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Church History
OUTLINE OF THE COURSE
I.
The Apostolic Church
From Pentecost, 30 AD
To the death of Saint John, 100 AD
II.
The Persecuted Church
From the death of St. John, 100 AD
To the Edict of Constantine, 313 AD
III.
The Imperial Church
From the Edict of Constantine, 313 AD
To the Fall of Rome
IV.
The Medieval Church
From the Fall of Rome, 476 AD
To the Fall of Constantinople, 1453 AD
V.
The Reformed Church
From the Fall of Constantinople, 1453 AD
To the end of the Thirty Year War, 1648 AD
VI.
The Missionary Church
From the end of the Thirty Year War, 1648 AD
To the Twentieth Century, until Jesus comes.
30-33 – Kingdom of God
100 – Close of the Canon = Rule
Doctrine Development
Established small house churches
110 – Infant Baptism, Structure of Bishops
313 - Christianity unofficial Religion
When the church and world marry - where many of the pagan practices came into
Christianity.
Roman Catholic Church: 1. Paganism
2: New Testament
3. Old Testament
325 – Controversy over whether Jesus is God
Arius said Jesus is not equal with the Father
Counsel of Nicea called Arius a heretic
600 – The structure of what the Roman Catholic Church is today started
622 – Mohammed born – a merchant
722 – Islamic faith (mixture of all religions) threatens the church
900 – Chiny, a monastic group that brought back renewal to the church
1095 – Crusades start (battle to take the Holy sites)
1095-1295 – Seven Crusades
600- 1095 – religion of experience becomes a religion of mechanics
1054 – East and West spilt
1170 – Two groups of people trying to bring back to Scripture
1517 – The Turning Point – Martin Luther, the Reformation, October 31, 1517
Hung the 95 theses’
Indulgences – A right to get family members out of purgatory to heaven
1517 - The umbrella was the Pentecostal Church
1520 – Lutheran Church
1520 – Reformed Church
1612 – Baptist Church
1787 - Methodist Church
Officiate of Reformed Church was Anglican
Between 1900 and 1914 the Pentecostals had no unity
Hot Spring, Ark. In 1914 meeting for unification / Gospel Publishing House
1886 – Church of God Cleveland
1914 – International Church of the four square gospel
1900 - December 31st – Bethel Bible Institute: Baptism of the Spirit
1922 – Central Bible College
1924 ZBI – for the most part Pentecost’s were anti education
The forerunners of Pentecost in the 1800’s
3 great moves in the last century:
1. Azusa
2. Notre Dame 2nd Wave 1962 – outpouring on the Catholics / Dennis Bennet, a priest in
California received the baptism of the spirit, launched Episapalian renewal
3. Among evangelicals began by Peter Wagner at Fuller in California / emphasis in
healing, deliverance, spiritual warfare
9-6-06
History has two sides: Divine and Healing
Divine: God’s revelation from the order of time, progressive revelation
He unfolds His plan in succession
Divine and Secular history run parallel
God is in charge of all history
Use the word divine for anything beyond the metaphysical
Secular: the unfolding or development of the physical world, intellectually
Key Word in church history is “kingdom” = the rule of God
Church History
The story of the application to the human nature of the principles taught by Jesus Christ
The story of light and darkness with light being dominant
The account of the growth and transaction of the religious community which changed
human destiny
The narration of all that is known about the founding and development of the church is
the rise progress of the kingdom of heaven on earth for the glory of God and for the
salvation of souls.
The purpose of Church History
(for something to be permanent it must be written down)
- to recount the religion of Christ on earth
- recount personality, events, controversies, social / customs, transition of mankind
Value of Church History
- necessary for a student in ministry
- be able to bridge the past with the present
- gives an understanding to culture
- occupies a central position of understanding the middle ages
Sources of Church History
- Divine and Human
- Written sources: 1. official documents of civil and ecclesiastical order
- Acts of Councils (Ephesus, Jerusalem, Nicea)
- Creeds, Confessions of aith
- Church Law
-
Letters of Papacy
2. Personal Journals and Letters
3. Inscriptions on tombs catacombs (tombs tell stories of Christianity)
4. Ancient Ruins
Unwritten Sources: 1. Church Buildings
2. Sculptured Art
3. Monuments
Three Fold Outline
1. Ancient History – early church 1-590 AD / birth of Christ to Gregory the Great
2. Medieval Church – 590-1517- Gregory to Martin Luther / posting of the 95 theses
3. Modern Church – 1517 to present
Emphasis of the Early Church: The return of Christ
- Evangelism, unification, persecution (the more they were persecuted, the more
they grew)
- The church began to grow and it became apparent they needed organization
- The holy spirit took time organizing a team
- Apostolic Fathers / Apostles (12) / Apostolic Fathers / Church Fathers
- 110 bishops, presbyters, sacraments, baby baptism
- Part of the organization of the church was the canon
- Acts 2:42
- Church Services (scripture reading, prayer, offering, preaching, fellowship)
Nature of the Church
- Consists of all those who believe in Christ, accepts Him, saved from sin and
obeys Him
- The very nature of the church was to be spiritual
- Spiritual kingdom would have opposition form within and without
- Holy Spirit abiding presence
- Empowerment to be a witness
- Illumination
- What was necessary next was structure
Two Great Institutions merge at the same time: Christianity and the Roman Empire
God physically prepared the Roman Empire
Common Language = Greek, built great roads, brought peace, great philosophies
Hellenist: Grecian Jew / descended from the dispersion, ancestry in foreign land
Proselytes: foreign blood, renounced heathenism and embraced Jewish Law
Reasons why the church grew
1. Early Church was moved by a conviction that Jesus was coming
2. Gospel met the human needs of the heart
3. The practical expression of Christian love
Heroic Age of the Church 33-313 AD persecution
9-7-06
Hellenist: influenced the culture of Bible Times
Grecian Jew, born out of Palestine
Spoke Greek or Aramaic, direct result of the dispersion and had a large impact on
Christianity, developed the synagogue into the world
Paul - born in Tarsus (a Hellenistic City)
Trained by the great minds of his day
Was a Pharisee and a tent maker / their is not a person that impacted Christianity
like Paul / 70% of New Testament writings
His calling was not by man / In the upper room they did not vote him in / became
one of the greatest apologists of the Christian faith / his role was to lay the
foundation
Proselyte: Convert to Judaism look on their laws and traditions
Became significant in Christianity
Apostolic Church 100 AD lead by many martyrs
1. fired from employment / prevented from having public office
2. separated them into different communities and from social and economic
programs forcing them to unite
3. put into slavery
4. accused of being immoral , secretive, and being cannibals
5. they refused emperor worship so they were accused of treason
Christian - Hagios – Saint
Holy / Separate
Christians were different lifestyle spoke of Christianity in action.
