James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© September 12, 2014
REFERENCE:
This is the
preface to “Search for the Real Parents of My Soul,” which will be an
occasional essay as I blow the dust off my previous ponderings on this subject
nearly a half century ago.
Perhaps the
best starting point in this evolutionary process would be to gain some sense of
the daily life in the time of Jesus (Daniel-Rope, 1962). What was it like when he came into the world?
Some
attention will be paid to showing the geographical, human and political context
in and around Jerusalem (Kenneth Scott Latourette, 1953) as Jesus was about to
come into the world.
In that same
context, Israel’s religious life of the people and its God (Arthur Hertzberg,
1962) should prove useful in understanding how, as well as why this fertile see
took root in this culture. Then some
attention will be paid in showing how writers have seen Jesus moving among his
people, and in his time (Fulton J. Sheen, 1958; Kahlil Gibran, 1928; Giovanni
Papini, 1923; Kenneth Scott Latourette, 1953; Kenneth E. Kirk, 1931; and Lucien
Cerfaux, 1959).
The bridge
from the life of Jesus to the dawn of Christianity is a precarious and
compelling drama. With Jesus and only
the gospels as source material, the foundation of Christianity represents a
tenuous climb from those works to the mountain of Christendom in the person of
St. Paul, who throughout human history has had his critics (Hyam Maccoby, 1986).
Against the
backdrop of the Greco-Roman World, Christianity takes shape in organization and
doctrine under Paul’s skillful if not compulsive leadership (Henry Burton
Sharman, 1945; Millar Burrows, 1955; and Will Durant, 1944). It would appear desirable to make a brief
inquiry into the religious thought of Greece at that time (W. S. Tyler, 1884;
Will Durant, 1953; and Edith Hamilton, 1930) against Paul’s Jewish heritage and
Roman citizenry with his Greco-cultural leanings.
No attempt
will be made here, however, to explore the theological implications of
Christianity. Instead, the worship and
discipline of the Christian community will be studied for its survival
capability. Why, for instance, did this
sect, only one of hundreds that constantly broke away from Judaism, managed to
not only survive, but flourish in a very uncertain climate?
What was
there about the times that appeared ready to risk the security of the Old
Testament for this new vision of God (K. E. Kirk, 1931)?
Many of the
answers lay in a reconstruction of the civilization of the ancient world in
terms of manners, morals and mores of men and women in society during the first
four hundred years of the Christian era.
It was during this period that Christianity became the religion of the
Roman Empire and no longer a persecuted faith (Latourette, 1951).
This, then,
is a study of the early Christian church with Jesus as the source with many
interpreting his life and mission through the gospels, accepted and rejected,
featuring the roles of Peter and Paul.
The
Christianity that evolved through their proselytizing zeal soon became
entangled in conflicts in creed and politics (Durant, 1944). Out of this rose Plotinus and the post apostolic
Fathers, who gave Christianity a philosophy overwhelming its enemies with
compelling arguments (K. Lake, Volume I, 1923).
These early
defenders of the Faith demonstrated a remarkable facility for organization, and
for structuring the function of authority.
Far from being ambiguous zealots, they apprised the collapse of the
Roman Empire correctly, and were ready to fill the vacuum (Durant, 1944; Latourette,
1953; and St. Augustine, 1934). Then,
too, the economic climate was such (W. C. Cunningham, 1900) that spiritual and
temporal needs inextricably overlapped.
During these
early years of Christianity, the church used reports of martyrdom to promote
its self-interest. Using passionate exaggeration
of these atrocities, the church filled the populous’ appetite for the macabre
to make a legend of the “blood of martyrs,” as Tertullian was to observe, and “the
seed” for promulgating the cause of Christianity (E. Gibbon, 1900).
The rise of
Constantine became the harbinger of the final triumph of Christianity. Constantine noted the efficacy of the
Christian’s struggle, and had the vision to scorn a succession of emperors who
oppressed Christianity to see a faith that survived many trials with fierce tenacity,
continued to multiply quietly, building order in the midst of chaos, fighting
adversity with the word opposed to the sword, brutality with hope, and at last,
justifying his allegiance to the faith for his own survival (Durant, 1944).
