion, claimed to be the location of the Last Supper and Pentecost. Bargil Pixner[7] claims the original Church of the Apostles is located under the current structure.
 
A diagram of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre based on a German documentary. The church is claimed to be at the site of Calvary and the Tomb of Jesus.

Jerusalem was the first center of the church, according to the Book of Acts, and according to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the location of "the first Christian church".[8] The apostles lived and taught there for some time after Pentecost.[9] James, the brother of Jesus was a leader in the church, and his other kinsmen likely held leadership positions in the surrounding area after the destruction of the city until its rebuilding as Aelia Capitolina, c. 130, when all Jews were banished from the city.[9]

In about 50, Barnabas and Paul went to Jerusalem to meet with the "pillars of the church",[10] James, Peter, and John. Later called the Council of Jerusalem, according to Pauline Christians, this meeting (among other things) confirmed the legitimacy of the mission of Barnabas and Paul to the gentiles, and the gentile converts' freedom from most Mosaic law, especially circumcision, which was repulsive to the Hellenic mind.[11] Thus, the Apostolic Decree (Acts 15:19–21) may be a major act of differentiation of the Church from its Jewish roots[12] although the decree may simply parallel Jewish Noahide Law and thus be a commonality rather than a differential. In roughly the same time period Rabbinic Judaism made their circumcision requirement of Jewish boys even stricter.[13]

When Peter left Jerusalem after Herod Agrippa I tried to kill him, James appears as the principal authority.[14] Clement of Alexandria (c. 150–215) called him Bishop of Jerusalem.[14] A second-century church historian, Hegesippus, wrote that the Sanhedrin martyred him in 62.[14]

In 66, the Jews revolted against Rome.[9] After a brutal siege, Jerusalem fell in 70.[9] The city, including the Temple, was destroyed and the population was mostly killed or removed.[9] According to a tradition recorded by Eusebius and Epiphanius of Salamis, the Jerusalem church fled to Pella at the outbreak of the First Jewish Revolt.[15][16] According to Epiphanius of Salamis,[17] the Cenacle survived at least to Hadrian's visit in 130. A scattered population survived.[9] The Sanhedrin relocated to Jamnia.[18] Prophecies of the Second Temple's destruction are found in the synoptics,[19] specifically in the Olivet Discourse.

In the 2nd century, Hadrian rebuilt Jerusalem as a pagan city called Aelia Capitolina,[20] erecting statues of Jupiter and himself on the site of the former Jewish Temple, the Temple Mount. Bar Cochba led an unsuccessful revolt as a Messiah, but Christians refused to acknowledge him as such. When Bar Cochba was defeated, Hadrian barred Jews from the city, except for the day of Tisha B'Av, thus the subsequent Jerusalem bishops were gentiles ("uncircumcised") for the first time.[21]

The general significance of Jerusalem to Christians entered a period of decline during the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, it is traditionally believed the Jerusalem Christians waited out the Jewish–Roman wars (66–135) in Pella in the Decapolis. Jerusalem's bishops became suffragans (subordinates) of the Metropolitan bishop in nearby Caesarea,[22] Interest in Jerusalem resumed with the pilgrimage of Helena (the mother of Constantine the Great) to the Holy Land c. 326–328. According to the church historian Socrates of Constantinople,[23] Helena (with the assistance of Bishop Macarius of Jerusalem) claimed to have found the cross of Christ, after removing a Temple to Venus (attributed to Hadrian) that had been built over the site. (For that reason she is seen as the patron saint of archaeologists.) Jerusalem had received special recognition in Canon VII of Nicaea in 325.[24] The traditional founding date for the Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre (which guards the Christian Holy places in the Holy Land) is 313 which corresponds with the date of the Edict of Milan which legalized Christianity in the Roman Empire. Jerusalem was later named as one of the Pentarchy, but this was never accepted by the church of Rome.[25][26] See also East–West Schism#Prospects for reconciliation.

Antioch

 
The Church of St Peter near Antakya, Turkey, said to be the spot where Saint Peter first preached the Gospel in Roman Antioch.

Antioch, a major center of Hellenistic Greece, and the third-most important city of the Roman Empire,[27] then part of Syria Province, today a ruin near Antakya, Turkey, was where Christians were first called Christians[28] and also the location of the Incident at Antioch. It was the site of an early church, traditionally said to be founded by Peter who is considered the first bishop. The Gospel of Matthew and the Apostolic Constitutions may have been written there. The church father Ignatius of Antioch was its third bishop. The School of Antioch, founded in 270, was one of two major centers of early church learning. The Curetonian Gospels and the Syriac Sinaiticus are two early (pre-Peshitta) New Testament text types associated with Syriac Christianity. It was one of the three whose bishops were recognized at the First Council of Nicaea (325) as exercising jurisdiction over the adjoining territories.[29]

Alexandria

Alexandria, in the Nile delta, was established by Alexander the Great. Its famous libraries were a center of Hellenistic learning. The Septuagint translation of the Old Testament began there and the Alexandrian text-type is recognized by scholars as one of the earliest New Testament types. It had a significant Jewish population, of which Philo of Alexandria is probably its most known author.[30] It produced superior scripture and notable church fathers, such as Clement, Origen, and Athanasius;[31] also noteworthy were the nearby Desert Fathers. By the end of the era, Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch were accorded authority over nearby metropolitans. The Council of Nicaea in canon VI affirmed Alexandria's traditional authority over Egypt, Libya, and Pentapolis (North Africa) (the Diocese of Egypt) and probably granted Alexandria the right to declare a universal date for the observance of Easter[32] (see also Easter controversy). Some postulate, however, that Alexandria was not only a center of Christianity, but was also a center for Christian-based Gnostic sects.

Asia Minor

 
Map of Western Anatolia showing the "Seven Churches of Asia" and the Greek island of Patmos.

The tradition of John the Apostle was strong in Anatolia (the near-east, part of modern Turkey, the western part was called the Roman province of Asia). The authorship of the Johannine works traditionally and plausibly occurred in Ephesus, c. 90–110, although some scholars argue for an origin in Syria.[33] According to the New Testament, the Apostle Paul was from Tarsus (in south-central Anatolia) and his missionary journeys were primarily in Anatolia. The Book of Revelation, believed to be authored by John of Patmos (a Greek island about 30 miles off the Anatolian coast), mentions Seven churches of Asia. The First Epistle of Peter (1:1–2) is addressed to Anatolian regions. On the southeast shore of the Black Sea, Pontus was a Greek colony mentioned three times in the New Testament. Inhabitants of Pontus were some of the very first converts to Christianity. Pliny, governor in 110, in his letters, addressed Christians in Pontus. Of the extant letters of Ignatius of Antioch considered authentic, five of seven are to Anatolian cities, the sixth is to Polycarp. Smyrna was home to Polycarp, the bishop who reportedly knew the Apostle John personally, and probably also to his student Irenaeus. Papias of Hierapolis is also believed to have been a student of John the Apostle. In the 2nd century, Anatolia was home to Quartodecimanism, Montanism, Marcion of Sinope, and Melito of Sardis who recorded an early Christian Biblical canon. After the Crisis of the Third Century, Nicomedia became the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire in 286. The Synod of Ancyra was held in 314. In 325 the emperor Constantine convoked the first Christian ecumenical council in Nicaea and in 330 moved the capital of the reunified empire to Byzantium (also an early Christian center and just across the Bosphorus from Anatolia, later called Constantinople), referred to as the Byzantine Empire, which lasted till 1453.[34] The First seven Ecumenical Councils were held either in Western Anatolia or across the Bosphorus in Constantinople.

Caesarea

 
Remains of the ancient Roman aqueduct in Caesarea Maritima.

Caesarea, on the seacoast just northwest of Jerusalem, at first Caesarea Maritima, then after 133 Caesarea Palaestina, was built by Herod the Great, c. 25–13 BC, and was the capital of Iudaea Province (6–132) and later Palaestina Prima. It was there that Peter baptized the centurion Cornelius, considered the first gentile convert. Paul sought refuge there, once staying at the house of Philip the Evangelist, and later being imprisoned there for two years (estimated to be 57–59). The Apostolic Constitutions (7.46) state that the first Bishop of Caesarea was Zacchaeus the Publican but the Catholic Encyclopedia claims that: "...there is no record of any bishops of Caesarea until the second century. At the end of this century a council was held there to regulate the celebration of Easter."[35] According to another Catholic Encyclopedia article,[36] after Hadrian's siege of Jerusalem (c. 133), Caesarea became the metropolitan see with the bishop of Jerusalem as one of its "suffragans" (subordinates). Origen (d. 254) compiled his Hexapla there and it held a famous library and theological school, St. Pamphilus (d. 309) was a noted scholar-priest. St. Gregory the Wonder-Worker (d. 270), St. Basil the Great (d. 379), and St. Jerome (d. 420) visited and studied at the library which was later destroyed, probably by the Persians in 614 or the Saracens around 637.[37] The first major church historian, Eusebius of Caesarea, was a bishop, c. 314–339. F. J. A. Hort and Adolf von Harnack have argued that the Nicene Creed originated in Caesarea. The Caesarean text-type is recognized by many textual scholars as one of the earliest New Testament types.

Cyprus

 
St Paul's Pillar in Paphos

Paphos was the capital of the island of Cyprus during the Roman years and seat of a Roman commander. In 45 AD, the apostles Paul and Barnabas (according to the Catholic Encyclopedia "a native of the island") came to Cyprus and reached Paphos preaching the Word of Christ, see also Acts 13:4–13. According to Acts, the apostles were persecuted by the Romans but eventually succeeded in convincing the Roman commander Sergius Paulus to renounce his old religion in favour of Christianity. Barnabas is traditionally identified as the founder of the Cypriot Orthodox Church.[38]

Damascus

 
The Chapel of Saint Paul, said to be Bab Kisan where St. Paul escaped from Old Damascus

Damascus is the capital of Syria and claims to be the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world. According to the New Testament, the Apostle Paul was converted on the Road to Damascus. In the three accounts (Acts 9:1–20, 22:1–22, 26:1–24), he is described as being led by those he was traveling with, blinded by the light, to Damascus where his sight was restored by a disciple called Ananias (who, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia, is thought to have been the first Bishop of Damascus) then he was baptized.

Greece

Thessaloniki, the major northern Greek city where it is believed Christianity was founded by Paul, thus an Apostolic See, and the surrounding regions of Macedonia, Thrace, and Epirus, which also extend into the neighboring Balkan states of Albania and Bulgaria, were early centers of Christianity. Of note are Paul's Epistles to the Thessalonians and to Philippi, which is often considered the first contact of Christianity with Europe.[39] The Apostolic Father Polycarp wrote a letter to the Philippians, c. 125.

Nicopolis was a city in the Roman province of Epirus Vetus, today a ruin on the northern part of the western Greek coast. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: "St. Paul intended going there (Titus 3:12) and it is possible that even then it numbered some Christians among its population; Origen (c. 185–254) sojourned there for a while (Eusebius, Church History VI.16)."

Ancient Corinth, today a ruin near modern Corinth in southern Greece, was an early center of Christianity. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: "St. Paul preached successfully at Corinth, where he lived in the house of Aquila and Priscilla (Acts 18:1), where Silas and Timothy soon joined him. After his departure he was replaced by Apollo, who had been sent from Ephesus by Priscilla. The Apostle visited Corinth at least once more. He wrote to the Corinthians in 57 from Ephesus, and then from Macedonia in the same year, or in 58. The famous letter of St. Clement of Rome to the Corinthian church (about 96) exhibits the earliest evidence concerning the ecclesiastical primacy of the Roman Church. Besides St. Apollo, Lequien (II, 155) mentions forty-three bishops: among them, St. Sosthenes (?), the disciple of St. Paul, St. Dionysius; Paul, brother of St. Peter ..."[40]

Athens, the capital and largest city in Greece, was visited by Paul. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: Paul "came to Athens from Berœa of Macedonia, coming probably by water and landing in the Peiræevs, the harbour of Athens. This was about the year 53. Having arrived at Athens, he at once sent for Silas and Timotheos who had remained behind in Berœa. While awaiting the coming of these he tarried in Athens, viewing the idolatrous city, and frequenting the synagogue; for there were already Jews in Athens. ... It seems that a Christian community was rapidly formed, although for a considerable time it did not possess a numerous membership. The commoner tradition names the Areopagite as the first head and bishop of the Christian Athenians. Another tradition, however, gives this honour to Hierotheos the Thesmothete. The successors of the first bishop were not all Athenians by lineage. They are catalogued as Narkissos, Publius, and Quadratus. Narkissos is stated to have come from Palestine, and Publius from Malta. In some lists Narkissos is omitted. Quadratus is revered for having contributed to early Christian literature by writing an apology, which he addressed to the Emperor Hadrian. This was on the occasion of Hadrian's visit to Athens. Aristeides dedicated an apology to the emperor Hadrian around CE 134. Athenagoras also wrote an apology. In the second century there must have been a considerable community of Christians in Athens, for Hygeinos, Bishop of Rome, is said to have written a letter to the community in the year 139."

Gortyn on Crete was allied with Rome and was thus made capital of Roman Creta et Cyrenaica. St. Titus is believed to have been the first bishop. The city was sacked by the pirate Abu Hafs in 828.

Thrace

Paul the Apostle preached in Macedonia, and also in Philippi, located in Thrace on the Thracian Sea coast. According to Hippolytus of Rome, Andrew the Apostle preached in Thrace, on the Black Sea coast and along the lower course of the Danube River. The spread of Christianity among the Thracians and the emergence of centers of Christianity like Serdica (present day Sofia), Philippopolis (present day Plovdiv) and Durostorum (present day Silistra) was likely to have begun with these early Apostolic missions.[41] The first Christian monastery in Europe was founded in Thrace in 344 by Saint Athanasius near modern-day Chirpan, Bulgaria, following the Council of Serdica.[42]

Libya

Cyrene and the surrounding region of Cyrenaica or the North African "Pentapolis", south of the Mediterranean from Greece, the northeastern part of modern Libya, was a Greek colony in North Africa later converted to a Roman province. In addition to Greeks and Romans, there was also a significant Jewish population, at least up to the Kitos War (115–117). According to Mark 15:21, Simon of Cyrene carried Jesus' cross. Cyrenians are also mentioned in Acts 2:10, 6:9, 11:20, 13:1. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: "Lequien mentions six bishops of Cyrene, and according to Byzantine legend the first was St. Lucius (Acts 13:1); St. Theodorus suffered martyrdom under Diocletian;" (284–305).

