6.
What
transition in the external life of the Church occurred at this time?
In the early days of Christianity,
in order to worship God, Christians had to leave the city at night and go into
caves. Even there, however, they were not safe. When they were discovered, the
authorities would block the cave's entrance and would collect brush and set it
on fire, thereby killing those inside.
In addition to legalizing
Christianity, Constantine moved the seat of the empire eastward from Italy to
the shores of the Bosphorus, calling this city Nea
Romi (New Rome), although people referred to it as Constantine’s
City, or Constantinople. From the moment that the
Christian Empire was established, the center of the world’s life was shifted
from ancient Rome to Constantinople, the latter of which became the symbolic center of Christianity. Old Rome thus joined Constantinople, New Rome, the
former city of Byzantium, and a primacy of honor, one that was recognized by the Second
Ecumenical Council, came to be shared by these two great capitals.
Two Greek hierarchs explain the
purpose of the Roman Empire, and they give a highly refined assessment of the first Christian
emperor, a view that is sadly lacking in Western accounts, particularly in the
historiographies of the Protestant world. They explain that:
For the Byzantine, the empire, as the structure into which the Church
was integrated, was not a power that, because of increasing strength and
numbers in Christianity, had capitulated to this new force. It existed for the
very purpose of accommodating the Christian Church. Thus the Emperor
Constantine was genuinely enlightened from within to favor the Christian
religion, having been convinced of its power by a miraculous image of the Holy
Cross that promised him victory in battle. His participation in the theological
debates and dialogues that helped safeguard and standardize the Christian
beliefs and traditions which had reached his age from the time of the Apostles
was, therefore, not — as prevailing historical theories would have it — an
attempt to sway the Christian Church towards a theology of his liking. His
participation grew out of his internal knowledge and acceptance of the divinely
ordained role of the Roman Empire in the spreading of Christianity. It was not a life of piety or a
martyric confession of Christianity that ultimately makes the Emperor
Constantine what he is. His simple acknowledgement of his role and the role of
the empire in the Christian scheme made him a saint, an Equal-to-the-Apostles —
the human through whom the divine mission of Christianity was made manifest
[Archbishop Chrysostomos of Etna and Bishop Auxentios of Photiki, The Roman West and the Byzantine East,
p. 22].
It
is important to pause on St. Constantine, for a common Protestant misconception
of Church history is that the Church fell into apostasy from the time of Constantine to
the Reformation. A former Protestant minister who converted to Orthodoxy, Fr.
John Whiteford, comments that in reply, it can be stated that had the Church
ceased for even one day, then the gates of hell would have prevailed against it
on that day, something contrary to Christ's promise (Mt 16:18). Moreover, the
same author continues, if the Church did indeed cease for a period of time,
...when Christ described the growth of the Church in His parable of the
mustard seed (Mt 13:31-12), He should have spoken of a plant that started to grow but was
squashed, and in its place a new seed sprouted later on. Instead, He used the
imagery of a mustard seed that begins small, but steadily grows into the
largest of garden plants [Sola Scriptura:
an Orthodox Analysis of the Cornerstone of Reformation Theology, p. 19].
That
the Church did not cease to exist at the time of Constantine is
also shown to be false inasmuch as Christ is the Head of the Church (Eph. 4:15-16),
the Church is His Body (Eph. 1:22-23), and because Christ
promised to be with the Church “even unto the end of the world” (Mt 28:20). Fr.
John points out that Christ did not promise that His Church would be prosperous
or the most numerous of religions; in fact, He promised the opposite (Mt
7:13-14, 10:22; Jn 15:20). Neither did Christ promise that there would be no
sinners in the Church (Mt 13:47-50), or that it would not
have to contend with false shepherds or wolves in sheep's clothing (Jn 10:1,12,13). Christ did promise, however, an abiding and
ultimately triumphant Church that would have His abiding presence and that
would be guided into all Truth by the Holy Spirit (Jn 16:13).
If the Church had indeed fallen into apostasy from the time of Constantine to
the Reformation, then these and many other scriptural passages would be
rendered meaningless, Fr. John concludes.
Now that the Church was out of the
catacombs, churches began to be built above ground. Some of the first churches
constructed were over the holy sites in Palestine
where Christ had lived. The Emperor Constantine and the Empress Helen, his
mother, built a massive church in honor of the Resurrection of Christ, the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher. They also built churches on the Mount of Olives in Bethlehem,
and in Hebron at the Oak of Mamre. Later, in the sixth century, St. Catherine's
Monastery was built on Mount Sinai over the site of the burning bush, near the place where Moses received
the Ten Commandments. Most of these buildings serve to this day as Orthodox
churches and monasteries.
Also during this new time of freedom
and rest for the Church, the Emperor Constantine called a Council of bishops to
gather from the four corners of the world. Modeled after the Council in the
time of the Apostles, it was the first of seven Ecumenical Councils in the
history of the Church. This First Ecumenical Council held at Nicaea, as well as
the Second Ecumenical Council of Constantinople, articulated the Creed of
Christianity, the Nicaeo-Constantinopolitan Symbol of Faith, or Nicene Creed
(also called the Creed), so that
there would be one confession of the faith and not different interpretations.
This Creed (“I believe in One God...”) is a concise summary of all the truths
of the Christian faith, and it is sung at every Divine Liturgy and recited in
several other places in the daily services of the Orthodox Church. The
Ecumenical Councils themselves acknowledge the Creed as being primary and fundamental
among all the doctrinal decrees of the Councils, and they forbade any changes
whatsoever in it, not only in its ideas, but also in its words, either by
addition or subtraction. Whoever does not accept the truths of the Creed is not
an Orthodox Christian.
This new period likewise became a
time to articulate the beliefs of the faith and to choose the books that would
comprise the standard of Scripture. Before the First Ecumenical Council, there
was no universally accepted New Testament canon of Scripture, and thus no
Bible. There were accounts of Christ's life by the four Evangelists, and many
epistles from several of the Apostles such as Paul and Peter. There were also
the letters and writings of the disciples of the Apostles such as Saints
Ignatius, Clement, Dionysius and others. One of the persons instrumental in the
First Ecumenical Council was St. Athanasius of Alexandria,
who is responsible for the canon of the New Testament Scriptures that we have
today.
Christianity began to flourish once
the Church came above ground. The new freedom allowed the perfection of
liturgical music (chant) and the refinement of religious art (iconography), and
Christian literature proliferated. In short, the Church became the center of
every aspect of life.
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