The question
has to be asked, was Constantine’s conversion sincere? Was it an act of religious belief, or a
consummate stroke of genius and political wisdom?
Some would
accept the former without question (Frank G. Slaughter, 1965). This study will attempt to develop a theory
to the contrary.
In the
process, organizational theory (Katz and Kahn, 1966; Max Weber, 1958; Talcott
Parsons, 1960) will be employed to put to rest this idea.
Finally, as
a point of reference, the conditions that gave rise to the First Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325 regarding a popular heresy
called “Arianism” (Van A. Harvey, 1964) was to “put to death” at that council. This signaled the unanimous conviction that
organizational survival was predicated on fixity of ecclesiastical doctrine
(Durant, 1950).
It is
important to note that once this precedence was established it would prove to
be carried on through all the subsequent councils including Ecumenical I and II
in the 1960s.
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
The
references that follow are in the chronology as they appear in the text.
Henri Daniel-Rops: Daily Life in the Time of Jesus, Hawthorne Books,
Inc., New York, 1962, Part I & III.
Kenneth Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity, Harper & Row,
New York, 1953, pp. 3-20.
Arthur Hertzberg, Judaism, George Braziller, New York, 1962, pp. 46-66.
Fulton J. Sheen, Life of
Christ, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1958.
Kahlil Gibran, Jesus the
Son of Man, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1928, pp. 56-60
Giovanni Papini, Life of
Christ, Harcourt, Brace and Co., Inc., New York, 1923.
Fulton Oursler, The Greatest Story
Ever Told, Doubleday, New York, 1949
The Holy Bible: Old Testament and New Testament in the Confraternity-Douay
Text; Vulgate Bible, Abradale Press, New York, 1959: New Testament, St. Mathew,
pp. 1-35; St. Mark, pp. 36-57; St. Luke, pp. 58-94; St. John, pp. 95-123.
Ibid, Latourette, pp.
33-64.
K. E. Kirk, The Vision of
God, Harper Torchbooks, New York, 1931, pp. 55-67.
Lucien Cerfaux, Christ in
the Theology of St. Paul, Herder and Herder, 1959, New York.
Hyam Maccoby, The
Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity, Barnes & Noble, New
York, 1986.
Henry Burton Sharman,
Paul as Experiment, Harper & Brothers, New York, 194.
Millar Burrows, The Dead
Sea Scrolls, Viking Press, New York, 1955, pp. 301-344.
Will Durant, Caesar and
Christ, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1944, Book V.
W. S. Tyler, The Theology
of the Greek Poets, Warren F. Draper, Boston, 1884.
Will Durant, The Story of
Philosophy, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1953, 41-73.
Edith Hamilton, The Greek
Way, Time, Inc., New York, 1963, pp. 266-283.
Ibid, Kirk, pp. 19-22.
Mike Waltari, The
Etruscans, G. P. Putnam’s & Sons, New York, 1956 (a novel).
Ibid, Latourette, p. 663.
Ibid, Durant, pp. 603.
K. Lake, The Apostolic
Fathers, Loeb Library, Vol. I, 1923.
Ibid, Durant, pp.
631-645.
Ibid, Latourette, pp.
65-70.
St. Augustine, The City
of God, Loeb Library, London, 1934.
W. C. Cunningham, Western
Civilization in its Economic Aspects, Cambridge, 1900, Vol. I.
E. Gibbon, Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire, Everyman Library, 1900, London.
Ibid, Durant, p. 652.
Frank G. Slaughter, Constantine,
The Miracle of the Flaming Cross, Doubleday, New York, 1965 (a novel).
Daniel Katz and Robert L.
Kahn, The Social Psychology of Organizations, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New
York, 1966.
Max Weber, The Protestant
Ethic & The Spirit of Capitalism, Scribner & sons, 1958; Reinhard
Bendix, Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait, Doubleday, New York, 1962.
Talcott Parsons,
Structure and Progress in Modern Societies, Free Press, New York, 1960.
Van A. Harvey, A Handbook
of Theological Terms, The Macmillan Company, New York, 1964.
Will Durant, The Age of
Faith, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1950, pp. 630, 741, 764.
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