Western Roman Empire

Rome

 
St. Peter's Basilica, believed to be the burial site of St. Peter, seen from the River Tiber

Exactly when Christians first appeared in Rome is difficult to determine. The Acts of the Apostles claims that the Jewish Christian couple Priscilla and Aquila had recently come from Rome to Corinth when, in about the year 50, Paul reached the latter city,[43] indicating that belief in Jesus in Rome had preceded Paul.

Historians consistently consider Peter and Paul to have been martyred in Rome under the reign of Nero[44][45][citation not found][46] in 64, after the Great Fire of Rome which, according to Tacitus, the Emperor blamed on the Christians.[47][48] In the second century Irenaeus of Lyons, reflecting the ancient view that the church could not be fully present anywhere without a bishop, recorded that Peter and Paul had been the founders of the Church in Rome and had appointed Linus as bishop.[49][50]

However, Irenaeus does not say that either Peter or Paul was "bishop" of the Church in Rome and several historians have questioned whether Peter spent much time in Rome before his martyrdom. While the church in Rome was already flourishing when Paul wrote his Epistle to the Romans to them from Corinth (c. 58)[51][citation not found] he attests to a large Christian community already there[48] and greets some fifty people in Rome by name,[52] but not Peter whom he knew. There is also no mention of Peter in Rome later during Paul's two-year stay there in Acts 28, about 60–62. Most likely he did not spend any major time at Rome before 58 when Paul wrote to the Romans, and so it may have been only in the 60s and relatively shortly before his martyrdom that Peter came to the capital.[53]

Oscar Cullmann sharply rejected the claim that Peter began the papal succession,[54] and concludes that while Peter was the original head of the apostles, Peter was not the founder of any visible church succession.[54][55]

 
A scene showing Christ Pantocrator from a Roman mosaic in the church of Santa Pudenziana in Rome, c. 410 AD

The original seat of Roman imperial power soon became a center of church authority, grew in power decade by decade, and was recognized during the period of the Seven Ecumenical Councils, when the seat of government had been transferred to Constantinople, as the "head" of the church.[56]

Rome and Alexandria, which by tradition held authority over sees outside their own province,[57] were not yet referred to as patriarchates.[58]

The earliest Bishops of Rome were all Greek-speaking, the most notable of them being: Pope Clement I (c. 88–97), author of an Epistle to the Church in Corinth; Pope Telesphorus (c. 126–136), probably the only martyr among them; Pope Pius I (c. 141–154), said by the Muratorian fragment to have been the brother of the author of the Shepherd of Hermas; and Pope Anicetus (c. 155–160), who received Saint Polycarp and discussed with him the dating of Easter.[48]

Pope Victor I (189–198) was the first ecclesiastical writer known to have written in Latin; however, his only extant works are his encyclicals, which would naturally have been issued in both Latin and Greek.[59]

Greek New Testament texts were translated into Latin early on, well before Jerome, and are classified as the Vetus Latina and Western text-type.

During the 2nd century, Christians and semi-Christians of diverse views congregated in Rome, notably Marcion and Valentinius, and in the following century there were schisms connected with Hippolytus of Rome and Novatian.[48]

The Roman church survived various persecutions. Among the prominent Christians executed as a result of their refusal to perform acts of worship to the Roman gods as ordered by emperor Valerian in 258 were Cyprian, bishop of Carthage.[60] The last and most severe of the imperial persecutions was that under Diocletian in 303; they ended in Rome, and the West in general, with the accession of Maxentius in 306.

Carthage

 
Early Christian quarter in ancient Carthage.

Carthage, in the Roman province of Africa, south of the Mediterranean from Rome, gave the early church the Latin fathers Tertullian[61] (c. 120 – c. 220) and Cyprian[62] (d. 258). Carthage fell to Islam in 698.

The Church of Carthage thus was to the Early African church what the Church of Rome was to the Catholic Church in Italy.[63] The archdiocese used the African Rite, a variant of the Western liturgical rites in Latin language, possibly a local use of the primitive Roman Rite. Famous figures include Saint Perpetua, Saint Felicitas, and their Companions (died c. 203), Tertullian (c. 155–240), Cyprian (c. 200–258), Caecilianus (floruit 311), Saint Aurelius (died 429), and Eugenius of Carthage (died 505). Tertullian and Cyprian are both considered Latin Church Fathers of the Latin Church. Tertullian, a theologian of part Berber descent, was instrumental in the development of trinitarian theology, and was the first to apply Latin language extensively in his theological writings. As such, Tertullian has been called "the father of Latin Christianity"[64][65] and "the founder of Western theology."[66] Carthage remained an important center of Christianity, hosting several councils of Carthage.

Southern Gaul

 
Amphithéâtre des Trois-Gaules, in Lyon. The pole in the arena is a memorial to the people killed during the persecution.

The Mediterranean coast of France and the Rhone valley, then part of Roman Gallia Narbonensis, were early centers of Christianity. Major Christian communities were found in Arles, Avignon, Vienne, Lyon, and Marseille (the oldest city in France). The Persecution in Lyon occurred in 177. The Apostolic Father Irenaeus from Smyrna of Anatolia was Bishop of Lyon near the end of the 2nd century and he claimed Saint Pothinus was his predecessor. The Council of Arles in 314 is considered a forerunner of the ecumenical councils. The Ephesine theory attributes the Gallican Rite to Lyon.

Italy outside Rome

Aquileia

The ancient Roman city of Aquileia at the head of the Adriatic Sea, today one of the main archaeological sites of Northern Italy, was an early center of Christianity said to be founded by Mark before his mission to Alexandria. Hermagoras of Aquileia is believed to be its first bishop. The Aquileian Rite is associated with Aquileia.

Milan

It is believed that the Church of Milan in northwest Italy was founded by the apostle Barnabas in the 1st century. Gervasius and Protasius and others were martyred there. It has long maintained its own rite known as the Ambrosian Rite attributed to Ambrose (born c. 330) who was bishop in 374–397 and one of the most influential ecclesiastical figures of the 4th century. Duchesne argues that the Gallican Rite originated in Milan.

Syracuse and Calabria

Syracuse was founded by Greek colonists in 734 or 733 BC, part of Magna Graecia. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: "Syracuse claims to be the second Church founded by St. Peter, after that of Antioch. It also claims that St. Paul preached there. ... In the times of St. Cyprian (the middle of the third century), Christianity certainly flourished at Syracuse, and the catacombs clearly show that this was the case in the second century." Across the Strait of Messina, Calabria on the mainland was also probably an early center of Christianity.[67]

Malta

 
St Paul's Islands near St. Paul's Bay, traditionally identified as the place where St Paul was shipwrecked

According to Acts, Paul was shipwrecked and ministered on an island which some scholars have identified as Malta (an island just south of Sicily) for three months during which time he is said to have been bitten by a poisonous viper and survived (Acts 27:39–42; Acts 28:1–11), an event usually dated c. AD 60. Paul had been allowed passage from Caesarea Maritima to Rome by Porcius Festus, procurator of Iudaea Province, to stand trial before the Emperor. Many traditions are associated with this episode, and catacombs in Rabat testify to an Early Christian community on the islands. According to tradition, Publius, the Roman Governor of Malta at the time of Saint Paul's shipwreck, became the first Bishop of Malta following his conversion to Christianity. After ruling the Maltese Church for thirty-one years, Publius was transferred to the See of Athens in 90 AD, where he was martyred in 125 AD. There is scant information about the continuity of Christianity in Malta in subsequent years, although tradition has it that there was a continuous line of bishops from the days of St. Paul to the time of Emperor Constantine.

Salona

Salona, the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea, was an early center of Christianity and today is a ruin in modern Croatia. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia it was where: "...Titus the pupil of St. Paul preached, where the followers of Jesus Christ first shed their blood as martyrs, and where beautiful examples of basilicas and other early Christian sculpture have been discovered." According to the Catholic Encyclopedia article on Dalmatia: "Salona became the centre from which Christianity spread. In Pannonia St. Andronicus founded the See of Syrmium (Mitrovica) and later those of Siscia and Mursia. The cruel persecution under Diocletian, who was a Dalmatian by birth, left numerous traces in Old Dalmatia and Pannonia. St. Quirinus, Bishop of Siscia, died a martyr A.D. 303. St. Jerome was born in Strido, a city on the border of Pannonia and Dalmatia."

Seville

Seville was the capital of Hispania Baetica or the Roman province of southern Spain. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia: "...the origin of the diocese goes back to Apostolic times, or at least to the first century of our era. St. Gerontius, Bishop of Italica (about four miles from Hispalis or Seville), preached in Baetica in Apostolic times, and without doubt must have left a pastor of its own to Seville. It is certain that in 303, when Sts. Justa and Rufina, the potters, suffered martyrdom for refusing to adore the idol Salambo, there was a Bishop of Seville, Sabinus, who assisted at the Council of Illiberis (287). Before that time Marcellus had been bishop, as appears from a catalogue of the ancient prelates of Seville preserved in the 'Codex Emilianensis', a manuscript of the year 1000, now in the Escorial. When Constantine brought peace to the Church [313] Evodius was Bishop of Seville; he set himself to rebuild the ruined churches, among them he appears to have built the church of San Vicente, perhaps the first cathedral of Seville." Early Christianity also spread from the Iberian peninsula south across the Strait of Gibraltar into Roman Mauretania Tingitana, of note is Marcellus of Tangier who was martyred in 298.

Roman Britain

Christianity reached Roman Britain by the third century of the Christian era, the first recorded martyrs in Britain being St. Alban of Verulamium and Julius and Aaron of Caerleon, during the reign of Diocletian (284–305). Gildas dated the faith's arrival to the latter part of the reign of Tiberius, although stories connecting it with Joseph of Arimathea, Lucius, or Fagan are now generally considered pious forgeries. Restitutus, Bishop of London, is recorded as attending the 314 Council of Arles, along with the Bishop of Lincoln and Bishop of York.

Christianisation intensified and evolved into Celtic Christianity after the Romans left Britain c. 410.

Outside the Roman Empire

Christianity also spread beyond the Roman Empire during the early Christian period.

Armenia

It is accepted that Armenia became the first country to adopt Christianity as its state religion. Although it has long been claimed that Armenia was the first Christian kingdom, according to some scholars this has relied on a source by Agathangelos titled "The History of the Armenians", which has recently been redated, casting some doubt.[68]

Christianity became the official religion of Armenia in 301,[69] when it was still illegal in the Roman Empire. According to church tradition,[citation needed] the Armenian Apostolic Church was founded by Gregory the Illuminator of the late third – early fourth centuries while they trace their origins to the missions of Bartholomew the Apostle and Thaddeus (Jude the Apostle) in the 1st century.

Georgia

According to Orthodox tradition, Christianity was first preached in Georgia by the Apostles Simon and Andrew in the 1st century. It became the state religion of Kartli (Iberia) in 319. The conversion of Kartli to Christianity is credited to a Greek lady called St. Nino of Cappadocia. The Georgian Orthodox Church, originally part of the Church of Antioch, gained its autocephaly and developed its doctrinal specificity progressively between the 5th and 10th centuries. The Bible was also translated into Georgian in the 5th century, as the Georgian alphabet was developed for that purpose.

India

 
According to tradition, the Indo-Parthian king Gondophares was proselytized by St Thomas, who continued on to southern India, and possibly as far as Malaysia or China.

According to Eusebius' record, the apostles Thomas and Bartholomew were assigned to Parthia (modern Iran) and India.[70][71] By the time of the establishment of the Second Persian Empire (AD 226), there were bishops of the Church of the East in northwest India, Afghanistan and Baluchistan (including parts of Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan), with laymen and clergy alike engaging in missionary activity.[70]

An early third-century Syriac work known as the Acts of Thomas[70] connects the apostle's Indian ministry with two kings, one in the north and the other in the south. According to the Acts, Thomas was at first reluctant to accept this mission, but the Lord appeared to him in a night vision and compelled him to accompany an Indian merchant, Abbanes (or Habban), to his native place in northwest India. There, Thomas found himself in the service of the Indo-Parthian King, Gondophares. The Apostle's ministry resulted in many conversions throughout the kingdom, including the king and his brother.[70]

Thomas thereafter went south to Kerala and baptized the natives, whose descendants form the Saint Thomas Christians or the Syrian Malabar Nasranis.[72]

Piecing together the various traditions, the story suggests that Thomas left northwest India when invasion threatened, and traveled by vessel to the Malabar Coast along the southwestern coast of the Indian continent, possibly visiting southeast Arabia and Socotra en route, and landing at the former flourishing port of Muziris on an island near Cochin in 52. From there he preached the gospel throughout the Malabar Coast. The various churches he founded were located mainly on the Periyar River and its tributaries and along the coast. He preached to all classes of people and had about 170 converts, including members of the four principal castes. Later, stone crosses were erected at the places where churches were founded, and they became pilgrimage centres. In accordance with apostolic custom, Thomas ordained teachers and leaders or elders, who were reported to be the earliest ministry of the Malabar church.