Mythology was the religion of the Roman Empire.
The only way of stopping Christianity was to persecute them.
They forced the Christians to recant or die.
Many Christians chose to be martyrs.
64 AD - Nero started a wave of persecution against Christians when he blames the
Christians for the fire he started a great hatred from the pagans toward the
Christians.
Christians are then slathered and crucified by the thousands.
At midnight Nero would burn hundreds of Christians alive.
Growth 33-313AD
House churches and street meetings became popular.
The structure of the church comes together.
Ignatius – born around 67 AD died around 110 AD
Helped to establish Christianity, apologist very vocal individual, arrested and was
to be thrown to the lions “May the beasts be eager to rush upon me…” He was not
afraid to die.
Polycarp – intelligent, great vision of who God was, believed firmly in Jesus,
called an Apostolic Father/ arrested in Smyrna / did not honor image worship and
was called an atheist / burned alive in 156 AD
Justin Martyr – born 100 AD died 166 AD great philosopher / beheaded in
Rome with six other Christians / brought about an understanding of truth / wrote a
great apology called supreme truth
9-13-06
33-313 Persecution, growth, structure / structure enabled growth
The canon of the New Testament closes: 100 at the death of John
Apostolic Fathers - > Church Fathers (to sort out theology what was going on)
Grostics, Montanists and Manecheans = all religious groups with a twist to
Christianity
During this time there were nasty emperors’: Domitian, Nero, Marcus, Decius,
and Diocletian 303-311 worst persecution = burnt scriptures, suspended rights
of Christians
-
Outward Development: growth
Inward Development: structure = had to do with doctrine, belief, and
organization
Why is scripture so important? = keeps us from wrong theology / makes what we
believe clear
without a theological base and theological positions the church would become
prey to Gnostics
-
gnostic - of, relating to, or possessing intellectual or spiritual knowledge.
-
It lays a foundation, gives people the substance of what they believe
Apostolic Fathers: taught by the disciples / Ignatius of Antioch / Barnabas of Alexandria
/ the concepts of Christianity were being challenged
Apologists = defenders of the faith / they intellectually and philosophically laid a
foundation / explained Christianity through education
Gnostics = Christ never dwelt on earth in human form
Montanists = The Holy Spirit never came but would come at the end of the age
Iranaeus – 115-142, friend of Polycarp / died a martyrs death / laid foundation of who
Christ was
Tertullian – 150-155 born in North Carthage, N. Africa / lawyer in Rome / after
conversion goes to Carthage and becomes a presbyter a great student of philosophy
Clement of Alexandria – teacher in the school of theology
Origen – established Christianity, one of the earliest scholars of the church / allegorized
= found hidden meanings and received new light
----------------creeds – because church struggled with groups / they understood the only way to equip
the lay person was through theology
aristocrats and clergy – only people able to read and write / the common person did not
have education
credo – I believe / creeds became the cornerstone of Christianity to fight heresy / creed,
canon, organization and structure
Structure of the church was simple – presbyter would take the lead
Episcopate (the development of) church government / exercise of authority ruled by
bishops early in church history
Smyrna had bishops at the close of the canon
Congregational = power invested in the pew / came much later
600 – the concept of the pope / catholic means universal / tradition – over time the
bishop of Rome becomes supreme / the structure was gradual and deliberate
Diocese – a cluster, geographical location / district
200 AD unity in the church because of the heretical groups
Apostles creed, canon of the New Testament, episape form of church government /
became known as the Roman Catholic Church because their were other groups
West Capital = Rome / East Capital = Constantinople
Roman Empire and Christianity merged / Roman Empire had two distinct personalities /
Maxentius = had 120,000 ruled a portion = Italy and N. Africa / Constantine had
40,000 ruled over Britain and Spain / both had a dream to be sole emperor
Edict of Toleration / Milan which gave Christians rights, no more persecution
When persecuted Christianity grew / this edict caused Christianity to become a
religion of mechanics instead of a religion of experience
Pagans then started to flood in / Pagans changed loyalties but not beliefs
Philosophy of religion not an experimental religion
Catholicism, paganism, OT and NT
9-14-06
Gnostics - found their birth in Greek philosophy and attended themselves to Christians
with a bizarre approach / into shrines of Greek philosophies / Sophia = goddess of
wisdom
Tertullian and Iraneaus went after the Gnostics / creeds were the single factor that
defeated the Gnostics / had to fight heresy with truth / knowledge, skill to be able to
articulate / Gnostics forced the church to structure itself / the structure allowed the church
to stand to test of time
Christological heresies the first 500 years / Christ was less than God the Father
Ebionites = “poor” / two groups Pharisees and Essenes / began around 70 AD / rose
after the destruction of the temple / had their origin in an old church in Jerusalem / held
strict Jewish customs / acknowledged Jesus was the Messiah, but picked and chose the
position they would hold / adopted many pagan practices
Montanists: Puritans, believed in the priesthood of all believers / the church is the body
of Christ / Tertullian attacked this groups theologically
Manichians: strongest between 215-277 / of Persian descent / mixture of all religions,
paganism, Judaism, Christianity / Buddhism came to be from this group / believed the
human body housed evil / classified everything by light and darkness / story of Christ
was a myth and Christ was only a symbol of the divine / they attacked Christianity / a
relatively successful group / Manichian philosophy lasted 12 centuries / their practices
still exist today in different forms (new age)
Constantine: the emperor of the west, son of constantinus / born in 273 (Edict of
Toleration 313) politician / greatest accomplishment was to free the church from
persecution -> pagans themselves become persecuted / pagan temples than became a
place of worship for Christians
The difference between the church and the state / (Constantine pushed a theocracy) battle
with which ruled the other
Roman Empire forgot the goodness of God
Barbarians = fierce warriors, intelligent
Counsels of Church History
9-21-06
Tremendous theological debates / the church is already structured / battling heretical
groups / God raises up philosophies to face challenges / needed some central authority the
rule / the bishops would convene to discuss the matters of the church -> counsels
Acts 15 Jerusalem Counsel – counsels very important for the first 500 years
Two bishops – Arius – older, said Jesus wasn’t coequal with the father
Athanasius – younger man, said Jesus was co-equal and co-existent
Early debates centered on the trinity / tri-unity / well known bishops and had quite a
following
Nicene Council called 325 in Nicene France - was vital to development of the church /
did not solve the problem, it lasted another 100 years
Nicene Creed = places Father, Son and Holy Spirit as equal / many signed but didn’t
believe it / Arius never recanted
Counsel of Constantinople 381 - dealt with the issue of whether or not the Holy Spirit is
God / because the Nicene Creed did not solve the problem and did not give emphasis on
the Holy Spirit
Counsel of Chalcedon 451 – Christ is both God and man / the deity of Christ and His
humanity is under attack / the scriptures indicate clearly the deity and humanity of Christ
Counsel of Ephesus 431 – debated the concept of depravity of humanity / 600 bishops at
this counsel
Latin Fathers: Ambrose Augustine and Jerome / became the voice in the church for the
next 1,000 years
Ambrose: born in 340 and died 397 / his father was a govern / western part of Germany
educated in Rome and studied in Milan / in Milan the battle of whether Jesus was coequal with the Father still raged / the bishop of Milan died and no system of re-election /
business meeting that was unruly -> Ambrose tries to restore order / by doing that he was
elected bishop in 470 / he wasn’t a member of the church or baptized / he became one of
the most powerful figures of church history
9-27-06
Ambrose – Shaped church history in the sense that he was a great hymn writer, a strong
theologian, a great administrator, fearless, straightened out many moral issues, withstood
emperor theologians, accommodated him, influenced Augustine. Wrote One Faith,
writings on the Holy Spirit and the sacraments.
