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The History of the Christian Church

The Change Part 8

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6 • 790 Ratings

🗓️ 12 December 2021

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is the 8th episode in our series examining the impact Christianity has had on history & culture. Today we take a look at the influence the Faith has had on labor and work.Historians of the traditional school laud Greco-Roman civilization for what it bequeathed the modern world in politics & philosophy.  But in the classical world poly-phi was done by the elite; the wealthy & powerful 1% who had the leisure time to engage exclusively in intellectual pursuits. What gets glossed over in this era is the low regard paid manual labor & those classes of society that did it. You could make a good case that it was the tension between the tiny elite, patrician class & the lower masses of plebeians that was the deciding factor in shaping Roman history.Both Greeks & Romans thought manual labor fit only for slaves & the lower classes who had to work because they couldn’t afford slaves. The wealthy shunned work or any kind. Plutarch reported that Plato was infuriated at 2 fellow philosophers because they constructed a machine to help solve problems of geometry. Such a device ought to have been made by a slave or artisan—not by thinkers & freemen. But that wasn’t the end or extent  of Plato’s outrage. He was also incensed that a machine had been constructed to make geometry practical; it corrupted the excellence of geometry as a thought-experiment! In Plato, at least, and his thinking here likely expresses the rest of the Athenian elite – there was utter disdain with & for the everyday world of the common man.The ancient mathematician Archimedes was embarrassed by having constructed devices that aided his studies in geometry. The 1st C BC Roman philosopher Cicero said no gentleman ought to lower himself to engage in daily labor to provide for his needs. He said, “Vulgar are the means of livelihood of all hired workmen whom we pay for mere manual labor…and all mechanics are engaged in vulgar trades.” Seneca, who lists the honorable activities for freemen, never mentions manual labor.In Athens in the 1st C AD, 1/3rd of the freemen did nothing more than sit in the city’s political assembly hall and discuss issues of State while slaves performed the work that made the State run. There were 5 times as many slaves in Athens as citizens.So, if the elite 1% weren’t working, what were they doing? They were seeking pleasure purchased by the wealth earned by the lower classes they despised. It was into this anti-work cultural environment the early Christians entered the Greco-Roman world.The value assigned simple work by Christians stemmed from 3 sources.First – they had Jesus as their example.He grew up in the home of a craftsman. Tradition says Joseph was a carpenter but the NT word tecknon refers to a skilled construction worker. Remember that though Joseph & Mary were from Bethlehem in the S just a few miles from Jerusalem, they lived up N in Nazareth when Jesus was born. That’s where He was raised. Joseph lived in Nazareth because in that day, that’s where the work was. Herod was building a new capital for Galilee in the city of Sepphoris, a short hike from Nazareth, which in that day was little more than a work camp for Jewish laborers working on Herod’s project. Tour the ruins of Sepphoris today and you come to the conclusion, Joseph probably did more work as a mason than as a carpenter. And following custom, Jesus would have learned his father’s trade & spent many hours in the quarries & on-site shaping stones. He plied this trade till he was 30.Second – The early Christians had another excellent role model in the Apostle Paul who from his Hebrew heritage had learned a trade, even though his real career was as a rabbi. Paul repeatedly used his tent-making as the means of supporting his ministry. So much so, that phrase has come over into our vernacular.Third – Early Christians were well aware of Paul’s admonition in 2 Thess. 3:10 that “If a man won’t w

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to

0:03.0

God in

0:07.0

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

0:28.6

This is the eighth episode in our series examining the impact that Christianity has had on history and culture.

0:35.4

Today, we're going to take a look at the influence the faith has had on labor and culture. Today, we're going to take a look at the influence the faith has

0:38.4

had on labor and work. Historians of the traditional school laud Greco-Roman civilization for what

0:46.5

it bequeathed the modern world in terms of politics and philosophy. But in the classical world,

0:52.8

Polyphi was done by the elite,

0:55.3

that is, the wealthy and powerful 1%, who had the leisure time to engage exclusively

1:01.0

in the intellectual pursuits.

1:03.7

What gets glossed over in this era is the low regard that was paid manual labor

1:08.6

and those classes of society that did it. You could make a good

1:12.7

case that it was the tension between the tiny elite patrician class and the lower masses of the

1:19.1

plebians that was the deciding factor in shaping Roman history. Both Greeks and Romans thought

1:25.4

that manual labor was fit only for slaves and the lower classes

1:29.3

who had to work because they couldn't afford slaves themselves.

1:33.0

The wealthy shunned work of any kind.

1:36.3

Plutarch reported that Plato was infuriated at two fellow philosophers because they constructed

1:41.9

a machine to help solve the problems of geometry.

1:45.0

Such a device ought to have been made by a slave or an artisan, not by thinkers and freeman.

1:52.0

But that wasn't the end or extent of Plato's outrage.

1:55.0

He was also in sense that a machine had been constructed to make geometry practical

...

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