Thomas next proceeded overland to the Coromandel Coast in southeastern India, and ministered in what is now Chennai (earlier Madras), where a local king and many people were converted. One tradition related that he went from there to China via Malacca in Malaysia, and after spending some time there, returned to the Chennai area.[73] Apparently his renewed ministry outraged the Brahmins, who were fearful lest Christianity undermine their social caste system. So according to the Syriac version of the Acts of Thomas, Mazdai, the local king at Mylapore, after questioning the Apostle condemned him to death about the year AD 72. Anxious to avoid popular excitement, the King ordered Thomas conducted to a nearby mountain, where, after being allowed to pray, he was then stoned and stabbed to death with a lance wielded by an angry Brahmin.[70][72]

Mesopotamia and the Parthian Empire

Edessa, which was held by Rome from 116 to 118 and 212 to 214, but was mostly a client kingdom associated either with Rome or Persia, was an important Christian city. Shortly after 201 or even earlier, its royal house became Christian.[74]

Edessa (now Şanlıurfa) in northwestern Mesopotamia was from apostolic times the principal center of Syriac-speaking Christianity. it was the capital of an independent kingdom from 132 BC to AD 216, when it became tributary to Rome. Celebrated as an important centre of Greco-Syrian culture, Edessa was also noted for its Jewish community, with proselytes in the royal family. Strategically located on the main trade routes of the Fertile Crescent, it was easily accessible from Antioch, where the mission to the Gentiles was inaugurated. When early Christians were scattered abroad because of persecution, some found refuge at Edessa. Thus the Edessan church traced its origin to the Apostolic Age (which may account for its rapid growth), and Christianity even became the state religion for a time.

The Church of the East had its inception at a very early date in the buffer zone between the Parthian and Roman Empires in Upper Mesopotamia, known as the Assyrian Church of the East. The vicissitudes of its later growth were rooted in its minority status in a situation of international tension. The rulers of the Parthian Empire (250 BC – AD 226) were on the whole tolerant in spirit, and with the older faiths of Babylonia and Assyria in a state of decay, the time was ripe for a new and vital faith. The rulers of the Second Persian empire (226–640) also followed a policy of religious toleration to begin with, though later they gave Christians the same status as a subject race. However, these rulers also encouraged the revival of the ancient Persian dualistic faith of Zoroastrianism and established it as the state religion, with the result that the Christians were increasingly subjected to repressive measures. Nevertheless, it was not until Christianity became the state religion in the West (380) that enmity toward Rome was focused on the Eastern Christians. After the Muslim conquest in the 7th century, the caliphate tolerated other faiths but forbade proselytism and subjected Christians to heavy taxation.

The missionary Addai evangelized Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) about the middle of the 2nd century. An ancient legend recorded by Eusebius (AD 260–340) and also found in the Doctrine of Addai (c. AD 400) (from information in the royal archives of Edessa) describes how King Abgar V of Edessa communicated to Jesus, requesting he come and heal him, to which appeal he received a reply. It is said that after the resurrection, Thomas sent Addai (or Thaddaeus), to the king, with the result that the city was won to the Christian faith. In this mission he was accompanied by a disciple, Mari, and the two are regarded as co-founders of the church, according to the Liturgy of Addai and Mari (c. AD 200), which is still the normal liturgy of the Assyrian church. The Doctrine of Addai further states that Thomas was regarded as an apostle of the church in Edessa.[70]

Addai, who became the first bishop of Edessa, was succeeded by Aggai, then by Palut, who was ordained about 200 by Serapion of Antioch. Thence came to us in the 2nd century the famous Peshitta, or Syriac translation of the Old Testament; also Tatian's Diatessaron, which was compiled about 172 and in common use until St. Rabbula, Bishop of Edessa (412–435), forbade its use. This arrangement of the four canonical gospels as a continuous narrative, whose original language may have been Syriac, Greek, or even Latin, circulated widely in Syriac-speaking Churches.[75]

A Christian council was held at Edessa as early as 197.[76] In 201 the city was devastated by a great flood, and the Christian church was destroyed.[77] In 232, the Syriac Acts were written supposedly on the event of the relics of the Apostle Thomas being handed to the church in Edessa. Under Roman domination many martyrs suffered at Edessa: Sts. Scharbîl and Barsamya, under Decius; Sts. Gûrja, Schâmôna, Habib, and others under Diocletian. In the meanwhile Christian priests from Edessa had evangelized Eastern Mesopotamia and Persia, and established the first churches in the kingdom of the Sasanians.[78] Atillâtiâ, Bishop of Edessa, assisted at the First Council of Nicaea (325).

Persia and Central Asia

By the latter half of the 2nd century, Christianity had spread east throughout Media, Persia, Parthia, and Bactria. The twenty bishops and many presbyters were more of the order of itinerant missionaries, passing from place to place as Paul did and supplying their needs with such occupations as merchant or craftsman. By AD 280 the metropolis of Seleucia assumed the title of "Catholicos" and in AD 424 a council of the church at Seleucia elected the first patriarch to have jurisdiction over the whole church of the East. The seat of the Patriarchate was fixed at Seleucia-Ctesiphon, since this was an important point on the East-West trade routes which extended both to India and China, Java and Japan. Thus the shift of ecclesiastical authority was away from Edessa, which in AD 216 had become tributary to Rome. the establishment of an independent patriarchate with nine subordinate metropoli contributed to a more favourable attitude by the Persian government, which no longer had to fear an ecclesiastical alliance with the common enemy, Rome.

By the time that Edessa was incorporated into the Persian Empire in 258, the city of Arbela, situated on the Tigris in what is now Iraq, had taken on more and more the role that Edessa had played in the early years, as a centre from which Christianity spread to the rest of the Persian Empire.[79]

Bardaisan, writing about 196, speaks of Christians throughout Media, Parthia and Bactria (modern-day Afghanistan)[80] and, according to Tertullian (c. 160–230), there were already a number of bishoprics within the Persian Empire by 220.[79] By 315, the bishop of SeleuciaCtesiphon had assumed the title "Catholicos".[79] By this time, neither Edessa nor Arbela was the centre of the Church of the East anymore; ecclesiastical authority had moved east to the heart of the Persian Empire.[79] The twin cities of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, well-situated on the main trade routes between East and West, became, in the words of John Stewart, "a magnificent centre for the missionary church that was entering on its great task of carrying the gospel to the far east".[81]

During the reign of Shapur II of the Sasanian Empire, he was not initially hostile to his Christian subjects, who were led by Shemon Bar Sabbae, the Patriarch of the Church of the East, however, the conversion of Constantine the Great to Christianity caused Shapur to start distrusting his Christian subjects. He started seeing them as agents of a foreign enemy. The wars between the Sasanian and Roman empires turned Shapur's mistrust into hostility. After the death of Constantine, Shapur II, who had been preparing for a war against the Romans for several years, imposed a double tax on his Christian subjects to finance the conflict. Shemon, however, refused to pay the double tax. Shapur started pressuring Shemon and his clergy to convert to Zoroastrianism, which they refused to do. It was during this period the 'cycle of the martyrs' began during which 'many thousands of Christians' were put to death. During the following years, Shemon's successors, Shahdost and Barba'shmin, were also martyred.

A near-contemporary 5th-century Christian work, the Ecclesiastical History of Sozomen, contains considerable detail on the Persian Christians martyred under Shapur II. Sozomen estimates the total number of Christians killed as follows:

The number of men and women whose names have been ascertained, and who were martyred at this period, has been computed to be upwards of sixteen thousand, while the multitude of martyrs whose names are unknown was so great that the Persians, the Syrians, and the inhabitants of Edessa, have failed in all their efforts to compute the number.

— Sozomen, in his Ecclesiastical History, Book II, Chapter XIV[82]

Arabian Peninsula

To understand the penetration of the Arabian peninsula by the Christian gospel, it is helpful to distinguish between the Bedouin nomads of the interior, who were chiefly herdsmen and unreceptive to foreign control, and the inhabitants of the settled communities of the coastal areas and oases, who were either middlemen traders or farmers and were receptive to influences from abroad. Christianity apparently gained its strongest foothold in the ancient center of Semitic civilization in South-west Arabia or Yemen (sometimes known as Seba or Sheba, whose queen visited Solomon). Because of geographic proximity, acculturation with Ethiopia was always strong, and the royal family traces its ancestry to this queen.

The presence of Arabians at Pentecost and Paul's three-year sojourn in Arabia suggest a very early gospel witness. A 4th-century church history, states that the apostle Bartholomew preached in Arabia and that Himyarites were among his converts. The Al-Jubail Church in what is now Saudi Arabia was built in the 4th century. Arabia's close relations with Ethiopia give significance to the conversion of the treasurer to the queen of Ethiopia, not to mention the tradition that the Apostle Matthew was assigned to this land.[70] Eusebius says that "one Pantaneous (c. A.D. 190) was sent from Alexandria as a missionary to the nations of the East", including southwest Arabia, on his way to India.[70]

Nubia

Christianity arrived early in Nubia. In the New Testament of the Christian Bible, a treasury official of "Candace, queen of the Ethiopians" returning from a trip to Jerusalem was baptised by Philip the Evangelist:

Then the Angel of the Lord said to Philip, Start out and go south to the road that leads down from Jerusalem to Gaza, which is desert. And he arose and went: And behold, a man of Ethiopia, an Eunuch of great authority under Candace, Queen of E-thi-o'pi-ans, who had the charge of all her treasure, and had come to Jerusalem to worship.[83]

Ethiopia at that time meant any upper Nile region. Candace was the name and perhaps, title for the Meroë or Kushite queens.

In the fourth century, bishop Athanasius of Alexandria consecrated Marcus as bishop of Philae before his death in 373, showing that Christianity had permanently penetrated the region. John of Ephesus records that a Monophysite priest named Julian converted the king and his nobles of Nobatia around 545 and another kingdom of Alodia converted around 569. By the 7th century Makuria expanded becoming the dominant power in the region so strong enough to halt the southern expansion of Islam after the Arabs had taken Egypt. After several failed invasions the new rulers agreed to a treaty with Dongola allowing for peaceful coexistence and trade. This treaty held for six hundred years allowing Arab traders introducing Islam to Nubia and it gradually supplanted Christianity. The last recorded bishop was Timothy at Qasr Ibrim in 1372.