Jerome – Live between 345-400, educated in Rome, had a great life of travel, understood
many cultures, a monk, A man who withdraw from the world to devote themselves to
God and religious exercise at this time of history monks could be married. The only
church father who knew Hebrew. Spent a lot of time with the rabbis in Jerusalem.
Vulgate translation from the original Hebrew. Live to be alone, solitude.
Augustine – Lived between 354-430 - The star of church history greatest of the church
fathers: born in North Africa. His mother was Monica. Augustine’s life was full of sin
and despair, but Monica prayed for him. “A son of so many prayers can not be lost.” In
his early years he showed promise and his parents wanted him to be a great scholar but
over time he began to show no interest in learning. Sent to Cartage at sixteen. Carthage
was a wicked city, he became involved in this. He goes to Rome, is always searching for
truth. Starts to read the bible but then turn to the poets. A Manichean at Rome was
appointed as a professor of rhetoric; went to hear Ambrose preach the gospel, had a
illegitimate child and took care of him all his life. Never denied him when he went to the
monastery. The confessions of Augustine Romans 13:13-14 “Let us behave decently, as
in the daytime, not in orgies and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery,
not in dissension and jealousy. 14Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ,
and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the sinful nature.”
When he had this it was a point of conversion for him around 386, next year he was
baptized; his theology is pre-dominant for 1000 years, a defender of scripture; bishop of
Hipo North Africa dies 430, gave whole heartedly to the church.
Monastic Movement, monastery house for monks. Augustine is an apologist; he
allegorized. He said the church gave birth to scripture. Sacrament: 100 in number at this
time and Augustine brought it down to seven. (an outward sign instituted by Christ to
give grace) spanned over a cycle of life birth -> death
1. Baptism – in Catholicism is the entrance into the Kingdom of God. Infant baptism
as early as 110 AD – similar to our dedication first 500 years baptism was
basically for adults
2. Confession – penance confess sins and have forgiveness in Roman Catholicism
the priest is the mediator
3. Communion – must take classes before you can take communion. In the Catholic
Church they took communion serious. The believe in transublantiation – the bread
and wine became the literal body and blood of Christ, a mysterious process takes
place (in our tradition we believe they represent and are emblems of the body and
4.
5.
6.
7.
blood (the presence of God is there consubstantiation 1 Corinthians 11medieval
practice.
Confirmation – receiving the Holy Spirit by the laying on off hands, called the
right of entry.
Matrimony vocation, marriage or ordination religious vows
Holy orders – priesthood ordination
Anointing of the sick – use to be called extra unction. Prayer for the dead a pagan
practice. A prayer for healing.
461 AD signs of deterioration
1. Prayer for the dead – the prayers of the living help the souls in purgatory be
purified, purgatory to be a waiting room.
2. The Lord supper as a sacrifice (Christ being re-crucified)
3. Elevation of the priesthood
4. Separation between priesthood and laity
5. Began to venerate / adore martyrs and saints adoration of Mary (she replaced the
pagan goddess Diana)
6. Burning of the candles to venerate the saints
7. Relic worship
8. The color are symbolic
9. Elaborate rituals
10. When the pulpit was taken from central focus their was less preaching of the
gospel
11. Pilgrimage to the holy land
12. Monasticism – brought a false idea of holiness
9-28-06
Monotheism – a reaction to the worldliness that entered the church / extreme ascetic
(self-denial / hermits) or those who related to communities / monastic movement
grew / monastic’s who were married or lived in religious communities / seven people
to start a religious community / 700 – 800’s unity in monasticism, but not recognized
until the 1200’s / European Christianity was built on the sacrifice of the monastic
movement / positive and negative elements – church in Europe became the central
focus / Irish monastic’s that saved the educational system / the fuel that caused the
church to grow, served the poor, taught in schools / Benedict was the father of the
monasticism 329AD / committed the church and the poor / Benedictines’ followed
the rules of St. Benedict / Bonafice was the first follower.
Positive aspects of Monastic’s
-
Church became the center, monasticism were places of refuge
A monastery is where travelers would stay, a cell
Places of education (taught ladies how to sew, knit and cook
Taught agriculture
For gospel to go around the world / missions
Monasticism – Is the ancient style of vowed religious life which typically includes
community, prayer, common worship, silence and labor. It is governed by monastic rule,
or way of life, which involves a choice to live apart from society and the world.
Christian Monasticism began in Egypt.
- Founder was Anthony in 270 AD
- Anthony lived in a cave.
- He became known as “Anthony the hermit”
- Other monasteries took the format of community living.
- It was a large house with many living their.
- Each monk had a cell.
- In the cell they lived a modest lifestyle.
- The objective and goals of the monastic was to please God by their sacrifice.
- Monasticism grew greatly.
- The real reason for the movement was to separate themselves.
- To give themselves over to prayer and a holy life.
- They helped in creating hospitals, education, and agriculture.
- The renaissance was a direct result of the sowing of the monastics
The Monasticeries Were:
1. Centers of peace
2. Hospitality
3. Refuge
4. Agriculture
5. Literature
6. Education
7. Missions
-
The center of their dedication was self-sacrifice
In all they did they promoted Catholicism
They were given to agriculture
They raised their own food.
They educated
-
They were the missionaries.
