Christianity and Late Roman Empire Diocletian (245-316) divided Empire into West and East in 286 Constantine (ca. 274-337) moved the capital in 330 from.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Conversion and Councils – AD An ecumenical council is … a worldwide meeting of Bishops to discuss beliefs and practices.
Advertisements

Ch 16, Pt 3: The Church World History. Describe the first churches. Thought Jesus was returning soon Lived together in small groups Shared goods Took.
Role of Orthodox Christianity and the Schism
The Division of the Christian Church Section 2. Standard Describe the establishment by Constantine of the new capital in Constantinople and the.
Religious Stuff that caused a problem! What is an Icon? They appear in several forms; in mural painting, mosaic and most typically painted on small.
AIM: WHY DID THE CHURCH DIVIDE?
 Origins – Greek city-state, A.D. 324 Roman Empire shifts capital to Constantinople  Marks the beginning of the Byzantine Empire  Early Period A.D.
The Language of Faith: Symbolism and the Arts
Timeline of Christianity: Power Structure of the Middle Ages in Europe
From early Christian prayer groups to the  Roman Catholic Church Centered in Rome and the Greek Orthodox Church Centered in Constantinople.
Christian Development The Middle Ages to the Schism.
Roman Catholic VS Eastern Orthodox
Monday 9/03 Objective: –Students will analyze why the Christian church split Homework –Rise and Fall of Rome Timeline 1/3/5- due Thursday( Rome test Thursday)
The Spread of Christian Ideas Chapter 10 Section 3.
The Early Church Chapter 10 Section 2. The Early Church Early Christians set up a church organization and explained their beliefs Groups of Christians.
Main Idea: Early Christians set up a church organization and explained their beliefs.
Byzantine Empire & Orthodox Influence on Russia
East vs. West.
Chapter 11 Section 1 Notes.
Main Idea: Early Christians set up a church organization and explained their beliefs.
NoteSheet 11.1 The Byzantine Empire.
Christianity History History World View World View Diversity of expressions Diversity of expressions.
 The student will demonstrate knowledge of the Byzantine Empire and Russia from about 300 to 1000 C.E. by:  Explaining disputes that led to the split.
Chapter 3 Church Victorious Age of the Fathers
■ Essential Question: – What is the significance of the Byzantine Empire?
Exploring the Church. Questions Exploring the Church Questions Describe a separation, falling out, or “death” of a relationship that you’ve experienced.
 First Roman emperor to become Christian  Enforced “correct practice” of religion  After his death in 337, Byzantium was renamed Constantinople Constantine.
The First Christians Chapter 10, Section 1, page 342.
Constantine The Western and Eastern Churches. What is going on? The empire is on the brink of destruction – Diocletian – ordered “every must worship the.
The Ecumenical Catholic Age 325 to 787 A. D. IT REPRESENTED 7 MAJOR CHURCH COUNCILS THAT FORMULATED DOCTRINE. 1. Theology. Important controversies raged.
The Byzantine Empire. The Roman empire, divided in the late AD200’s, was weakened by internal and external forces. Power shifted to the east, as Germanic.
The Life of Jesus Born in Bethlehem, raised in Nazareth Studied scriptures in Hebrew He traveled around preaching to people in everyday language using.
Early Byzantine Empire. Essential Question  What were main characteristics of the Byzantine Empire. Sprawling Empire Justinian Legal Code Public Works.
BYZANTINE EMPIRE CHAPTER 11. DID ROME REALLY FALL??? The Western Roman Empire crumbled in the 5 th century when Germanic tribes overran Rome However,
Homework MA #1 due tomorrow Next current events article due Friday.
The Makings of a Medieval World - 1 The Rise of Christianity and Islam Christ being Baptized, catacomb wall painting, 330 CE, Italy.
Religious Stuff that caused a problem! What is an Icon? They appear in several forms; in mural painting, mosaic and most typically painted on small.
THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE Essential Question:
Chapter 11 Drill. He believed that the Roman Empire had grown too large and too complex for one ruler. He divided the empire into the Greek-speaking East.
Chapter 16 -Part Two – -Early Middle Ages in Byzantine Empire.
Foundation Stones of Christianity Chapter 5 #2. Christianity Spreads around the Mediterranean Sea  Christian Churches & communities are formed in Greek.
Language of Faith. Language of Faith: a brief history of the fall of the Roman Empire-- Diocletian divided the Empire into two administrative regions.
Eastern vs. Western Church
Comparing Christianity in the Middle Ages
Chapter 4, Lesson 3 A Christian Europe It Matters Because: Christianity divided in to the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox branches. Despite this division,
The Byzantine Empire The Forgotten Empire.
What happened to the Roman Empire by 500 A.D.?
Christianity in Late Antiquity/Early Middle Ages
Byzantine Culture and Art Greek Orthodox Christianity.
Saints in Our History The First Thousand Years
Catholic vs. Orthodox. The Great Schism East-West Schism or the Great Schism – Eastern Greek and Western Latin – Split the Church over political and ecclesiastical.
The Orthodox Church Roman Catholic Church Anglican Church (Greek or Russian) At a Glance (Greek or Russian) At a Glance (Greek or Russian) At a Glance.
Holy Trivia! Church History Questions and answers from Michael Daley, Creative Catechist Magazine, Nov/Dec 2010 and some other sources!
Chapter 10 What did Jesus Teach?. What Did Jesus Teach? HE CLAIMED TO BE THE SON OF GOD. He preached that God was coming soon to rule the world HE ASKED.
 Agenda ◦ 1) Lesson 2 Notes ◦ 2) Church Venn Diagram ◦ 3) ReviewCab 1 and 2  What’s Due ◦ Church Venn Diagram  What’s Next ◦ Byzantine Culture ◦ Culture.
Byzantine Religion Constantine was the first Christian emperor in the Roman Empire Theodosius was the emperor that made Christianity the official religion.
The Division of Christianity ■ Because of the distance & lack of contact between Byzantine Empire & Western Europe, Christianity developed differently.
Church History for Dummies CHAPTER 6: The Dark Ages… ( A.D.) Bringing Order out of Chaos in a Crumbling Empire.
The Great Schism Throughout the Byzantine Empire, the Christian church carried forward a long tradition of icons. Icons are a representation of sacred.
Early Medieval Europe (ca ). Early Medieval Europe How was Europe different now from the classical past? How was Europe different now from the.
Great Schism of 1054 East-West Schism:
Origins of Christianity
Eastern vs. Western Church
Language of Faith.
Christianity in the Byzantine Empire
Rome Adopts Christianity
The Division of the Church
Medieval Europe Chapter 8.
Chapter 2, lesson 3 The Early Christian Church
Early Christianity: Teachings of Christ
Presentation transcript:

Christianity and Late Roman Empire Diocletian ( ) divided Empire into West and East in 286 Constantine (ca ) moved the capital in 330 from Rome (West) to Byzantium (East), renaming it Constantinople (today, Istanbul), a.k.a. the “New Rome” Rome falls in 476 (no more Roman emperors) Byzantine Empire survives until 1453, when it is overthrown by the Turks

Constantine

Council of Nicaea, 325 Ecumenical (world-wide) meeting called by Constantine Purpose: to establish Christian doctrine One major conclusion: that Jesus is “of one substance with the Father” (see 192)

Christianity and Late Roman Empire Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian ( ) reunited the Empire briefly, but unity did not last In the West, the Church (Roman Catholic) centered in Rome filled the power vacuum left by the decline of political authority In the East, emperors worked in alliance with the Eastern (Orthodox) Church

Christianity West & East Roman Catholic –Pope (Rome) –Church authority in absence of stable government –Uniform/universal –Latin –Legal theological language Eastern Orthodox –Patriarch (Constantinople) –Church authority connected to government –National churches –National languages –Mystical theological language

Christianity West & East: Issues Icons (Gr. images): representations of God, Jesus, the Virgin, the saints. –Roman Catholic Church approved of icons –Some Orthodox Christians—iconoclasts—did not approve, and they destroyed icons. –Orthodox churches generally have only two- dimensional icons, not statues as in Roman Catholicism Marriage of Clergy: Orthodox: OK; Rome: No