See also

References

  1. ^ Paul, for example, greets a house church in Romans 16:5.
  2. ^ ἐκκλησία. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  3. ^ Bauer lexicon
  4. ^ Vidmar, The Catholic Church Through the Ages (2005), pp. 19–20
  5. ^ a b Hitchcock, Geography of Religion (2004), p. 281, quote: "By the year 100, more than 40 Christian communities existed in cities around the Mediterranean, including two in North Africa, at Alexandria and Cyrene, and several in Italy."
  6. ^ a b Bokenkotter, A Concise History of the Catholic Church (2004), p. 18, quote: "The story of how this tiny community of believers spread to many cities of the Roman Empire within less than a century is indeed a remarkable chapter in the history of humanity."
  7. ^ Pixner, Bargil (May–June 1990). "The Church of the Apostles found on Mount Zion". Biblical Archaeology Review. Vol. 16, no. 3. from the original on 9 March 2018 – via CenturyOne Foundation.
  8. ^ Jerusalem (A.D. 71–1099): "During the first Christian centuries the church at this place was the centre of Christianity in Jerusalem, "Holy and glorious Sion, mother of all churches" (Intercession in "St. James' Liturgy", ed. Brightman, p. 54). Saint Mark of syriac orthodox church is also known as last supper church and believe first christian church. "
  9. ^ a b c d e f "Jerusalem." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  10. ^ St. James the Less Catholic Encyclopedia: "Then we lose sight of James till St. Paul, three years after his conversion (A.D. 37), went up to Jerusalem. ... On the same occasion, the "pillars" of the Church, James, Peter, and John "gave to me (Paul) and Barnabas the right hands of fellowship; that we should go unto the Gentiles, and they unto the circumcision" (Galatians 2:9)."
  11. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia: Circumcision: In Apocryphal and Rabbinical Literature: "Contact with Grecian life, especially at the games of the arena [which involved nudity], made this distinction obnoxious to the Hellenists, or anti-nationalists; and the consequence was their attempt to appear like the Greeks by epispasm ("making themselves foreskins"; I Macc. i. 15; Josephus, "Ant." xii. 5, § 1; Assumptio Mosis, viii.; I Cor. vii. 18;, Tosef., Shab. xv. 9; Yeb. 72a, b; Yer. Peah i. 16b; Yeb. viii. 9a). All the more did the law-observing Jews defy the edict of Antiochus Epiphanes prohibiting circumcision (I Macc. i. 48, 60; ii. 46); and the Jewish women showed their loyalty to the Law, even at the risk of their lives, by themselves circumcising their sons."; Hodges, Frederick, M. (2001). "The Ideal Prepuce in Ancient Greece and Rome: Male Genital Aesthetics and Their Relation to Lipodermos, Circumcision, Foreskin Restoration, and the Kynodesme" (PDF). The Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 75 (Fall 2001): 375–405. doi:10.1353/bhm.2001.0119. PMID 11568485. S2CID 29580193. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
  12. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia: Baptism: "According to rabbinical teachings, which dominated even during the existence of the Temple (Pes. viii. 8), Baptism, next to circumcision and sacrifice, was an absolutely necessary condition to be fulfilled by a proselyte to Judaism (Yeb. 46b, 47b; Ker. 9a; 'Ab. Zarah 57a; Shab. 135a; Yer. Kid. iii. 14, 64d). Circumcision, however, was much more important, and, like baptism, was called a "seal" (Schlatter, "Die Kirche Jerusalems", 1898, p. 70). But as circumcision was discarded by Christianity, and the sacrifices had ceased, Baptism remained the sole condition for initiation into religious life. The next ceremony, adopted shortly after the others, was the imposition of hands, which, it is known, was the usage of the Jews at the ordination of a rabbi. Anointing with oil, which at first also accompanied the act of Baptism, and was analogous to the anointment of priests among the Jews, was not a necessary condition."
  13. ^ "peri'ah", (Shab. xxx. 6)
  14. ^ a b c "James, St." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  15. ^ Eusebius, Church History 3, 5, 3; Epiphanius, Panarion 29,7,7–8; 30, 2, 7; On Weights and Measures 15. On the flight to Pella see: Jonathan Bourgel, "'The Jewish Christians’ Move from Jerusalem as a pragmatic choice", in: Dan Jaffe (ed), Studies in Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity, (Leyden: Brill, 2010), pp. 107–138 (https://www.academia.edu/4909339/THE_JEWISH_CHRISTIANS_MOVE_FROM_JERUSALEM_AS_A_PRAGMATIC_CHOICE).
  16. ^ P. H. R. van Houwelingen, "Fleeing forward: The departure of Christians from Jerusalem to Pella", Westminster Theological Journal 65 (2003), 181–200.
  17. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Jerusalem (A.D. 71–1099): "Epiphanius (d. 403) says that when the Emperor Hadrian came to Jerusalem in 130 he found the Temple and the whole city destroyed save for a few houses, among them the one where the Apostles had received the Holy Ghost. This house, says Epiphanius, is "in that part of Sion which was spared when the city was destroyed" – therefore in the "upper part ("De mens. et pond.", cap. xiv). From the time of Cyril of Jerusalem, who speaks of "the upper Church of the Apostles, where the Holy Ghost came down upon them" (Catech., ii, 6; P.G., XXXIII), there are abundant witnesses of the place. A great basilica was built over the spot in the fourth century; the crusaders built another church when the older one had been destroyed by Hakim in 1010. It is the famous Coenaculum or Cenacle – now a Moslem shrine – near the Gate of David, and supposed to be David's tomb (Nebi Daud)."; Epiphanius' Weights and Measures at tertullian.org.14: "For this Hadrian..."
  18. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia: Academies in Palestine
  19. ^ Harris, Stephen L., Understanding the Bible. Palo Alto: Mayfield. 1985.
  20. ^ It was still known as Aelia at the time of the First Council of Nicaea, which marks the end of the Early Christianity period (Canon VII of the First Council of Nicaea).
  21. ^ Eusebius' History of the Church Book IV, chapter V, verses 3–4
  22. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Jerusalem (AD. 71–1099)
  23. ^ Socrates' Church History at CCEL.org: Book I, Chapter XVII: The Emperor's Mother Helena having come to Jerusalem, searches for and finds the Cross of Christ, and builds a Church.
  24. ^ Schaff's Seven Ecumenical Councils: First Nicaea: Canon VII: "Since custom and ancient tradition have prevailed that the Bishop of Aelia [i.e., Jerusalem] should be honoured, let him, saving its due dignity to the Metropolis, have the next place of honour."; "It is very hard to determine just what was the "precedence" granted to the Bishop of Aelia, nor is it clear which is the metropolis referred to in the last clause. Most writers, including Hefele, Balsamon, Aristenus and Beveridge consider it to be Cæsarea; while Zonaras thinks Jerusalem to be intended, a view recently adopted and defended by Fuchs; others again suppose it is Antioch that is referred to."
  25. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica "Quinisext Council". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved February 14, 2010. "The Western Church and the Pope were not represented at the council. Justinian, however, wanted the Pope as well as the Eastern bishops to sign the canons. Pope Sergius I (687–701) refused to sign, and the canons were never fully accepted by the Western Church".
  26. ^ Quinisext Canon 36 from Schaff's Seven Ecumenical Councils at ccel.org: "we decree that the see of Constantinople shall have equal privileges with the see of Old Rome, and shall be highly regarded in ecclesiastical matters as that is, and shall be second after it. After Constantinople shall be ranked the See of Alexandria, then that of Antioch, and afterwards the See of Jerusalem."
  27. ^ Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005, article Antioch
  28. ^ Acts 11:26
  29. ^ "Their jurisdiction extended over the adjoining territories ... The earliest bishops exercising such powers... were those of Rome (over the whole or part of Italy), Alexandria (over Egypt and Libya), and Antioch (over large parts of Asia Minor). These three were recognized by the Council of Nicaea (325)." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005, article patriarch (ecclesiastical)
  30. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia: Alexandria, Egypt – Ancient
  31. ^ According to the Catholic Encyclopedia article Alexandria: "An important seaport of Egypt, on the left bank of the Nile. It was founded by Alexander the Great to replace the small borough called Racondah or Rakhotis, 331 B.C. The Ptolemies, Alexander's successors on the throne of Egypt, soon made it the intellectual and commercial metropolis of the world. Cæsar who visited it 46 B.C. left it to Queen Cleopatra, but when Octavius went there in 30 B.C. he transformed the Egyptian kingdom into a Roman province. Alexandria continued prosperous under the Roman rule but declined a little under that of Constantinople. ... Christianity was brought to Alexandria by the Evangelist St. Mark. It was made illustrious by a lineage of learned doctors such as Pantænus, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen; it has been governed by a series of great bishops amongst whom Athanasius and Cyril must be mentioned."
  32. ^ Philip Schaff's History of the Christian Church, volume 3, section 79: "The Time of the Easter Festival": "...this was the second main object of the first ecumenical council in 325. The result of the transactions on this point, the particulars of which are not known to us, does not appear in the canons (probably out of consideration for the numerous Quartodecimanians), but is doubtless preserved in the two circular letters of the council itself and the emperor Constantine. [Socrates: Hist. Eccl. i. 9; Theodoret: H. E. i. 10; Eusebius: Vita Const ii. 17.]"
  33. ^ Brown, Raymond E. (1997). Introduction to the New Testament. New York: Anchor Bible. p. 334. ISBN 0-385-24767-2.
  34. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Asia Minor: Spread of Christianity in Asia Minor: "Asia Minor was certainly the first part of the Roman world to accept as a whole the principles and the spirit of the Christian religion, and it was not unnatural that the warmth of its conviction should eventually fire the neighbouring Armenia and make it, early in the fourth century, the first of the ancient states formally to accept the religion of Christ (Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., IX, viii, 2)."
  35. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Caesarea Palaestinae, perhaps an oversight, what does the New Catholic Encyclopedia say?; the "council" is most likely a reference to Theophilus, bishop of Caesarea, see also Eusebius' Church History Book V chapter 23.
  36. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Jerusalem (A.D. 71–1099): "As the rank of the various sees among themselves was gradually arranged according to the divisions of the empire, Caesarea became the metropolitan see; the Bishop of Ælia [Jerusalem as renamed by Hadrian] was merely one of its suffragans. The bishops from the siege under Hadrian (135) to Constantine (312) were:".
  37. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Caesarea Palaestinae
  38. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Barnabas
  39. ^ Philippi: Catholic Encyclopedia "Philippi was the first European town in which St. Paul preached the Faith. He arrived there with Silas, Timothy, and Luke about the end of 52 A.D., on the occasion of his second Apostolic voyage."
  40. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Corinth
  41. ^ "Early Christianity in Bulgarian Lands – Project HOP".
  42. ^ "The Saint Athanasius Monastery of Chirpan, the oldest cloister in Europe" (in Bulgarian). Bulgarian National Radio. 22 June 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2018.
  43. ^ Acts 18:1–2; The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3), article Priscilla, St
  44. ^ "Paul, St" Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  45. ^ Pennington, p. 2
  46. ^ St-Paul-Outside-the-Walls homepage July 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  47. ^ Historians debate whether or not the Roman government distinguished between Christians and Jews prior to Nerva's modification of the Fiscus Judaicus in 96. From then on, practising Jews paid the tax, Christians did not. 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, 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.;
  48. ^ a b c d The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3), article Rome (early Christian)
  49. ^ Irenaeus Against Heresies 3.3.2: the "...Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul; as also [by pointing out] the faith preached to men, which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops. ...The blessed apostles, then, having founded and built up the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate."
  50. ^ "Irenaeus Against Heresies 3.3.2". ...[the] Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul; as also [by pointing out] the faith preached to men, which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops. ...The blessed apostles, then, having founded and built up the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate.
  51. ^ Franzen 26
  52. ^ Romans 16
  53. ^ Brown, Raymond E.; Meier, John P. (1983). Antioch and Rome: New Testament Cradles of Christianity. Paulist Press. As for Peter, we have no knowledge at all of when he came to Rome and what he did there before he was martyred. Certainly he was not the original missionary who brought Christianity to Rome (and therefore not the founder of the church of Rome in that sense). There is no serious proof that he was the bishop (or local ecclesiastical officer) of the Roman church—a claim not made till the third century. Most likely he did not spend any major time at Rome before 58 when Paul wrote to the Romans, and so it may have been only in the 60s and relatively shortly before his martyrdom that Peter came to the capital.
  54. ^ a b "In the life of Peter there is no starting point for a chain of succession to the leadership of the church at large." While Cullman believed the Matthew 16:18 text is entirely valid and is in no way spurious, he says it cannot be used as "warrant of the papal succession."— "Religion: Peter & the Rock." Time, December 7, 1953. Accessed October 8, 2009
  55. ^ Cullman, Oscar "In the New Testament [Jerusalem] is the only church of which we hear that Peter stood at its head. Of other episcopates of Peter we know nothing certain. Concerning Antioch, indeed ... there is a tradition, first appearing in the course of the second century, according to which Peter was its bishop. The assertion that he was Bishop of Rome we first find at a much later time. From the second half of the second century we do possess texts that mention the apostolic foundation of Rome, and at this time, which is indeed rather late, this foundation is traced back to Peter and Paul, an assertion that cannot be supported historically. Even here, however, nothing is said as yet of an episcopal office of Peter."
  56. ^ Schaff's Seven Ecumenical Councils: The Seventh: Letter to Pope Hadrian: "Therefore, O most holy Head (Caput)", "And after this, may there be no further schism and separation in the one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, of which Christ our true God is the Head."; Pope Hadrian's letter: "the holy Catholic and Apostolic Roman Church your spiritual mother ... the head of all Churches"; Canon IV: "For Peter the supreme head (ἡ κερυφαία ἀκρότης) of the Apostles"; Letter to the Emperor and Empress: "Christ our God (who is the head of the Church)".
  57. ^ First Council of Nicaea 2008-09-15 at the Wayback Machine, canon VI
  58. ^ "Patriarch (ecclesiastical). A title dating from the 6th cent., for the bishops of the five chief sees of Christendom ... Their jurisdiction extended over the adjoining territories ... The earliest bishops exercising such powers, though not so named, were those of Rome (over the whole or part of Italy, Alexandria (over Egypt and Libya), and Antioch (over large parts of Asia Minor))" [Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005, article Patriarch (ecclesiastical)]. "Nobody can maintain that the bishops of Antioch and Alexandria were called patriarchs then, or that the jurisdiction they had then was co-extensive with what they had afterward, when they were so called" (ffoulkes, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities, quoted in Volume XIV of Philip Schaff's The Seven Ecumenical Councils).
  59. ^ Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005, article "Victor I, St"
  60. ^ Candida Moss (2013). The Myth of Persecution. HarperCollins. p. 153. ISBN 978-0-06-210452-6.
  61. ^ "Tertullian." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  62. ^ "Cyprian, St." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
  63. ^ Plummer, Alfred (1887). The Church of the Early Fathers: External History. Longmans, Green and Company. pp. 109. church of africa carthage.
  64. ^ Benham, William (1887). The Dictionary of Religion. Cassell. pp. 1013.
  65. ^ Ekonomou, Andrew J. (2007). Byzantine Rome and the Greek Popes: Eastern Influences on Rome and the Papacy from Gregory the Great to Zacharias, A.D. 590-752. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-7391-3386-6.
  66. ^ Gonzáles, Justo L. (2010). "The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation". The Story of Christianity. Vol. 1. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 91–93.
  67. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: Reggio di Calabria: "Through a misinterpretation of Acts 27:13, St. Paul was said to have preached the Gospel there, and to have consecrated his companion, St. Stephen, bishop; it is probable, however, that it was evangelized at an early period. The first bishop known is Mark, legate of Pope Sylvester at the Council of Nicaea (325)."
  68. ^ Portella, Mario Alexis; Woldegaber, O. Cist Abba Abraham Buruk (2012). Pringle, Brendan (ed.). Abyssinian Christianity: The First Christian Nation. Pismo Beach, California: BP Editing. ISBN 9780615652979.
  69. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-03. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  70. ^ a b c d e f g h A. E. Medlycott, India and The Apostle Thomas, pp. 18–71; M. R. James, Apocryphal New Testament, pp. 364–436; A. E. Medlycott, India and The Apostle Thomas, pp. 1–17, 213–97; Eusebius, History, chapter 4:30; J. N. Farquhar, The Apostle Thomas in North India, chapter 4:30; V. A. Smith, Early History of India, p. 235; L. W. Brown, The Indian Christians of St. Thomas, pp. 49–59.
  71. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 February 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  72. ^ a b James, M. R. (1966) "The Acts of Thomas" in The Apocryphal New Testament, pp. 365−77; 434−38. Oxford.
  73. ^ Breviary of the Mar Thoma Church in Malabar
  74. ^ von Harnack, Adolph (1905). The Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries. Williams & Norgate. p. 293. there is no doubt that even before 190 A.D. Christianity had spread vigorously within Edessa and its surroundings and that (shortly after 201 or even earlier?) the royal house joined the church
  75. ^ Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005, article Diatessaron
  76. ^ Eusebius of Caesarea, Historia Ecclesiastica, V, 23
  77. ^ Chronicon Edessenum, ad. an. 201
  78. ^ Christianity[permanent dead link] Encyclopædia Iranica
  79. ^ a b c d (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-04-25. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  80. ^ "We are Christians by the one name of the Messiah. As regards our customs our brethren abstain from everything that is contrary to their profession.... Parthian Christians do not take two wives.... Our Bactrian sisters do not practice promiscuity with strangers. Persians do not take their daughters to wife. Medes do not desert their dying relations or bury them alive. Christians in Edessa do not kill their wives or sisters who commit fornication but keep them apart and commit them to the judgement of God. Christians in Hatra do not stone thieves" (quoted in Mark Dickens: The Church of the East 2017-04-25 at the Wayback Machine).
  81. ^ John Stewart, Nestorian Missionary Enterprise (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1928)
  82. ^ Sozomen, Hermias (2018). Walford, Edward (ed.). The Ecclesiastical History of Sozomen. Merchantville, NJ: Evolution Publishing. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-935228-15-8.
  83. ^ Acts 8:26–27

Bibliography

  • Dunn, James D.G. Jews and Christians: The Parting of the Ways, AD 70 to 135. Pp 33–34. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing (1999). ISBN 0-8028-4498-7.
  • Esler, Philip F. The Early Christian World. Routledge (2004). ISBN 0-415-33312-1.
  • Pelikan, Jaroslav Jan. The Christian Tradition: The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition (100–600). University of Chicago Press (1975). ISBN 0-226-65371-4.
  • Stark, Rodney.The Rise of Christianity. Harper Collins Pbk. Ed edition 1997. ISBN 0-06-067701-5
  • Taylor, Joan E. Christians and the Holy Places: The Myth of Jewish-Christian Origins. Oxford University Press (1993). ISBN 0-19-814785-6.
  • Thiede, Carsten Peter. The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Jewish Origins of Christianity. Palgrabe Macmillan (2003). ISBN 1-4039-6143-3.