They converted the barbarians to Christianity
Evil Results of Monasticism
- The exaltation of celibacy
- Monasticism affected the social and national life because of seclusion.
- Their was luxury and immorality
- Contributions were extorted
Major Monastic Orders
- Benedictines
- Founded by Benedict of Nursia
- Founded in 529 AD in Monte Cassino, Italy
- Because the first monastic order
- Based on Benedict rule
- The key to this order was obedience, obedience, chastity
- Focus on prayer and meditation
- Black religious habit
Monastic Orders
 Augustinians
 Significant members, Thomas Kempis, Gerhard Groote, Martin Luther
 Followed rule of St. Augustine
 1000 years of theological prominence




Carmelites
Founder was Berthold
Founded in 1156 in Mt. Carmel
Later became mendicants
Dominicans
- founded by Dominic Guzman
- founded in 1216 in Spain
- used rule of St. Augustine
- used by Popes to rule out heresy
- conducted inquisition (questioning on heresy)
- educated and founder of schools
- Callevell College and Providence College are Dominican
- Great educators and teachers
- white religious habit
Franciscans
- founder was Francis of Assisi
- one of the most loved men of his time
- as a result of his life many joined
- founded in 1209 in Italy
-
their original rule was taken from scripture
took a vow of absolute poverty
their whole focus was community affairs
brown religious habit
Society of Jesus / Jesuits
- founder was Ignatius Loyela
- founded in 1540 in Rome
- their rule was taken from Loyela’s spiritual exercises
- were active in missions – education
- sought to eradicate the protestant reformation
- founded to fight reformation
- commissioned by the Pope
- report directly to the Pope
- suppressed in 1773
- were restored in 1814
- Boston College is Jesuit
Cloisters
- main idea was missions, prayer, emphasis on worship
- service to the church
- made the bread and wine for communion
Mohammed
- his uncle was a Moravian, a traveling merchant and Mohammed traveled with
him – therefore encountered Jews, Christians, and different religions
- he took all these beliefs and made his own religion
- he liked to seclude himself for meditation
- has a visitation under a palm tree from the archangel Gabriel and from that
encounter Islam was born
- years later he wrote about it
- sacred book is the Koran
- Allah is great and Mohammed is his prophet – is the central theme
- There is but one god and Mohammed his prophet
- There is no redemptive sacrifice
- The followers are Muslim
- In the beginning the movement was very slow and most of the followers were
from Meca
- In the beginning many believed in many gods
- 622 AD persecution over Islam in Meca / Mohammed was forced to flee / moved
to Hegira and many were converted
- Mohammed was born in 570 AD
- During the next 100 years they conquered territories: Persia, and a lot of India,
Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and North Africa
- Allah was worthy of all control
When the middle ages opened there was a two-fold task to evangelize and educate / the
secret to changing sociality
- By the year 1000 the church had Christianized Europe
- By the year 1500 they had woven with the culture
As a youth Mohammed was a shepherd boy
Attributes: meditation
Koran – the sacred book
- Christ is considered a prophet
- Talks of many key figures of Christianity
- Mohammed dies in 632 – his teaching lived on – flourished / given more than
when he was alive
- Conquered territory / fierce horsemen / powerful worriers / took Syria, Palestine,
penetrated India, took Egypt, took siege of Constantinople, took North Africa, on
between 711 and 718 they conquered Spain
- Conquered through warfare and demanded you to convert
- Church begins to fight back 732-1095their theme was “Allah is worthy of all
control” and their emblem was a crescent
- Their motto was “if you fight in a holy war, instant heaven”
- Their goal was “all the world for Allah”
- 732 the little tours begin and it stopped Islam in its tracks / France led the charge /
Charles Martel led the rally under Charles the French won a decisive battle. The
Islamic lost territory / the church takes ???
Theology of Islam
1. The unity of god
2. For ordination
3. Angels
4. Koran
5. Emphasis on the prophets
6. The hereafter
The crusades were then launched 1095-1295 / they were a movement to take back the
holy land from Muslim control (to this day most of the religious sites are controlled by
different religions)
- Romans Catholicism is growing, Rome is more powerful, and the papacy is
developed
- Papacy = (the office of the Pope)
- The supremacy of the papacy
- The factors and the results / Matthew 16:17-19 / the church believed the Christ
gave Peter the keys to the Kingdom
- - Apostolic succession the keys of the Kingdom were given to Peter then his
successor was given the keys, the authority was passed on
Martyrdom of Peter and Paul: many Christians gave their life for Christ, but because
Peter and Paul were such great apostles they were venerated
- Population of Rome: they had great resources
- The Imperial Capital: the bishop of Rome is elevated / East- Greek speaking
- Location – the west had Rome – bishops
- East had Constantinople, Alexandria, etc. / the patriarchs
- (1054 schism)
Missionary Outreach – Rome had money and they used that to evangelize the world
Muslim Conquest – needed a voice for Christianity, bishop of Rome by default
 the development of the papacy took hundreds of years
 Pope Leo X – declared the Pope is supreme by the year 600
476 Rome fell (it began to fall in 376)
376 Barbarians, tribes / 3 Major points:
1. The Church is born in Jerusalem
2. Paul invades the Gentile World
3. 313 The Church was victorious over heathen
313 Rome was center of the world
Rome extended itself over Italy, Sicily, North Africa, and Spain
Conquered Greece
Germanic tribes – 376; as early as 305 there are signs
- tremendous horsemen
- took pieces of the outskirts of the empire
- Hums
- West Goths = the Visigoths – attacked empire 376
- East Goths = The Ostrogoths
- Pagan Tribes
- Organized; own religious thinking / mythology; own civil system of law; warriors
- Marched into Rome, burned monasteries, killed the priest and children / dragged
many into captivity (but Rome was too busy to pay attention)
- 410 Rome is sacked again
- 6 days of siege 476
- the pagans who remained in the Rome Empire said that the Romans gods are
upset and as a results they avenged themselves and blamed Christians
- Franks, Sats, Irish – many of the tribes were Christized
- Barbarians embraced Christianity
- The Barbarians were a success story of converting the oppressed
- 476 the Barbarians brought ancient history to an end and usher in the Middle
Ages
Eastern side of the empire had a hard time converting Muslims
As the Middle Ages open, the church is faced with a challenge
- East losing territory to Muslims
-
West converting Barbarians
Two-fold task = Christianize the world and educate
Barbarians had destroyed many, but not all of the books
Monasteries had libraries and scriptoriums / much of the ancient writing were
preserved
Patrick converted the Irish (credited with saving civilizations)
Franks: under rule of Clovers, German
Gaul = modern day France
Germans had extended authority to Gaul
Embraced Christianity
Clovers saw a sign of a cross in a vision much like Constantine
Gospel moves to Great Britain, St. Patrick (apostle of Ireland)
461 The Irish are all converted
Netherlands are than evangelized
Boniface
Gregory, symbolizes the Medieval Church
- a monk that became pope in 590 to 604
- first pope to call himself “a servant of servants”
- more power than the emperor in Italy
- raised his own armies, but doing peace treaties able to keep warring families at
bay
- called pope Gregory the great
- helped to establish many of the practices of Christianity and promote Saintlogy
and purgatory.