Christianity: West and East 1054: Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches split John Paul II worked to bridge the divide between these two sides of Christendom

Roman Church: Petrine Succession Formulated by Leo the Great (c ), bishop of Rome The bishop of Rome, the pope (pontiff) is the successor of St. Peter, who was given authority by Jesus

Monasticism Ascetic lifestyle followed by certain Christians who wanted to devote themselves to their faith Monasticism originated in the East (Egypt), from Gr. monas meaning “alone”

Monasticism Monks practiced asceticism: self-control and self-denial Asceticism is from Gr. askein: athletic training or exercise. Monks were called the “desert athletes for Christ” Early monastics sought extremes of self- denial, even self-torture: self-caging, standing on one leg for hours, etc.

Monasticism: Causes Martyrdom and persecution in decline; some Christians looking for test of faith Church becoming more worldly and authoritative; some Christians wanted to escape to a simpler, severe religious practice

Communal Monasticism East: St. Basil (c ) –Stressed labor and prayer over self-torture: self- laceration and prolonged fasts prohibited West: St. Benedict (c ) –Poverty, chastity, obedience (to abbot) –Liberal in some respects: allowed for wine

St. Benedict

St. Scholastica

Benedictines: Significance Missionaries: Benedictines converted England and most of Germany Manual labor: contrasted with classical ideal of pure contemplation

Benedictines: Significance Learning: Benedictines copied and studied classical texts, preserving them through the Middle Ages Fu Jen Catholic University was originally operated by the Benedictines when it was established in 1925

Famous Benedictines Dionysius Exiguus (Denis the Little, fl. 525), established the Western calendar used today Venerable Bede ( ) wrote a monumental history of England Brother Nicholas Koss, Dean of College of Foreign Languages, Fu Jen University

Women and Men in the Church Paul wrote, “there is neither male nor female” after Baptism However, women were also associated with sexual temptation, with the flesh Sex in marriage for procreation, not for pleasure Virginity became a requirement for the priesthood, but it was not originally so –Some of Jesus’ disciples were married, it is thought

Women and Men in the Church Women were not allowed to hold authority in the Church or to be priests However, women could participate in monastic life as nuns –In Egypt, 20,000 women joined monasteries, vs. only 10,000 men –In West, Benedictine nunneries became centers of learning for women, an alternative to marriage

Latin Church Fathers: Jerome C Translated the Bible into Latin from Hebrew (Old Testament) and Greek (New Testament): the Vulgate

Latin Church Fathers: Ambrose C Archbishop of Milan Wrote On the Duties of Ministers, influenced by Cicero’s On Duty He said God’s grace goes to some, but not others

Latin Church Fathers: Gregory the Great C ; became pope in 590 Increased power of Roman Church Sent Benedictines to England (he had been one) Latin liturgy: Gregorian chant

Latin Church Fathers: Augustine Bishop of Hippo, North Africa Confessions: struggle between higher and lower nature City of God: heavenly city vs. earthly city

Significance of Augustine Founded the genre of spiritual autobiography: The Confessions (c. 400) Established the concept of linear history with a direction: City of God ( ) Common theme: salvation through Christ gives meaning to history

Christian symbols

Sarcophagus, Theodorus, 6 th c.

Gospel Writers: Matching Matthew Mark Luke John Lion Eagle Man Ox

Gospel Writers Matthew (man) Mark (lion) Luke (ox) John (eagle)

Mosaic, Santa Pudenziana, Rome, c

Orans (Rome, catacombs,4 th c.)

The Good Shepherd, c. 300 C.E.

Jesus: Good Shepherd (Rome, catacombs, 4 th c.)

Jesus, The Good Shepherd, Ravenna, c

Jesus: Majestic Roman Leader (Rome, catacombs, 4 th c.)

Basilica: St. Paul’s Outside the Walls, Rome

St. Paul’s Outside the Walls, Rome

Basilica: St. Paul’s Outside the Walls, Rome

The Mass Kyrie eleison (Lord have mercy) Gloria (Glory to God) Credo (Creed/statement of belief) Sanctus and Benedictus (Holy, Holy Holy; Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord) Agnus Dei (Lamb of God)