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The History of the Christian Church

The Change Part 1

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6790 Ratings

🗓️ 26 October 2021

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We're changing gears a bit to begin a series of podcasts considering the impact Christianity has had on the world. We’ll unpack how the Faith has left its imprint on society. The Title of this episode is The Change - Part 1: The Sanctity of Life.Knowing my fascination with history and especially the history of Rome, a few years ago, someone recommended I watch a mini-series that aired on a cable network. While it was dramatic historical fiction, the producers did a good job of presenting the customs & values of 1st C BC Roman culture. While the series was suspenseful & entertaining, it was difficult to watch because of the brutality that was commonplace. And it wasn't put in merely for the sake of titillation or to make the shows more provocative. It was an accurate depiction of the time. More than once, I found myself near tears, broken over just how lost the world was. Several times I said out loud, "They needed Jesus!"Exactly! THAT was the very era Jesus was born into & the culture the Gospel spread in. How desperately the Roman Empire needed the life-affirming message the Early Church preached & lived.There's an old saying, “When in Rome, do as the Romans do.” When the early Christians came to Rome, we can be thankful they DIDN'T do what the Romans did. On the contrary, slowly but surely, with fits & starts, they eventually transformed the Greco-Roman world from rank paganism to a more or less Biblical worldview. Nowhere was that seen more clearly than in the change that was made to the sanctity of human life.During the early days of the Roman republic, the high value put on the family unit formed a moral base that lent a certain weight to the value of the individual. But as the idea of the State grew during the late republic, then blossomed in the Empire, people were evaluated in terms of what they could contribute to the State. That meant people on the bottom of the social scale had little to no value. The poor, women, and slaves became chattel; property to be used. Life became cheap. And the pagan gods bequeathed no real moral virtue into the Roman world. They were understood to be whimsical & selfish at the best of times, cruel in the worst.The Christian value of the sanctity or specialness of human beings was based in the Jewish view of man as created in God's image. There was a healthy Jewish population in the City of Rome itself & scattered throughout other major cities of the Empire. Early on, the unique Jewish view of man had infiltrated the Roman world where ever Jews were to be found. So different was this view of man from the paganized Greco-Roman worldview that many of the more enlightened Greeks & Romans had begun attending Jewish synagogues. If they stayed, they became known as God-fearers; Gentiles who believed in the God of the Bible, but hadn't become full converts to Judaism by being circumcised, baptized, & keeping kosher. They occupied a section in many synagogues, sitting by themselves to hear the teaching of Scripture. The book of Acts tells us some of Paul's most fruitful work was in this God-Fearer section of the synagogue.The Jewish idea of men & women being created in God's image took on new potency when the Gospel was preached, for it told of God becoming man. And becoming a man so He could go to the cross to ransom lost men & women; translating them from a destiny in hell to the glory of heaven. All this spoke of God's view of the value of human beings. If He would endure the passion & cross, it meant life was of inestimable value. Rather than life being cheap, it was to be honored and protected at all costs, regardless of its station or quality.One way the early Christian demonstrated this was the church's opposition to the widespread practice of infanticide. It was common to expose unwanted children soon after birth, either by drowning or leaving them on exposed where the elements or wild beasts would finish them. Th

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to God

0:07.0

God in heaven, Welcome to Communio Sanctorum, the history of the Christian Church.

0:28.5

We're going to change gears a bit and begin a series of podcasts, considering the impact

0:33.1

that Christianity has had on the world.

0:35.2

We'll unpack how the faith has left its imprint on society.

0:39.3

The title of this episode is The Change Part One, and we'll be taking a look at the sanctity of

0:45.1

life. Knowing my fascination with history and especially the history of Rome, a few years ago,

0:50.8

someone recommended that I watched a mini-series that had aired on a cable network.

0:55.4

While it was a dramatic historical fiction, the producers did a pretty good job of representing

1:00.5

the customs and values of first century BC Roman culture.

1:04.7

While the series was suspenseful and entertaining, it was rather difficult to watch because

1:09.6

of the brutality that was commonplace.

1:12.2

And it wasn't put in merely for the sake of titillation or to make the shows more provocative.

1:18.3

It was an accurate depiction of the time.

1:20.9

More than once, I found myself near tears, broken over just how lost that world was.

1:27.3

And several times I said out loud,

1:29.2

oh man, they needed Jesus.

1:31.7

Exactly.

1:32.7

That was the very era that Jesus was born into

1:36.1

and the culture of the gospel spread in.

1:38.7

How desperately the Roman Empire needed

1:41.3

the life-affirming message that the early church preached and lived.

...

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