Middle Ages open 500 – 590 Muslin conquest begins
West and East Church divided
the next 500 years were difficult for the church / the church losses territory
internal condition is not healthy – unbelievable corruption, morality at an all time low,
moved to a mechanic approach, many monasteries become house of iniquity,
Simony = pay someone for a position / many popes sold their roles to others / began to
use fear tactics to hold on / indulgences were created, it was an act or a payoff to help
deal with the sin problem, created a theology of works / this theology was from 550 to
1500’s / Catholicism became mystical by year 1000 / all the unbiblical practices became
???
Ostrogoths settled in Lombardy 568
Also known as Lombards
Pope Gregory I put a crown on the head of a Lombard and now there is a close
relationship between Lombards and Greeks
Lombards become a threat to popes / always fiction / futilism = warring families and
tribes
- fiction with emperor in Constantinople
- many battles; the Frankish Kings had power and authority
Charles Martel – called “Charles the Hammer” / another great leader in German battle,
had a son Pipan who then takes authority in 751
Pope having trouble with Lombards and asks Pipian for help; Pipian defeat the Lombards
On the death of Pipian 768, his two sons Carolman and Charles succeed him
800 Charles praying in Rome / dies in 3 years / sole ruler / the pope comes and puts the
crown on his head / an imperial crown / Charles becomes Charlemagne / pope is saying
“he and Charles are one in spirit” / Charlemagne did more for Rome then anyone.
1. Stood for Law
2. Stood for civilization and culture
3. Christianized; brought back true religion
Established much of Christian education, established schools throughout the empire
Fought Muslims and German tribes, God seemingly helped him defeat things that
threatened Christianity
Charlemagne looked for true religion
Three Powerful empires:
1. Eastern Empire (oldest and weakest)
2. Empire of the Muslim Arabs (largest of the three) / India, Persia, Syria, Palestine
and North Africa
3. Empire of Charlemagne (youngest and strongest) / North Italy, Spain, France,
Belgium, Netherlands, and larger part of Germany
Church is still in disarray; internally decaying
Cluny Monastic’s brought about renewal in the church / the monastery prayed for
renewal in Church and began to see change / speaking in tongues in Monasteries / the
papacy always had trouble / created hierarchy, false documents / the European church
was in disorder
Charlemagne created order out of chaos / feudalism underground system / feudal lords
that controlled the popes / by the year 10000 the church is dividing
1054 schism between East and West
Battle with the Muslims began a militant spirit in the church
10-25-06
910 founding of the Cluny’s; brought renewal to the church, for 200 years, a powerful
force, changed the inner life of the church / god raised up within a purification system,
the Cluny’s brought about repentance; caused a corrupt church to get down on its knees
- Muslims had taken a lot of territory, including Palestine / the Muslims and Catholics
understood the importance of the holy sites / between 500 & 1000 the church had lost its
way, having a form of godliness by denying the form there of
Charlemagne – law, civilization, and Christianized
- battle between the state and the church 754-1309
- 885 – 1049 the church is in bondage to the state because the battles raging externally
- Holy Roman Empire was divided among Charlemagne’s 3 grandsons
- the 3 kingdoms suffered decay
Salves and Hungarians fighting, they were called Norseman
- Europe is in disorder
- Feudalism = quarrels between families
- Many rival groups began to fight the Vatican, Germany, Italy, center of
Feudalism / Italy had many prominent families
Church Divided East and West
- Roman Catholic Church; and in Constantinople the patriarchs felt like they were
the original church / by the year 1000 the church has settled its theology and the
patriarchs had differences from the RCC = a schism takes place
- Pope Leo IX 1054 sends a letter and puts it on the alter of the St. Sophia and in
the letter he excommunicates the patriarch and in return he excommunicates the
patriarch and in return he excommunicates the pope of Rome
- - Schism between the Greek Eastern and Latin Western
See Chart of Cause – Eastern – Western
On the death of Leo IX, Henry III appoints a new German man to the papacy – Victor II,
who was only pope for two years; he was very committed to Henry, who died in 1056
- after Victor comes pope Stephen X; he’s chosen by the Roman clergy from the
Cluny reform; he was about 8 years old and his mother, Agnus, was not consulted
/ he was appointed by the lay people
Hildebrand, a week after Stephen’s death, is made pope / change takes place in the
church under him / born in Italy around 1020, from a poor family, his uncle was an abbot
in one of the Cluny monasteries and in a Cluny monastery that Hildebrand was educated /
made pope in 1073 / chose the name Gregory VII (all popes chose a new name to signify
a new beginning and chose the name he brought tremendous reform
Pope Leo X after Hildebrand who was clever at diplomacy, was able to outwit the Roman
nobles, recognized that the church would not be successful without the government /
helped fix the problem in Italy / a new way of electing popes came from Hildebrand
10-26-06
internal – spilt, corruption, immorality / 350 + onward major changes take place: 910
chunys
Pope Gregory VII symbol of
Most important pope up to this time / first monk to become pope / coined term “servants
of servants” / stood for pure salvation, not interested in politics / brought peace between
church and secular rule / administrator / upheld the power of the pope / outlined the roles
of the pope / a great teacher and missionary / heavily into music / Gregorian chants /
communicated the importance of communication / concept of saints as helpers (ex-tra
biblical) promoted purgatory
Boniface – evangelized Germany
Middle Ages – Muslims a force to be reckoned with
- the church is spilt; emphasis on the West, the papacy: / the east is losing lots of territory
/ Gregory frees the church from state dominion, but their was a misuse of power / church
launched crusades: to free the holy land from Muslim conquest / sacred places – birthplace of Christ, Mt. of Olives, upper room
7 Crusades from 1095-1295
The crusades failed because their was no unity in leadership / there was dissension,
strategic planning was poor
Chapter 15 in the story of the Christian Church page 102 talks about the reasons for the
failures of the crusades.