External links

  • (archived 1 September 2014)
  • PBS Frontline: The First Christians
  • First Christians and Rome
  • Biblical Archaeology Review (archived 7 January 2010)

history, early, christianity, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, september, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, temp. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early Christianity up to the First Council of Nicaea in 325 spread from the Levant across the Roman Empire and beyond Originally this progression was closely connected to already established Jewish centers in the Holy Land and the Jewish diaspora The first followers of Christianity were Jews who had converted to the faith i e Jewish Christians The Apostolic sees claim to have been founded by one or more of the apostles of Jesus who are said to have dispersed from Jerusalem sometime after the crucifixion of Jesus c 26 36 perhaps following the Great Commission Early Christians gathered in small private homes 1 known as house churches but a city s whole Christian community would also be called a church the Greek noun ἐkklhsia ekklesia literally means assembly gathering or congregation 2 3 but is translated as church in most English translations of the New Testament Many early Christians were merchants and others who had practical reasons for traveling to North Africa Asia Minor Arabia the Balkans and other places 4 5 6 Over 40 such communities were established by the year 100 5 6 many in Anatolia also known as Asia Minor such as the Seven churches of Asia By the end of the first century Christianity had already spread to Rome Armenia Greece and Syria serving as foundations for the expansive spread of Christianity eventually throughout the world Contents 1 Eastern Roman Empire 1 1 Jerusalem 1 2 Antioch 1 3 Alexandria 1 4 Asia Minor 1 5 Caesarea 1 6 Cyprus 1 7 Damascus 1 8 Greece 1 9 Thrace 1 10 Libya 2 Western Roman Empire 2 1 Rome 2 2 Carthage 2 3 Southern Gaul 2 4 Italy outside Rome 2 4 1 Aquileia 2 4 2 Milan 2 4 3 Syracuse and Calabria 2 5 Malta 2 6 Salona 2 7 Seville 2 8 Roman Britain 3 Outside the Roman Empire 3 1 Armenia 3 2 Georgia 3 3 India 3 4 Mesopotamia and the Parthian Empire 3 5 Persia and Central Asia 3 6 Arabian Peninsula 3 7 Nubia 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEastern Roman Empire EditSee also Eastern Christianity Jerusalem Edit See also Jerusalem in Christianity and Early bishops of Jerusalem The Cenacle on Mount Zion claimed to be the location of the Last Supper and Pentecost Bargil Pixner 7 claims the original Church of the Apostles is located under the current structure A diagram of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre based on a German documentary The church is claimed to be at the site of Calvary and the Tomb of Jesus Jerusalem was the first center of the church according to the Book of Acts and according to the Catholic Encyclopedia the location of the first Christian church 8 The apostles lived and taught there for some time after Pentecost 9 James the brother of Jesus was a leader in the church and his other kinsmen likely held leadership positions in the surrounding area after the destruction of the city until its rebuilding as Aelia Capitolina c 130 when all Jews were banished from the city 9 In about 50 Barnabas and Paul went to Jerusalem to meet with the pillars of the church 10 James Peter and John Later called the Council of Jerusalem according to Pauline Christians this meeting among other things confirmed the legitimacy of the mission of Barnabas and Paul to the gentiles and the gentile converts freedom from most Mosaic law especially circumcision which was repulsive to the Hellenic mind 11 Thus the Apostolic Decree Acts 15 19 21 may be a major act of differentiation of the Church from its Jewish roots 12 although the decree may simply parallel Jewish Noahide Law and thus be a commonality rather than a differential In roughly the same time period Rabbinic Judaism made their circumcision requirement of Jewish boys even stricter 13 When Peter left Jerusalem after Herod Agrippa I tried to kill him James appears as the principal authority 14 Clement of Alexandria c 150 215 called him Bishop of Jerusalem 14 A second century church historian Hegesippus wrote that the Sanhedrin martyred him in 62 14 In 66 the Jews revolted against Rome 9 After a brutal siege Jerusalem fell in 70 9 The city including the Temple was destroyed and the population was mostly killed or removed 9 According to a tradition recorded by Eusebius and Epiphanius of Salamis the Jerusalem church fled to Pella at the outbreak of the First Jewish Revolt 15 16 According to Epiphanius of Salamis 17 the Cenacle survived at least to Hadrian s visit in 130 A scattered population survived 9 The Sanhedrin relocated to Jamnia 18 Prophecies of the Second Temple s destruction are found in the synoptics 19 specifically in the Olivet Discourse In the 2nd century Hadrian rebuilt Jerusalem as a pagan city called Aelia Capitolina 20 erecting statues of Jupiter and himself on the site of the former Jewish Temple the Temple Mount Bar Cochba led an unsuccessful revolt as a Messiah but Christians refused to acknowledge him as such When Bar Cochba was defeated Hadrian barred Jews from the city except for the day of Tisha B Av thus the subsequent Jerusalem bishops were gentiles uncircumcised for the first time 21 The general significance of Jerusalem to Christians entered a period of decline during the persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire According to the Catholic Encyclopedia it is traditionally believed the Jerusalem Christians waited out the Jewish Roman wars 66 135 in Pella in the Decapolis Jerusalem s bishops became suffragans subordinates of the Metropolitan bishop in nearby Caesarea 22 Interest in Jerusalem resumed with the pilgrimage of Helena the mother of Constantine the Great to the Holy Land c 326 328 According to the church historian Socrates of Constantinople 23 Helena with the assistance of Bishop Macarius of Jerusalem claimed to have found the cross of Christ after removing a Temple to Venus attributed to Hadrian that had been built over the site For that reason she is seen as the patron saint of archaeologists Jerusalem had received special recognition in Canon VII of Nicaea in 325 24 The traditional founding date for the Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre which guards the Christian Holy places in the Holy Land is 313 which corresponds with the date of the Edict of Milan which legalized Christianity in the Roman Empire Jerusalem was later named as one of the Pentarchy but this was never accepted by the church of Rome 25 26 See also East West Schism Prospects for reconciliation Antioch Edit The Church of St Peter near Antakya Turkey said to be the spot where Saint Peter first preached the Gospel in Roman Antioch See also School of Antioch Patriarch of Antioch and Antiochene Rite Antioch a major center of Hellenistic Greece and the third most important city of the Roman Empire 27 then part of Syria Province today a ruin near Antakya Turkey was where Christians were first called Christians 28 and also the location of the Incident at Antioch It was the site of an early church traditionally said to be founded by Peter who is considered the first bishop The Gospel of Matthew and the Apostolic Constitutions may have been written there The church father Ignatius of Antioch was its third bishop The School of Antioch founded in 270 was one of two major centers of early church learning The Curetonian Gospels and the Syriac Sinaiticus are two early pre Peshitta New Testament text types associated with Syriac Christianity It was one of the three whose bishops were recognized at the First Council of Nicaea 325 as exercising jurisdiction over the adjoining territories 29 Alexandria Edit See also Alexandrian school Catechetical School of Alexandria Bishop of Alexandria Egypt Roman province Christian Egypt and Alexandrian Rite Alexandria in the Nile delta was established by Alexander the Great Its famous libraries were a center of Hellenistic learning The Septuagint translation of the Old Testament began there and the Alexandrian text type is recognized by scholars as one of the earliest New Testament types It had a significant Jewish population of which Philo of Alexandria is probably its most known author 30 It produced superior scripture and notable church fathers such as Clement Origen and Athanasius 31 also noteworthy were the nearby Desert Fathers By the end of the era Alexandria Rome and Antioch were accorded authority over nearby metropolitans The Council of Nicaea in canon VI affirmed Alexandria s traditional authority over Egypt Libya and Pentapolis North Africa the Diocese of Egypt and probably granted Alexandria the right to declare a universal date for the observance of Easter 32 see also Easter controversy Some postulate however that Alexandria was not only a center of Christianity but was also a center for Christian based Gnostic sects Asia Minor Edit Map of Western Anatolia showing the Seven Churches of Asia and the Greek island of Patmos See also History of Anatolia and Christianity in Turkey The tradition of John the Apostle was strong in Anatolia the near east part of modern Turkey the western part was called the Roman province of Asia The authorship of the Johannine works traditionally and plausibly occurred in Ephesus c 90 110 although some scholars argue for an origin in Syria 33 According to the New Testament the Apostle Paul was from Tarsus in south central Anatolia and his missionary journeys were primarily in Anatolia The Book of Revelation believed to be authored by John of Patmos a Greek island about 30 miles off the Anatolian coast mentions Seven churches of Asia The First Epistle of Peter 1 1 2 is addressed to Anatolian regions On the southeast shore of the Black Sea Pontus was a Greek colony mentioned three times in the New Testament Inhabitants of Pontus were some of the very first converts to Christianity Pliny governor in 110 in his letters addressed Christians in Pontus Of the extant letters of Ignatius of Antioch considered authentic five of seven are to Anatolian cities the sixth is to Polycarp Smyrna was home to Polycarp the bishop who reportedly knew the Apostle John personally and probably also to his student Irenaeus Papias of Hierapolis is also believed to have been a student of John the Apostle In the 2nd century Anatolia was home to Quartodecimanism Montanism Marcion of Sinope and Melito of Sardis who recorded an early Christian Biblical canon After the Crisis of the Third Century Nicomedia became the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire in 286 The Synod of Ancyra was held in 314 In 325 the emperor Constantine convoked the first Christian ecumenical council in Nicaea and in 330 moved the capital of the reunified empire to Byzantium also an early Christian center and just across the Bosphorus from Anatolia later called Constantinople referred to as the Byzantine Empire which lasted till 1453 34 The First seven Ecumenical Councils were held either in Western Anatolia or across the Bosphorus in Constantinople Caesarea Edit Remains of the ancient Roman aqueduct in Caesarea Maritima See also Caesarea Maritima Early Christian centre and Bishop of Caesarea Caesarea on the seacoast just northwest of Jerusalem at first Caesarea Maritima then after 133 Caesarea Palaestina was built by Herod the Great c 25 13 BC and was the capital of Iudaea Province 6 132 and later Palaestina Prima It was there that Peter baptized the centurion Cornelius considered the first gentile convert Paul sought refuge there once staying at the house of Philip the Evangelist and later being imprisoned there for two years estimated to be 57 59 The Apostolic Constitutions 7 46 state that the first Bishop of Caesarea was Zacchaeus the Publican but the Catholic Encyclopedia claims that there is no record of any bishops of Caesarea until the second century At the end of this century a council was held there to regulate the celebration of Easter 35 According to another Catholic Encyclopedia article 36 after Hadrian s siege of Jerusalem c 133 Caesarea became the metropolitan see with the bishop of Jerusalem as one of its suffragans subordinates Origen d 254 compiled his Hexapla there and it held a famous library and theological school St Pamphilus d 309 was a noted scholar priest St Gregory the Wonder Worker d 270 St Basil the Great d 379 and St Jerome d 420 visited and studied at the library which was later destroyed probably by the Persians in 614 or the Saracens around 637 37 The first major church historian Eusebius of Caesarea was a bishop c 314 339 F J A Hort and Adolf von Harnack have argued that the Nicene Creed originated in Caesarea The Caesarean text type is recognized by many textual scholars as one of the earliest New Testament types Cyprus Edit See also Church of Cyprus St Paul s Pillar in Paphos Paphos was the capital of the island of Cyprus during the Roman years and seat of a Roman commander In 45 AD the apostles Paul and Barnabas according to the Catholic Encyclopedia a native of the island came to Cyprus and reached Paphos preaching the Word of Christ see also Acts 13 4 13 According to Acts the apostles were persecuted by the Romans but eventually succeeded in convincing the Roman commander Sergius Paulus to renounce his old religion in favour of Christianity Barnabas is traditionally identified as the founder of the Cypriot Orthodox Church 38 Damascus Edit The Chapel of Saint Paul said to be Bab Kisan where St Paul escaped from Old Damascus See also Syriac Orthodox Church and Christianity in Syria Damascus is the capital of Syria and claims to be the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world According to the New Testament the Apostle Paul was converted on the Road to Damascus In the three accounts Acts 9 1 20 22 1 22 26 1 24 he is described as being led by those he was traveling with blinded by the light to Damascus where his sight was restored by a disciple called Ananias who according to the Catholic Encyclopedia is thought to have been the first Bishop of Damascus then he was baptized Greece Edit See also Church of Greece Thessaloniki the major northern Greek city where it is believed Christianity was founded by Paul thus an Apostolic See and the surrounding regions of Macedonia Thrace and Epirus which also extend into the neighboring Balkan states of Albania and Bulgaria were early centers of Christianity Of note are Paul s Epistles to the Thessalonians and to Philippi which is often considered the first contact of Christianity with Europe 39 The Apostolic Father Polycarp wrote a letter to the Philippians c 125 Nicopolis was a city in the Roman province of Epirus Vetus today a ruin on the northern part of the western Greek coast According to the Catholic Encyclopedia St Paul intended going there Titus 3 12 and it is possible that even then it numbered some Christians among its population Origen c 185 254 sojourned there for a while Eusebius Church History VI 16 Ancient Corinth today a ruin near modern Corinth in southern Greece was an early center of Christianity According to the Catholic Encyclopedia St Paul preached successfully at Corinth where he lived in the house of Aquila and Priscilla Acts 18 1 where Silas and Timothy soon joined him After his departure he was replaced by Apollo who had been sent from Ephesus by Priscilla The Apostle visited Corinth at least once more He wrote to the Corinthians in 57 from Ephesus and then from Macedonia in the same year or in 58 The famous letter of St Clement of Rome to the Corinthian church about 96 exhibits the earliest evidence concerning the ecclesiastical primacy of the Roman Church Besides St Apollo Lequien II 155 mentions forty three bishops among them St Sosthenes the disciple of St Paul St Dionysius Paul brother of St Peter 40 Athens the capital and largest city in Greece was visited by Paul According to the Catholic Encyclopedia Paul came to Athens from Berœa of Macedonia coming probably by water and landing in the Peiraeevs the harbour of Athens This was about the year 53 Having arrived at Athens he at once sent for Silas and Timotheos who had remained behind in Berœa While awaiting the coming of these he tarried in Athens viewing the idolatrous city and frequenting the synagogue for there were already Jews in Athens It seems that a Christian community was rapidly formed although for a considerable time it did not possess a numerous membership The