1. lack of unity in leadership
2. limited view
Good Outcomes:
1. The pilgrims that did go to the holy land were now protected more
2. The Muslim aggression was put in check, they were put in their place, especially
in Europe
3. Nations began to talk / discuss about the issues
4. Trade – silks, jewels, etc. merchants grew rich and cities grew
5. Power of the church grew
Leaders: Peter the hermit, Godfrey (of Boullin), Louis VII, Frederick
For the next 1000 years the church processed education, missionary endeavors and
evangelization
West: almost all were Christianized
East: Muslims had power
Accomplishments of the church are outstanding
Sacraments: the central focus and the theology and practice of the church; less
preaching, more sacraments; practices of extra-biblical theology developed from this time
to the Reformation common practice become theology / law later
11-2-06
Hildebrand gave the pope a spiritual identity
- he brought a breath of fresh air to the papacy and the church
- emphasized monasticism
Focus of the church in the Middle Ages
- Christianize / evangelize
- Educate
An interest began in the Medieval Art
Fall of Rome 476-1453: Medieval Period
Around the year of 200 paintings began to surface
313 there is a boom of religious art
Out of the religious art comes strained glass
Initially it was religious art that filled the churches, not statues
453 architect and beautiful building being erected all throughout Europe
Even the Muslims picked up on the use of art, but they were not into symbols
There were many symbols in the church still
Age of Scholasticism 9th-14th Century
- Scholasticism put the mind and reason above the teaching of scripture
- Cathedral Schools / education started with the church / they would train the mind
in the area of philosophy and theology
- Clergy and aristocrats are the 2nd classes of educated people
- When the people began to think for themselves they began to question the
practices of the church
- They started building universities with a theological and philosophical structure to
them
- Guilds – an organization – were founded throughout Europe / Italy, Paris, Rome,
Oxford, and Cambridge / made scholasticism strong through the Guilds
Thomas Aquinas – helped us understand how the mind really works; concept of logic or
philosophy, he laid it out in a methodical way
Scholasticism
- emerge out of the Cathedral Schools
- center teaching was logic, rhetoric and grammar (core)
- added arithmetic, geometry, astronomy and music
- merged together philosophy and theology
- changed the face of church history
- people began to think for themselves
Albigenses and Walenses
- emerged around 1300
- forerunners of the reformation
- also known as the Puritans, fighting for the pure doctrine of the church
- challenged church and fought some biblical reflections
- both had profound influence on the church, both persecuted by the church,
considered heretics
- both has different levels of appreciation for the bible
- also during this time God raised up apologists, religious communities came into
place.
- Franciscan order came, propelled a movement of service
Francis 1180-1256
- The pope at the time rejected Francis offer to start a religious community, but
when the new pope comes in he gives Francis permission
- Founded the order to care for people and to educate.
- Met the needs of the poor by giving all they have / His mission was to care for
people
- He was born in a wealthy home / he denounced his son ship of a rich father and
became a beggar / lived with the lepers and took care of them / exalted poverty
- Franciscans grew rapidly, started hospitals, sent out missionaries
- The most famous saying “Lord make me a instrument of thy peace”
Dominions
Dominic Guzman was from Spain, accompanies a bishop to St. France and begins to
preach to those who are wayward
- Dominic was used in the miraculous
- He brought many converts from paganism
- Lateran Council convened in 1215
- Preaching Friars come from the word the means brother
- Growth was quick
- Teachers helped with the theological problems
- Dominic dies after four years after first sending out the friars
- Vow to poverty
11-8-06 Gutenberg’s printing press changed the face of Christianity used to bring about
renewal in Europe
Forerunners of the reformation
Cluny, started in France
Popes declaring absolute authority
1309 & 1376 Babylonian captivity of the church – the pope is removed from Rome by
the domination of the French King
Pope is in captivity for 70 years
3 opposing popes vying for authority
the great schism = division 1378 -1417
great battle between French and Italians and they elected their own popes, one in Italy
and one in France
Council in 1409 to heal the schism
1417 the Italians elected Constant, who became known as Martin V
Europe had a negative feel, sick of corruption and the politics they did not understand
what change would mean for them / God always tries within
Albigensis and Waldenses
- origin in Persia and spread thought the empire
- their original form – Manichean 1170
- located in Albi, in southern France
- they were dualists, believed their was a good god and an evil god
-
material world souls are held in bondage
they rejected the OT considering from the good God rejected sacraments, did not
believe in church building / had good intents but were heretical
Waldenesis were hostile, founder was Waldo, a rich merchant from France /
believed bible, but thought emphasis should be on NT
1176 gave all money away / studied and memorized major portion of the NT
2 by 2 Peter Waldo would send off his preachers in simple woolen garments and
bare feet
fasted Monday, Wednesday and Fridays
would not swear an oath / did not believe in purgatory or prayer for the dead /
believed that a prayer in a house was just as affective as one in the church
practiced lay preaching / church declared them heretics
Dominicans and Franciscans persecuted them
Inquisition of the Roman Church
- when the Roman Church persecuted heretics
- by the Dominions
- through education; formed apologetics against these groups
- told the heretics to recant and deny their heretical teachings
John Wycliff – morning star of reformation
- there were many rejecting the teachings
- he was a priest of the church at this time ans so was John Huss
- Wycliff was born in England, studied at Oxford and became a professor their
- 1376 criticized the church for their unbiblical practices their
- the wealth and politics has corrupted the church
- he demands radical reform / they should turn back to the basics
- Wycliff responded negatively by calling the pope the antichrist
- The bible is the final authority not the church
- At this time the bible was in Latin and the common person could not read it
- Wycliff says let the people read the bible in their common language
- He spent his time translating the bible into the language of the people
- The popes and the bishops were angry and they tried to destroy him but by this
time a large portion of people were disgusted with the hierarchy of the church
- For the first time the church is faced with many questions from the people of the
authenticity of what the church was practicing
Wycliff was beloved and protected by the nobles / dies in 1384 / dug up his bones and
burned them
Stripped Wycliff of all priveleges and transferred him to a church in the countryside and
there he raised up a group of preachers who hand wrote the bible and then were sent out
Lollards – what the followers of Wyccliff were called, they denounced the pope,
Catholic clergy and acknowledged the Bible as the only standard for doctrine, they were
persecuted and it slowed their growth, in time they were driven into hiding / they were
still around during the time of the reformation
John Huss
- heard the teachings of Wycliff in Bohemia he accepted the teaching of Wycliff
- born around 1369, a trained priest, dean of education and a university of Pragne
(capital of Bohemia)
- he was named the president of the university
- he preached against the abuses of the clergy
- the Waldenes were already in Bohemia preaching against the church so Huss’s
teachings were embraced
- he converted almost all of Bohemia to his teachings
- before Luther ever came John Huss was teaching the same thing
- Huss taught many ideas of the reformation
- The government of the church was unnecessary because Christ is the head of the
church
- At this time there are 3 popes
- France John XXIII
- Rome Gregory Vii
- Naples John ----- People are questioning indulgences
- Huns opposed any teaching that was not foundation in scripture
- Pope John xxiii excommunicated John Huss
- Huss was summoned before a council and burned alive
3 great Church Councils 1409-1449
The purposes:
1. Healed schism
- The councils were considered infallible
2. Bring reform
- Church was divided
3. Suppress heresy - 1436 the Hussites entered into agreement with the Catholic
Church and were given the freedom to preach, they suggested reform to the clergy
The church oppressed the problem, but did never solve them
Renaissance – a revival of learning
- art and beauty became part of the language of Christianity
- people were cultured and able to read
- Italy, France, Germany were now seats of education
- Renaissance fueled the Reformation
- Reformation made the church accountable
- Not just a secular movement, but also a deeply spiritual one
- Looked at authentic spiritually
- Showed what the essence of Christianity was
- During this time that St. Peter in Rome was built
- Resurrected the Pagan roots
The Brethren of the Common Life
- Netherlands
- Gerhard Groote, a preacher
-
- emphasized Christian education
resurrected schools
Europe is ripe for change
1517 Oct. 31 – Reformation
- the theology of the Reformation was not entirely pure, Luther still held on to
many of the Catholic Church teachings
Reformation spread rapidly and the church was losing much territory
Reformation centered around the sacrament of penance
Indulgences = making payment for the sin in your life
Working out salvation by material means
Attached to penance is purgatory
Everything was formula including dealing with sin
Indulgences shortened stay in purgatory
Luther revolted against this / he said you need contrition, confession to a priest
and satisfaction
Indulgences = money paid in place of penalty
Wycliff – brought the Bible to the language of the common person
- Introduces Huss
Huss – criticized the papacy – selling of indulgences
3 general counsels to deal with the schisms
Renaissance – an awakening of the arts, sciences, literature / learning in all of Europe
- for the first time in history the church is no longer the lens through which the
people thought, they questioned the practices of the church
- ministry was regulated to the pulpit, the church is liturgical
Germany is upset with the papacy / so are the aristocrats of England
The sacraments of penance helped keep the lid on the people
The church made a mistake of mixing the faith and money
Europe is ripe for change
Martin Luther born in Eisleben – Nov. 10, 1483 / his family moved to Mansfield,
Germany / parent were religious people / went to school and obtained a master degree /
he dropped out and join a Augustan monastery (Luther and his father were strong-willed)
he takes religious vows, he went into this believing he’d do this for the rest of his life /
he’s ordained a priest and sent to Wittenberg to teach / picks up a degree in theology /
after a year he’s transfers back to Erfurt and writes many books / he was mentioned and
the leadership went to Rome and while there he visited sacred stairs / as penance they
would go up these steps on their knees; when he goes up the steps he gets a word from
the Lord – “the just shall live by faith” / some say he was converted in 1512 when he was
in his cell room
Luther was making an attempt to understand spiritual life in the monastery / he lived a
life of strict asceticism / self-denial, a theology of works to attain salvation / Luther
challenged this theology / no matter how hard he worked the worse he felt
“I of ten endure in agony that is so hellish and violent, that if those spells would last any
longer I’d die”
1512 – he’s in his cell and he opens his Bible and studies Romans 1:17 the righteous will
live by faith / unspeakable peace fills his soul / then he began to pen the 95 theses / they
all deal with the abuse of indulgences, the people are being deceived of eternity
Oct. 31, 1517 nails the 95 theses to Wittenberg castle door and around the same time the
printing press was invented so the 95 theses was able to be published and spread abroad /
the 95 theses stopped indulgences
Luther never intended to leave the church; he wanted to work with the framework of the
church
MOVIE – Morning Star / Black Death / 1/3 / 1/3
LAST QUIZ - 11-29-06
- The Indulgences: were used to fund the building of St. Peters and Martin Luther’s 95
Theses halted this building
- Martin Luther went into hiding and wrote many books
Fundamentals of Reformation
1. The reformation ??? went back to the apostolic church
2. They stressed the priesthood of all believers
3. The church is a community of believers, not a heresy of officials
4. They urged the distribution of the bible in the common language of the people
-
Luther simply crippled the power of the church
1518 he is summoned to Rome, but did not go because he would be killed
Elector Fredrick his friend
Eck and Luther have a debate
He was winning the hearts of the people
Luther then exalts married life and many follow
1520 he is excommunicated
Wrote 3 great books
1. To the Nobility of Germany
2. The Babylonian Captivity of the Church – exposes false teaching3. The Liberty of the Christian Man
11-30-06
I. Thomas Aquinas – 1274 died: greatest scholar in the middle ages
- Aquiro, Italy
- As a kid he was heavy, pious
- Sent to the abby – monticassino from age 5-14
- University oat Naples
- Dominican order (teachers) he joined the order
- parents opposed and kidnapped there son / his nickname: dumb ox
- scholar study, committed person, a writer (18 large volumes covering most of the backs
of the bible) and a philosopher
- Gumathologiae – Summaconta Gentiles was one of his great writings
- based his writing from Aristotle
- he shaped the thinking of the middle ages
II. Counsel of Trent
- 1545-1563 resolve
- used Thomas Aquinas writings
III. Luther – Oct. 31, 1517
- 1s all of Germany was effected by Luther
- Restored Christian Biblically
- Did keep some of the traditional churches ideas / traditions
- Believed in communion of saints
- Reactionary movement
- Wrote many pamphlets
- 1518 He became professor at Wittenberg
- June 13, 1525 marries Catherine Bora (catholic nun)
- Celibacy did not start till 1200, recent teaching of the church
- From Germany to Switzerland
IV. Ulich Zwingli picked the torch up (1584-1631)
- His teaching varied
- Luther never lived in a monastery
- He did not struggle with conscious
- 1506 got masters degree
- 1518 attended the indulgence convention in Germany
V. John Calvin: should not be afraid of him
- He intellectually put reformation on the map
Institute of Christian Religion
July 10, 1509 born in Nathien, France
Father was secretary to the bishop and wealthy