commoner tradition names the Areopagite as the first head and bishop of the Christian Athenians Another tradition however gives this honour to Hierotheos the Thesmothete The successors of the first bishop were not all Athenians by lineage They are catalogued as Narkissos Publius and Quadratus Narkissos is stated to have come from Palestine and Publius from Malta In some lists Narkissos is omitted Quadratus is revered for having contributed to early Christian literature by writing an apology which he addressed to the Emperor Hadrian This was on the occasion of Hadrian s visit to Athens Aristeides dedicated an apology to the emperor Hadrian around CE 134 Athenagoras also wrote an apology In the second century there must have been a considerable community of Christians in Athens for Hygeinos Bishop of Rome is said to have written a letter to the community in the year 139 Gortyn on Crete was allied with Rome and was thus made capital of Roman Creta et Cyrenaica St Titus is believed to have been the first bishop The city was sacked by the pirate Abu Hafs in 828 Thrace Edit Paul the Apostle preached in Macedonia and also in Philippi located in Thrace on the Thracian Sea coast According to Hippolytus of Rome Andrew the Apostle preached in Thrace on the Black Sea coast and along the lower course of the Danube River The spread of Christianity among the Thracians and the emergence of centers of Christianity like Serdica present day Sofia Philippopolis present day Plovdiv and Durostorum present day Silistra was likely to have begun with these early Apostolic missions 41 The first Christian monastery in Europe was founded in Thrace in 344 by Saint Athanasius near modern day Chirpan Bulgaria following the Council of Serdica 42 Libya Edit See also Christianity in LibyaCyrene and the surrounding region of Cyrenaica or the North African Pentapolis south of the Mediterranean from Greece the northeastern part of modern Libya was a Greek colony in North Africa later converted to a Roman province In addition to Greeks and Romans there was also a significant Jewish population at least up to the Kitos War 115 117 According to Mark 15 21 Simon of Cyrene carried Jesus cross Cyrenians are also mentioned in Acts 2 10 6 9 11 20 13 1 According to the Catholic Encyclopedia Lequien mentions six bishops of Cyrene and according to Byzantine legend the first was St Lucius Acts 13 1 St Theodorus suffered martyrdom under Diocletian 284 305 Western Roman Empire EditSee also Western Christianity Rome Edit St Peter s Basilica believed to be the burial site of St Peter seen from the River Tiber See also Bishop of Rome God fearer Proselyte and History of the Jews in the Roman Empire Exactly when Christians first appeared in Rome is difficult to determine The Acts of the Apostles claims that the Jewish Christian couple Priscilla and Aquila had recently come from Rome to Corinth when in about the year 50 Paul reached the latter city 43 indicating that belief in Jesus in Rome had preceded Paul Historians consistently consider Peter and Paul to have been martyred in Rome under the reign of Nero 44 45 citation not found 46 in 64 after the Great Fire of Rome which according to Tacitus the Emperor blamed on the Christians 47 48 In the second century Irenaeus of Lyons reflecting the ancient view that the church could not be fully present anywhere without a bishop recorded that Peter and Paul had been the founders of the Church in Rome and had appointed Linus as bishop 49 50 However Irenaeus does not say that either Peter or Paul was bishop of the Church in Rome and several historians have questioned whether Peter spent much time in Rome before his martyrdom While the church in Rome was already flourishing when Paul wrote his Epistle to the Romans to them from Corinth c 58 51 citation not found he attests to a large Christian community already there 48 and greets some fifty people in Rome by name 52 but not Peter whom he knew There is also no mention of Peter in Rome later during Paul s two year stay there in Acts 28 about 60 62 Most likely he did not spend any major time at Rome before 58 when Paul wrote to the Romans and so it may have been only in the 60s and relatively shortly before his martyrdom that Peter came to the capital 53 Oscar Cullmann sharply rejected the claim that Peter began the papal succession 54 and concludes that while Peter was the original head of the apostles Peter was not the founder of any visible church succession 54 55 A scene showing Christ Pantocrator from a Roman mosaic in the church of Santa Pudenziana in Rome c 410 AD The original seat of Roman imperial power soon became a center of church authority grew in power decade by decade and was recognized during the period of the Seven Ecumenical Councils when the seat of government had been transferred to Constantinople as the head of the church 56 Rome and Alexandria which by tradition held authority over sees outside their own province 57 were not yet referred to as patriarchates 58 The earliest Bishops of Rome were all Greek speaking the most notable of them being Pope Clement I c 88 97 author of an Epistle to the Church in Corinth Pope Telesphorus c 126 136 probably the only martyr among them Pope Pius I c 141 154 said by the Muratorian fragment to have been the brother of the author of the Shepherd of Hermas and Pope Anicetus c 155 160 who received Saint Polycarp and discussed with him the dating of Easter 48 Pope Victor I 189 198 was the first ecclesiastical writer known to have written in Latin however his only extant works are his encyclicals which would naturally have been issued in both Latin and Greek 59 Greek New Testament texts were translated into Latin early on well before Jerome and are classified as the Vetus Latina and Western text type During the 2nd century Christians and semi Christians of diverse views congregated in Rome notably Marcion and Valentinius and in the following century there were schisms connected with Hippolytus of Rome and Novatian 48 The Roman church survived various persecutions Among the prominent Christians executed as a result of their refusal to perform acts of worship to the Roman gods as ordered by emperor Valerian in 258 were Cyprian bishop of Carthage 60 The last and most severe of the imperial persecutions was that under Diocletian in 303 they ended in Rome and the West in general with the accession of Maxentius in 306 Carthage Edit See also Church of Carthage Bishop of Carthage and Councils of Carthage Early Christian quarter in ancient Carthage Carthage in the Roman province of Africa south of the Mediterranean from Rome gave the early church the Latin fathers Tertullian 61 c 120 c 220 and Cyprian 62 d 258 Carthage fell to Islam in 698 The Church of Carthage thus was to the Early African church what the Church of Rome was to the Catholic Church in Italy 63 The archdiocese used the African Rite a variant of the Western liturgical rites in Latin language possibly a local use of the primitive Roman Rite Famous figures include Saint Perpetua Saint Felicitas and their Companions died c 203 Tertullian c 155 240 Cyprian c 200 258 Caecilianus floruit 311 Saint Aurelius died 429 and Eugenius of Carthage died 505 Tertullian and Cyprian are both considered Latin Church Fathers of the Latin Church Tertullian a theologian of part Berber descent was instrumental in the development of trinitarian theology and was the first to apply Latin language extensively in his theological writings As such Tertullian has been called the father of Latin Christianity 64 65 and the founder of Western theology 66 Carthage remained an important center of Christianity hosting several councils of Carthage Southern Gaul Edit Amphitheatre des Trois Gaules in Lyon The pole in the arena is a memorial to the people killed during the persecution See also Christianity in Gaul The Mediterranean coast of France and the Rhone valley then part of Roman Gallia Narbonensis were early centers of Christianity Major Christian communities were found in Arles Avignon Vienne Lyon and Marseille the oldest city in France The Persecution in Lyon occurred in 177 The Apostolic Father Irenaeus from Smyrna of Anatolia was Bishop of Lyon near the end of the 2nd century and he claimed Saint Pothinus was his predecessor The Council of Arles in 314 is considered a forerunner of the ecumenical councils The Ephesine theory attributes the Gallican Rite to Lyon Italy outside Rome Edit Aquileia Edit See also Bishop of Aquileia The ancient Roman city of Aquileia at the head of the Adriatic Sea today one of the main archaeological sites of Northern Italy was an early center of Christianity said to be founded by Mark before his mission to Alexandria Hermagoras of Aquileia is believed to be its first bishop The Aquileian Rite is associated with Aquileia Milan Edit See also Bishop of Milan It is believed that the Church of Milan in northwest Italy was founded by the apostle Barnabas in the 1st century Gervasius and Protasius and others were martyred there It has long maintained its own rite known as the Ambrosian Rite attributed to Ambrose born c 330 who was bishop in 374 397 and one of the most influential ecclesiastical figures of the 4th century Duchesne argues that the Gallican Rite originated in Milan Syracuse and Calabria Edit See also Bishop of Syracuse and Bishop of Reggio Calabria Syracuse was founded by Greek colonists in 734 or 733 BC part of Magna Graecia According to the Catholic Encyclopedia Syracuse claims to be the second Church founded by St Peter after that of Antioch It also claims that St Paul preached there In the times of St Cyprian the middle of the third century Christianity certainly flourished at Syracuse and the catacombs clearly show that this was the case in the second century Across the Strait of Messina Calabria on the mainland was also probably an early center of Christianity 67 Malta Edit See also Christianity in Malta St Paul s Islands near St Paul s Bay traditionally identified as the place where St Paul was shipwrecked According to Acts Paul was shipwrecked and ministered on an island which some scholars have identified as Malta an island just south of Sicily for three months during which time he is said to have been bitten by a poisonous viper and survived Acts 27 39 42 Acts 28 1 11 an event usually dated c AD 60 Paul had been allowed passage from Caesarea Maritima to Rome by Porcius Festus procurator of Iudaea Province to stand trial before the Emperor Many traditions are associated with this episode and catacombs in Rabat testify to an Early Christian community on the islands According to tradition Publius the Roman Governor of Malta at the time of Saint Paul s shipwreck became the first Bishop of Malta following his conversion to Christianity After ruling the Maltese Church for thirty one years Publius was transferred to the See of Athens in 90 AD where he was martyred in 125 AD There is scant information about the continuity of Christianity in Malta in subsequent years although tradition has it that there was a continuous line of bishops from the days of St Paul to the time of Emperor Constantine Salona Edit See also Religion in Croatia Salona the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea was an early center of Christianity and today is a ruin in modern Croatia According to the Catholic Encyclopedia it was where Titus the pupil of St Paul preached where the followers of Jesus Christ first shed their blood as martyrs and where beautiful examples of basilicas and other early Christian sculpture have been discovered According to the Catholic Encyclopedia article on Dalmatia Salona became the centre from which Christianity spread In Pannonia St Andronicus founded the See of Syrmium Mitrovica and later those of Siscia and Mursia The cruel persecution under Diocletian who was a Dalmatian by birth left numerous traces in Old Dalmatia and Pannonia St Quirinus Bishop of Siscia died a martyr A D 303 St Jerome was born in Strido a city on the border of Pannonia and Dalmatia Seville Edit See also Bishop of Seville Seville was the capital of Hispania Baetica or the Roman province of southern Spain According to the Catholic Encyclopedia the origin of the diocese goes back to Apostolic times or at least to the first century of our era St Gerontius Bishop of Italica about four miles from Hispalis or Seville preached in Baetica in Apostolic times and without doubt must have left a pastor of its own to Seville It is certain that in 303 when Sts Justa and Rufina the potters suffered martyrdom for refusing to adore the idol Salambo there was a Bishop of Seville Sabinus who assisted at the Council of Illiberis 287 Before that time Marcellus had been bishop as appears from a catalogue of the ancient prelates of Seville preserved in the Codex Emilianensis a manuscript of the year 1000 now in the Escorial When Constantine brought peace to the Church 313 Evodius was Bishop of Seville he set himself to rebuild the ruined churches among them he appears to have built the church of San Vicente perhaps the first cathedral of Seville Early Christianity also spread from the Iberian peninsula south across the Strait of Gibraltar into Roman Mauretania Tingitana of note is Marcellus of Tangier who was martyred in 298 Roman Britain Edit See also History of the Church of England Roman and Sub Roman Christianity in the British Isles Christianity reached Roman Britain by the third century of the Christian era the first recorded martyrs in Britain being St Alban of Verulamium and Julius and Aaron of Caerleon during the reign of Diocletian 284 305 Gildas dated the faith s arrival to the latter part of the reign of Tiberius although stories connecting it with Joseph of Arimathea Lucius or Fagan are now generally considered pious forgeries Restitutus Bishop of London is recorded as attending the 314 Council of Arles along with the Bishop of Lincoln and Bishop of York Christianisation intensified and evolved into Celtic Christianity after the Romans left Britain c 410 Outside the Roman Empire EditSee also History of Eastern Christianity in Asia and Church of the East Christianity also spread beyond the Roman Empire during the early Christian period Armenia Edit It is accepted that Armenia became the first country to adopt Christianity as its state religion Although it has long been claimed that Armenia was the first Christian kingdom according to some scholars this has relied on a source by Agathangelos titled The History of the Armenians which has recently been redated casting some doubt 68 Christianity became the official religion of Armenia in 301 69 when it was still illegal in the Roman Empire According to church tradition citation needed the Armenian Apostolic Church was founded by Gregory the Illuminator of the late third early fourth centuries while they trace their origins to the missions of Bartholomew the Apostle and Thaddeus Jude the Apostle in the 1st century Georgia Edit According to Orthodox tradition Christianity was first preached in Georgia by the Apostles Simon and Andrew in the 1st century It became the state religion of Kartli Iberia in 319 The conversion of Kartli to Christianity is credited to a Greek lady called St Nino of Cappadocia The Georgian Orthodox Church originally part of the Church of Antioch gained its autocephaly and developed its doctrinal specificity progressively between the 5th and 10th centuries The Bible was also translated into Georgian in the 5th century as the Georgian alphabet was developed for that purpose India Edit Main articles Christianity in India Christianity in Pakistan and Saint Thomas Christians This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to tradition the Indo Parthian king Gondophares was proselytized by St Thomas who continued on to southern India and possibly as far as Malaysia or China According to Eusebius record the apostles Thomas and Bartholomew were assigned to Parthia modern Iran and India 70 71 By the time of the establishment of the Second Persian Empire AD 226 there were bishops of the Church of the East in northwest India Afghanistan and Baluchistan including parts of Iran Afghanistan and Pakistan with laymen and clergy alike engaging in missionary activity 70 An early third century Syriac work known as the Acts of Thomas 70 connects the apostle s Indian ministry with two kings one in the north and the other in the south According to the Acts Thomas was at first reluctant to accept this mission but the Lord appeared to him in a night vision and compelled him to accompany an Indian merchant Abbanes or Habban to his native place in northwest India There Thomas found himself in the service of the Indo Parthian King Gondophares The Apostle s ministry resulted in many conversions throughout the kingdom including the king and his brother 70 Thomas thereafter went south to Kerala and baptized the natives whose descendants form the Saint Thomas Christians or the Syrian Malabar Nasranis 72 Piecing together the various traditions the story suggests that Thomas left northwest India when invasion threatened and traveled by vessel to the Malabar Coast along the southwestern coast of the Indian continent possibly visiting southeast Arabia and Socotra en route and landing at the former flourishing port of Muziris on an island near Cochin in 52 From there he preached the gospel throughout the Malabar Coast The various churches he founded were located mainly on the Periyar River and its tributaries and along the coast He preached to all classes of people and had about 170 converts including members of the four principal castes Later stone crosses were erected at the places where churches were founded and they became pilgrimage centres In accordance with apostolic custom Thomas ordained teachers and leaders or elders who were reported to be the earliest ministry of the Malabar church Thomas next proceeded overland to the Coromandel Coast in southeastern India and ministered in what is now Chennai earlier Madras where a local king and many people were converted One tradition related that he went from there to China via Malacca in Malaysia and after spending some time there returned to the Chennai area 73 Apparently his renewed ministry outraged the Brahmins who were fearful lest Christianity undermine their social caste system So according to the Syriac version of the Acts of Thomas Mazdai the local king at Mylapore after questioning the Apostle condemned him to death about the year AD 72 Anxious to avoid popular excitement the King ordered Thomas conducted to a nearby mountain where after being allowed to pray he was then stoned and stabbed to death with a lance wielded by an angry Brahmin 70 72 Mesopotamia and the Parthian Empire Edit Edessa which was held by Rome from 116 to 118 and 212 to 214 but was mostly a client kingdom associated either with Rome or Persia was an important Christian city Shortly after 201 or even earlier its royal house became Christian 74 Edessa now Sanliurfa in northwestern Mesopotamia was from apostolic times the principal center of Syriac speaking Christianity it was the capital of an independent kingdom from 132 BC to AD 216 when it became tributary to Rome Celebrated as an important centre of Greco Syrian culture Edessa was also noted for its Jewish community with proselytes in the royal family Strategically located on the main trade routes of the Fertile Crescent it was easily accessible from Antioch where the mission to the Gentiles was inaugurated When early Christians were scattered abroad because of persecution some found refuge at Edessa Thus the Edessan church traced its origin to the Apostolic Age which may account for its rapid growth and Christianity even became the state religion for a time The Church of the East had its inception at a very early date in the buffer zone between the Parthian and Roman Empires in Upper Mesopotamia known as the Assyrian Church of the East The vicissitudes of its later growth were rooted in its minority status in a situation of international tension The rulers of the Parthian Empire 250 BC AD 226 were on the whole tolerant in spirit and with the older faiths of Babylonia and Assyria in a state of decay the time was ripe for a new and vital faith The rulers of the Second Persian empire 226 640 also followed a policy of religious toleration to begin with though later they gave Christians the same status as a subject race However these rulers also encouraged the revival of the ancient Persian dualistic faith of Zoroastrianism and established it as the state religion with the result that the Christians were increasingly subjected to repressive measures Nevertheless it was not until Christianity became the state religion in the West 380 that enmity toward Rome was focused on the Eastern Christians After the Muslim conquest in the 7th century the caliphate tolerated other faiths but forbade proselytism and subjected Christians to heavy taxation The missionary Addai evangelized Mesopotamia modern Iraq about the middle of the 2nd century An ancient legend recorded by Eusebius AD 260 340 and also found in the Doctrine of Addai c AD 400 from information in the royal archives of Edessa describes how King Abgar V of Edessa communicated to Jesus requesting he come and heal him to which appeal he received a reply It is said that after the resurrection Thomas sent Addai or Thaddaeus to the king with the result that the city was won to the Christian faith In this mission he was accompanied by a disciple Mari and the two are regarded as co founders of the church according to the Liturgy of Addai and Mari c AD 200 which is still the normal liturgy of the Assyrian church The Doctrine of Addai further states that Thomas was regarded as an apostle of the church in Edessa 70 Addai who became the first bishop of Edessa was succeeded by Aggai then by Palut who was ordained about 200 by Serapion of Antioch Thence came to us in the 2nd century the famous Peshitta or Syriac translation of the Old Testament also Tatian s Diatessaron which was compiled about 172 and in common use until St Rabbula Bishop of Edessa 412 435 forbade its use This arrangement of the four canonical gospels as a continuous narrative whose original language may have been Syriac Greek or even Latin circulated widely in Syriac speaking Churches 75 A Christian council was held at Edessa as early as 197 76 In 201 the city was devastated by a great flood and the Christian church was destroyed 77 In 232 the Syriac Acts were written supposedly on the event of the relics of the Apostle Thomas being handed to the church in Edessa Under Roman domination many martyrs suffered at Edessa Sts Scharbil and Barsamya under Decius Sts Gurja Schamona Habib and others under Diocletian In the meanwhile Christian priests from Edessa had evangelized Eastern Mesopotamia and Persia and established the first churches in the kingdom of the Sasanians 78 Atillatia Bishop of Edessa assisted at the First Council of Nicaea 325 Persia and Central Asia Edit By the latter half of the 2nd century Christianity had spread east throughout Media Persia Parthia and Bactria The twenty bishops and many presbyters were more of the order of itinerant missionaries passing from place to place as Paul did and supplying their needs with such occupations as merchant or craftsman By AD 280 the metropolis of Seleucia assumed the title of Catholicos and in AD 424 a council of the church at Seleucia elected the first patriarch to have jurisdiction over the whole church of the East The seat of the Patriarchate was fixed at Seleucia Ctesiphon since this was an important point on the East West trade routes which extended both to India and China Java and Japan Thus the shift of ecclesiastical authority was away from Edessa which in AD 216 had become tributary to Rome the establishment of an independent patriarchate with nine subordinate metropoli contributed to a more favourable attitude by the Persian government which no longer had to fear an ecclesiastical alliance with the common enemy Rome By the time that Edessa was incorporated into the Persian Empire in 258 the city of Arbela situated on the Tigris in what is now Iraq had taken on more and more the role that Edessa had played in the early years as a centre from which Christianity spread to the rest of the Persian Empire 79 Bardaisan writing about 196 speaks of Christians throughout Media Parthia and Bactria modern day Afghanistan 80 and according to Tertullian c 160 230 there were already a number of bishoprics within the Persian Empire by 220 79 By 315 the bishop of Seleucia Ctesiphon had assumed the title Catholicos 79 By this time neither Edessa nor Arbela was the centre of the Church of the East anymore ecclesiastical authority had moved east to the heart of the Persian Empire 79 The twin cities of Seleucia Ctesiphon well situated on the main trade routes between East and West became in the words of John Stewart a magnificent centre for the missionary church that was entering on its great task of carrying the gospel to the far east 81 During the reign of Shapur II of the Sasanian Empire he was not initially hostile to his Christian subjects who were led by Shemon Bar Sabbae the Patriarch of the Church of the East however the conversion of Constantine the Great to Christianity caused Shapur to start distrusting his Christian subjects He started seeing them as agents of a foreign enemy The wars between the Sasanian and Roman empires turned Shapur s mistrust into hostility After the death of Constantine Shapur II who had been preparing for a war against the Romans for several years imposed a double tax on his Christian subjects to finance the conflict Shemon however refused to pay the double tax Shapur started pressuring Shemon and his clergy to convert to Zoroastrianism which they refused to do It was during this period the cycle of the martyrs began during which many thousands of Christians were put to death During the following years Shemon s successors Shahdost and Barba shmin were also martyred A near contemporary 5th century Christian work the Ecclesiastical History of Sozomen contains considerable detail on the Persian Christians martyred under Shapur II Sozomen estimates the total number of Christians killed as follows The number of men and women whose names have been ascertained and who were martyred at this period has been computed to be upwards of sixteen thousand while the multitude of martyrs whose names are unknown was so great that the Persians the Syrians and the inhabitants of Edessa have failed in all their efforts to compute the number Sozomen in his Ecclesiastical History Book II Chapter XIV 82 Arabian Peninsula Edit See also Ghassanids and Lakhmids To understand the penetration of the Arabian peninsula by the Christian gospel it is helpful to distinguish between the Bedouin nomads of the interior who were chiefly herdsmen and unreceptive to foreign control and the inhabitants of the settled communities of the coastal areas and oases who were either middlemen traders or farmers and were receptive to influences from abroad Christianity apparently gained its strongest foothold in the ancient center of Semitic civilization in South west Arabia or Yemen sometimes known as Seba or Sheba whose queen visited Solomon Because of geographic proximity acculturation with Ethiopia was always strong and the royal family traces its ancestry to this queen The presence of Arabians at Pentecost and Paul s three year sojourn in Arabia suggest a very early gospel witness A 4th century church history states that the apostle Bartholomew preached in Arabia and that Himyarites were among his converts The Al Jubail Church in what is now Saudi Arabia was built in the 4th century Arabia s close relations with Ethiopia give significance to the conversion of the treasurer to the queen of Ethiopia not to mention the tradition that the Apostle Matthew was assigned to this land 70 Eusebius says that one Pantaneous c A D 190 was sent from Alexandria as a missionary to the nations of the East including southwest Arabia on his way to India 70 Nubia Edit Christianity arrived early in Nubia In the New Testament of the Christian Bible a treasury official of Candace queen of the Ethiopians returning from a trip to Jerusalem was baptised by Philip the Evangelist Then the Angel of the Lord said to Philip Start out and go south to the road that leads down from Jerusalem to Gaza which is desert And he arose and went And behold a man of Ethiopia an Eunuch of great authority under Candace Queen of E thi o pi ans who had the charge of all her treasure and had come to Jerusalem to worship 83 Ethiopia at that time meant any upper Nile region Candace was the name and perhaps title for the Meroe or Kushite queens In the fourth century bishop Athanasius of Alexandria consecrated Marcus as bishop of Philae before his death in 373 showing that Christianity had permanently penetrated the region John of Ephesus records that a Monophysite priest named Julian converted the king and his nobles of Nobatia around 545 and another kingdom of Alodia converted around 569 By the 7th century Makuria expanded becoming the dominant power in the region so strong enough to halt the southern expansion of Islam after the Arabs had taken Egypt After several failed invasions the new rulers agreed to a treaty with Dongola allowing for peaceful coexistence and trade This treaty held for six hundred years allowing Arab traders introducing Islam to Nubia and it gradually supplanted Christianity The last recorded bishop was Timothy at Qasr Ibrim in 1372 See also EditChristianity in the 1st century Christianity in the 2nd century Christianity in the 3rd century Early Christian art and architecture History of ChristianityReferences Edit Paul for example greets a house church in Romans 16 5 ἐkklhsia Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Bauer lexicon Vidmar The Catholic Church Through the Ages 2005 pp 19 20 a b Hitchcock Geography of Religion 2004 p 281 quote By the year 100 more than 40 Christian communities existed in cities around the Mediterranean including two in North Africa at Alexandria and Cyrene and several in Italy a b Bokenkotter A Concise History of the Catholic Church 2004 p 18 quote The story of how this tiny community of believers spread to many cities of the Roman Empire within less than a century is indeed a remarkable chapter in the history of humanity Pixner Bargil May June 1990 The Church of the Apostles found on Mount Zion Biblical Archaeology Review Vol 16 no 3 Archived from the original on 9 March 2018 via CenturyOne Foundation Jerusalem A D 71 1099 During the first Christian centuries the church at this place was the centre of Christianity in Jerusalem Holy and glorious Sion mother of all churches Intercession in St James Liturgy ed Brightman p 54 Saint Mark of syriac orthodox church is also known as last supper church and believe first christian church a b c d e f Jerusalem Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 St James the Less Catholic Encyclopedia Then we lose sight of James till St Paul three years after his conversion A D 37 went up to Jerusalem On the same occasion the pillars of the Church James Peter and John gave to me Paul and Barnabas the right hands of fellowship that we should go unto the Gentiles and they unto the circumcision Galatians 2 9 Jewish Encyclopedia Circumcision In Apocryphal and Rabbinical Literature Contact with Grecian life especially at the games of the arena which involved nudity made this distinction obnoxious to the Hellenists or anti nationalists and the consequence was their attempt to appear like the Greeks by epispasm making themselves foreskins I Macc i 15 Josephus Ant xii 5 1 Assumptio Mosis viii I Cor vii 18 Tosef Shab xv 9 Yeb 72a b Yer Peah i 16b Yeb viii 9a All the more did the law observing Jews defy the edict of Antiochus Epiphanes prohibiting circumcision I Macc i 48 60 ii 46 and the Jewish women showed their loyalty to the Law even at the risk of their lives by themselves circumcising their sons Hodges Frederick M 2001 The Ideal Prepuce in Ancient Greece and Rome Male Genital Aesthetics and Their Relation to Lipodermos Circumcision Foreskin Restoration and the Kynodesme PDF The Bulletin of the History of Medicine 75 Fall 2001 375 405 doi 10 1353 bhm 2001 0119 PMID 11568485 S2CID 29580193 Retrieved 2007 07 24 Jewish Encyclopedia Baptism According to rabbinical teachings which dominated even during the existence of the Temple Pes viii 8 Baptism next to circumcision and sacrifice was an absolutely necessary condition to be fulfilled by a proselyte to Judaism Yeb 46b 47b Ker 9a Ab Zarah 57a Shab 135a Yer Kid iii 14 64d Circumcision however was much more important and like baptism was called a seal Schlatter Die Kirche Jerusalems 1898 p 70 But as circumcision was discarded by Christianity and the sacrifices had ceased Baptism remained the sole condition for initiation into religious life The next ceremony adopted shortly after the others was the imposition of hands which it is known was the usage of the Jews at the ordination of a rabbi Anointing with oil which at first also accompanied the act of Baptism and was analogous to the anointment of priests among the Jews was not a necessary condition peri ah Shab xxx 6 a b c James St Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 Eusebius Church History 3 5 3 Epiphanius Panarion 29 7 7 8 30 2 7 On Weights and Measures 15 On the flight to Pella see Jonathan Bourgel The Jewish Christians Move from Jerusalem as a pragmatic choice in Dan Jaffe ed Studies in Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity Leyden Brill 2010 pp 107 138 https www academia edu 4909339 THE JEWISH CHRISTIANS MOVE FROM JERUSALEM AS A PRAGMATIC CHOICE P H R van Houwelingen Fleeing forward The departure of Christians from Jerusalem to Pella Westminster Theological Journal 65 2003 181 200 Catholic Encyclopedia Jerusalem A D 71 1099 Epiphanius d 403 says that when the Emperor Hadrian came to Jerusalem in 130 he found the Temple and the whole city destroyed save for a few houses among them the one where the Apostles had received the Holy Ghost This house says Epiphanius is in that part of Sion which was spared when the city was destroyed therefore in the upper part De mens et pond cap xiv From the time of Cyril of Jerusalem who speaks of the upper Church of the Apostles where the Holy Ghost came down upon them Catech ii 6 P G XXXIII there are abundant witnesses of the place A great basilica was built over the spot in the fourth century the crusaders built another church when the older one had been destroyed by Hakim in 1010 It is the famous Coenaculum or Cenacle now a Moslem shrine near the Gate of David and supposed to be David s tomb Nebi Daud Epiphanius Weights and Measures at tertullian org 14 For this Hadrian Jewish Encyclopedia Academies in Palestine Harris Stephen L Understanding the Bible Palo Alto Mayfield 1985 It was still known as Aelia at the time of the First Council of Nicaea which marks the end of the Early Christianity period Canon VII of the First Council of Nicaea Eusebius History of the Church Book IV chapter V verses 3 4 Catholic Encyclopedia Jerusalem AD 71 1099 Socrates Church History at CCEL org Book I Chapter XVII The Emperor s Mother Helena having come to Jerusalem searches for and finds the Cross of Christ and builds a Church Schaff s Seven Ecumenical Councils First Nicaea Canon VII Since custom and ancient tradition have prevailed that the Bishop of Aelia i e Jerusalem should be honoured let him saving its due dignity to the Metropolis have the next place of honour It is very hard to determine just what was the precedence granted to the Bishop of Aelia nor is it clear which is the metropolis referred to in the last clause Most writers including Hefele Balsamon Aristenus and Beveridge consider it to be Caesarea while Zonaras thinks Jerusalem to be intended a view recently adopted and defended by Fuchs others again suppose it is Antioch that is referred to Encyclopaedia Britannica Quinisext Council Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved February 14 2010 The Western Church and the Pope were not represented at the council Justinian however wanted the Pope as well as the Eastern bishops to sign the canons Pope Sergius I 687 701 refused to sign and the canons were never fully accepted by the Western Church Quinisext Canon 36 from Schaff s Seven Ecumenical Councils at ccel org we decree that the see of Constantinople shall have equal privileges with the see of Old Rome and shall be highly regarded in ecclesiastical matters as that is and shall be second after it After Constantinople shall be ranked the See of Alexandria then that of Antioch and afterwards the See of Jerusalem Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 article Antioch Acts 11 26 Their jurisdiction extended over the adjoining territories The earliest bishops exercising such powers were those of Rome over the whole or part of Italy Alexandria over Egypt and Libya and Antioch over large parts of Asia Minor These three were recognized by the Council of Nicaea 325 Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 article patriarch ecclesiastical Jewish Encyclopedia Alexandria Egypt Ancient According to the Catholic Encyclopedia article Alexandria An important seaport of Egypt on the left bank of the Nile It was founded by Alexander the Great to replace the small borough called Racondah or Rakhotis 331 B C The Ptolemies Alexander s successors on the throne of Egypt soon made it the intellectual and commercial metropolis of the world Caesar who visited it 46 B C left it to Queen Cleopatra but when Octavius went there in 30 B C he transformed the Egyptian kingdom into a Roman province Alexandria continued prosperous under the Roman rule but declined a little under that of Constantinople Christianity was brought to Alexandria by the Evangelist St Mark It was made illustrious by a lineage of learned doctors such as Pantaenus Clement of Alexandria and Origen it has been governed by a series of great bishops amongst whom Athanasius and Cyril must be mentioned Philip Schaff s History of the Christian Church volume 3 section 79 The Time of the Easter Festival this was the second main object of the first ecumenical council in 325 The result of the transactions on this point the particulars of which are not known to us does not appear in the canons probably out of consideration for the numerous Quartodecimanians but is doubtless preserved in the two circular letters of the council itself and the emperor Constantine Socrates Hist Eccl i 9 Theodoret H E i 10 Eusebius Vita Const ii 17 Brown Raymond E 1997 Introduction to the New Testament New York Anchor Bible p 334 ISBN 0 385 24767 2 Catholic Encyclopedia Asia Minor Spread of Christianity in Asia Minor Asia Minor was certainly the first part of the Roman world to accept as a whole the principles and the spirit of the Christian religion and it was not unnatural that the warmth of its conviction should eventually fire the neighbouring Armenia and make it early in the fourth century the first of the ancient states formally to accept the religion of Christ Eusebius Hist Eccl IX viii 2 Catholic Encyclopedia Caesarea Palaestinae perhaps an oversight what does the New Catholic Encyclopedia say the council is most likely a reference to Theophilus bishop of Caesarea see also Eusebius Church History Book V chapter 23 Catholic Encyclopedia Jerusalem A D 71 1099 As the rank of the various sees among themselves was gradually arranged according to the divisions of the empire Caesarea became the metropolitan see the Bishop of AElia Jerusalem as renamed by Hadrian was merely one of its suffragans The bishops from the siege under Hadrian 135 to Constantine 312 were Catholic Encyclopedia Caesarea Palaestinae Catholic Encyclopedia St Barnabas Philippi Catholic Encyclopedia Philippi was the first European town in which St Paul preached the Faith He arrived there with Silas Timothy and Luke about the end of 52 A D on the occasion of his second Apostolic voyage Catholic Encyclopedia Corinth Early Christianity in Bulgarian Lands Project HOP The Saint Athanasius Monastery of Chirpan the oldest cloister in Europe in Bulgarian Bulgarian National Radio 22 June 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2018 Acts 18 1 2 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 article Priscilla St Paul St Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 Pennington p 2 St Paul Outside the Walls homepage Archived July 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine Historians debate whether or not the Roman government distinguished between Christians and Jews prior to Nerva s modification of the Fiscus Judaicus in 96 From then on practising Jews paid the tax Christians did not 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 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 a b c d The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 article Rome early Christian Irenaeus Against Heresies 3 3 2 the Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles Peter and Paul as also by pointing out the faith preached to men which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops The blessed apostles then having founded and built up the Church committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate Irenaeus Against Heresies 3 3 2 the Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles Peter and Paul as also by pointing out the faith preached to men which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops The blessed apostles then having founded and built up the Church committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate Franzen 26 Romans 16 Brown Raymond E Meier John P 1983 Antioch and Rome New Testament Cradles of Christianity Paulist Press As for Peter we have no knowledge at all of when he came to Rome and what he did there before he was martyred Certainly he was not the original missionary who brought Christianity to Rome and therefore not the founder of the church of Rome in that sense There is no serious proof that he was the bishop or local ecclesiastical officer of the Roman church a claim not made till the third century Most likely he did not spend any major time at Rome before 58 when Paul wrote to the Romans and so it may have been only in the 60s and relatively shortly before his martyrdom that Peter came to the capital a b In the life of Peter there is no starting point for a chain of succession to the leadership of the church at large While Cullman believed the Matthew 16 18 text is entirely valid and is in no way spurious he says it cannot be used as warrant of the papal succession Religion Peter amp the Rock Time December 7 1953 Time com Accessed October 8 2009 Cullman Oscar In the New Testament Jerusalem is the only church of which we hear that Peter stood at its head Of other episcopates of Peter we know nothing certain Concerning Antioch indeed there is a tradition first appearing in the course of the second century according to which Peter was its bishop The assertion that he was Bishop of Rome we first find at a much later time From the second half of the second century we do possess texts that mention the apostolic foundation of Rome and at this time which is indeed rather late this foundation is traced back to Peter and Paul an assertion that cannot be supported historically Even here however nothing is said as yet of an episcopal office of Peter Schaff s Seven Ecumenical Councils The Seventh Letter to Pope Hadrian Therefore O most holy Head Caput And after this may there be no further schism and separation in the one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church of which Christ our true God is the Head Pope Hadrian s letter the holy Catholic and Apostolic Roman Church your spiritual mother the head of all Churches Canon IV For Peter the supreme head ἡ keryfaia ἀkroths of the Apostles Letter to the Emperor and Empress Christ our God who is the head of the Church First Council of Nicaea Archived 2008 09 15 at the Wayback Machine canon VI Patriarch ecclesiastical A title dating from the 6th cent for the bishops of the five chief sees of Christendom Their jurisdiction extended over the adjoining territories The earliest bishops exercising such powers though not so named were those of Rome over the whole or part of Italy Alexandria over Egypt and Libya and Antioch over large parts of Asia Minor Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 article Patriarch ecclesiastical Nobody can maintain that the bishops of Antioch and Alexandria were called patriarchs then or that the jurisdiction they had then was co extensive with what they had afterward when they were so called ffoulkes Dictionary of Christian Antiquities quoted in Volume XIV of Philip Schaff s The Seven Ecumenical Councils Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 article Victor I St Candida Moss 2013 The Myth of Persecution HarperCollins p 153 ISBN 978 0 06 210452 6 Tertullian Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 Cyprian St Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 Plummer Alfred 1887 The Church of the Early Fathers External History Longmans Green and Company pp 109 church of africa carthage Benham William 1887 The Dictionary of Religion Cassell pp 1013 Ekonomou Andrew J 2007 Byzantine Rome and the Greek Popes Eastern Influences on Rome and the Papacy from Gregory the Great to Zacharias A D 590 752 Lanham Lexington Books p 22 ISBN 978 0 7391 3386 6 Gonzales Justo L 2010 The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation The Story of Christianity Vol 1 New York HarperCollins Publishers pp 91 93 Catholic Encyclopedia Reggio di Calabria Through a misinterpretation of Acts 27 13 St Paul was said to have preached the Gospel there and to have consecrated his companion St Stephen bishop it is probable however that it was evangelized at an early period The first bishop known is Mark legate of Pope Sylvester at the Council of Nicaea 325 Portella Mario Alexis Woldegaber O Cist Abba Abraham Buruk 2012 Pringle Brendan ed Abyssinian Christianity The First Christian Nation Pismo Beach California BP Editing ISBN 9780615652979 Armenian History Chapter III Archived from the original on 2011 08 03 Retrieved 2010 01 08 a b c d e f g h A E Medlycott India and The Apostle Thomas pp 18 71 M R James Apocryphal New Testament pp 364 436 A E Medlycott India and The Apostle Thomas pp 1 17 213 97 Eusebius History chapter 4 30 J N Farquhar The Apostle Thomas in North India chapter 4 30 V A Smith Early History of India p 235 L W Brown The Indian Christians of St Thomas pp 49 59 Thomas the Apostole Archived from the original on 8 February 2011 Retrieved 25 April 2010 a b James M R 1966 The Acts of Thomas in The Apocryphal New Testament pp 365 77 434 38 Oxford Breviary of the Mar Thoma Church in Malabar von Harnack Adolph 1905 The Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries Williams amp Norgate p 293 there is no doubt that even before 190 A D Christianity had spread vigorously within Edessa and its surroundings and that shortly after 201 or even earlier the royal house joined the church Cross F L ed The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church New York Oxford University Press 2005 article Diatessaron Eusebius of Caesarea Historia Ecclesiastica V 23 Chronicon Edessenum ad an 201 Christianity permanent dead link Encyclopaedia Iranica a b c d Mark Dickens The Church of the East PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 04 25 Retrieved 2010 01 08 We are Christians by the one name of the Messiah As regards our customs our brethren abstain from everything that is contrary to their profession Parthian Christians do not take two wives Our Bactrian sisters do not practice promiscuity with strangers Persians do not take their daughters to wife Medes do not desert their dying relations or bury them alive Christians in Edessa do not kill their wives or sisters who commit fornication but keep them apart and commit them to the judgement of God Christians in Hatra do not stone thieves quoted in Mark Dickens The Church of the East Archived 2017 04 25 at the Wayback Machine John Stewart Nestorian Missionary Enterprise Edinburgh T amp T Clark 1928 Sozomen Hermias 2018 Walford Edward ed The Ecclesiastical History of Sozomen Merchantville NJ Evolution Publishing p 59 ISBN 978 1 935228 15 8 Acts 8 26 27Bibliography EditDunn James D G Jews and Christians The Parting of the Ways AD 70 to 135 Pp 33 34 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 8028 4498 7 Esler Philip F The Early Christian World Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 415 33312 1 Pelikan Jaroslav Jan The Christian Tradition The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition 100 600 University of Chicago Press 1975 ISBN 0 226 65371 4 Stark Rodney The Rise of Christianity Harper Collins Pbk Ed edition 1997 ISBN 0 06 067701 5 Taylor Joan E Christians and the Holy Places The Myth of Jewish Christian Origins Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 814785 6 Thiede Carsten Peter The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Jewish Origins of Christianity Palgrabe Macmillan 2003 ISBN 1 4039 6143 3 External links EditEarly Christians archived 1 September 2014 PBS Frontline The First Christians First Christians and Rome Cave in Jordan Said to Have Been Used by Early Christians Biblical Archaeology Review archived 7 January 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of early Christianity amp oldid 1139570151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.