At 11 he was appointed Chaplin
Common for young boys to be paid as Chaplin
Lost mother at a young age, raised in the church
Influence of the church
He was respected, great mind
His writings became the standard / wrote 14 books
Brought new people to the church
Studied the church fathers
Best known as a leader and writer
VI. John Knox – 1536 entered priesthood
- Scottish reformer (Scotland)
-
Today is the foundation of the prebytian church
History of reformation
His writings dealt with writing against the Catholic Churches
Counter reformation
Counsel of Trent 1545-1563
Goal was to bridge the gap between catholic and protestants
Gap was to big theologically / RCC was the problem
Many of the issues in the RCC had changed today
VII. Jesuit Order: was commissioned in 1534 to solve issue
- Ignatius Loynla = fight the form intelligently
- Ignatius Loynla = Head of the order
- Jesuit Order only goes to the Vatican, all other order goes to the bishop
12-6-06
Calvin connected to Geneva
Anabaptists connected with Switzerland
- Considered a radical group because of their teaching and willingness to die than
rather violate their conscious
- Ulrich Zwingle connected Vienna
Calvin known for his theological foundation
- John Knox born 1514, died 1573 / Scottish reformer / a priest / teaching was the
history of the reformation / led the great reformation of Scotland / gives us the
Presbyterian faith
England: 1534-1563 the church is reformer
- Wycliffe is a reformer / tied of the Roman Church
- Tyndale gave the Bible to the people 1525
- Reformation here was different (m an6y twists)
- Each country had a personalit6y in charge of a reformation, except England
- Had a hard time accepting outside control / believed pope had become secularized
/ did not want an Italian prince to rule them
King Henry VIII – made an application to the pope of Rome for divorce from his wife
Catherine, so he could marry Anne; Henry controlled the parliament and because the
people would not give him a divorce so he took matters into his own hands / law of
supremacy / saying he was above the pope / the practices of the church did not change
just the governance / Henry was a powerful king, pushing the pope aside / not all
Englishman submitted to the law of supremacy / monks are executed for not submitting /
Henry formed the church of England – Anglican the Episcopal Church
He ruled with an iron fist and took m any practices of Roman Catholicism / took away
the land from the church (which had owned 1/3 of land) and gave it to the aristocrats who
were loyal to him / At Henry’s death England was on its way to becoming Protestant /
Henry’s son was Edward VI / he was 9 years old and he dies of tuberculosis and his
sister, Mary succeeds him / Mary is a strong catholic and pushing back the reformation
for 30 years / a women of great blood-shed / next to reign was Elizabeth and she brings
back reform / 1630 more then 400 people gather at South Hampton, England to prepare
to sail to the New World / John Cotton preached a farewell message which was tied
together with Israel crossing the Red Sea / they arrived in Plymouth / came for religious
freedom
John Wesley – born into a pastor’s home 1703, died in 1791 / influenced both England
and America through holiness / one of 18 children / mother was the key figure in his wife
/age 6 he is studying theology / charter house is were he learned Greek and Hebrew /
went to Oxford to continue his education / did not take his father’s ministry / comes to
the US in Georgia to work with the Indians and he had no converts / went back to
England / 1740 shaped theological thinking = Methodist Movement
Methodists – conversion and sanctification ate two Methodist doctrines = said at
salvation you are instantly sanctified / Methodists movement were the first to bring
sanctification to am Erica / Methodists brought what is called camp meetings to a place
where they were Pentecostal in experience / circuit writers have services all day at
different churches / there were extremes = Charles Finney
Charles Finney – born in Connecticut / preached salvation and sanctification from
Calvinist viewpoint / preached in houses, barns and the streets / 1840 a new reform
comes = intellectualism / it is now acceptable to be religiously intelligent /social issues /
women’s rights, slavery, alcohol / the south is noted for slavery and alcoholism / the
Methodists were trying to bring structure to their meetings and it wasn’t long before they
became mechanical / holiness movement begins to die
William Booth – founded Salvation Army to bring about a move of the Spirit in the
church / the holiness movement gives birth to the Pentecostal reformation / the
Pentecostals have roots in the Methodists, out of the concept of holiness
Agnus in Topeka, Kansas at Bethel Bible Institute which had 40 students / Charles
Parham – teacher and president / December 31, 1900 Agnus receives the baptism of the
Holy Spirit, launches the Pentecostal Movement
Willian Seymor – also receives the baptism / he preaches in a Baptist church in LA on
the baptism of the Holy Spirit and is no longer welcome so he starts home prayer
meetings with people being filled in the Spirit / moved from the house to a vacant church
in Azusa Street / people came from all over / many from the south / color did not matter /
the6y did not preach the baptism, they preached Christ / 1906 it was spread all over / like
most movements, the Pentecostal movement was not structured / William Seymore is
called the Father or apostle of Azusa Street / by 1914 the Pentecostal movement grew and
spread throughout / women in missionaries; 1914 ministers met in Arkansas for an
organizational meeting for a strategy for missions and this gives birth to the Assemblies
of God / they did not intend to create a denomination but a fellowship
1914 Pentecostal Assemblies of Jesus Christ
1914 Pentecostal Assemblies of the World
they later merged to United Pentecostal Church
1918 Pentecostal Church of Christ
1918 Pentecostal Church of the Four Square Gospel
1919 Pentecostal Church of God in Am Erica
1919 Bible Standard / open Bible
1924 Zion Fellowship
1947 Elam Fellowship
Phoebe Palmer – wife of a prominent doctor / 1840 she began a prayer meeting in her
home, prayed about holiness / she wrote a number of books / 1840 is when the
Pentecostal church was established
AJ Gordon – founder of Gordon College / pastured Chaledon / writer and author /
identified with the baptism in the Holy Spirit / mentioned tongues and prophecy
DL Moody – said you can not be a leader without being a follower / embraced the
baptism of the Holy Spirit / two ladies in his church prayed for his baptism in the Holy
Spirit /1871 he was baptized in the Holy Spirit in a radical way = a marked difference in
his preaching
Toorey = Moody associate popularized the doctrine of the baptism in the Spirit / created
an atmosphere for Pentecostal movement
1900’s three waves of Pentecostalism
1. Azua 1906
2. Bennet, Episcopalian priest in California / church was dry in 60’s and 70’s / wrote
The Holy Spirit in You / he awakened the Episcopalian Church
Review
1517 Reformation
1520 Reformed Church began
- Anabaptist 1524
- Anglican 1534
- Baptist 1612
- Methodist 1787 -> Pentecostalism
Essays – thumbnail sketch of 2,000 years of history
- Describe Azusa Street
- Describe the 3 waves
Page 10 of the story of the Christians C
- Identify what happened during these periods
Polycarp, Ignatius, Ambrose
Order of when events occurred
Dates you need to know
1517
1900
100
313
325
910
1054
1095
Church, Apostolic Fathers and Latin Fathers
Hoc Signo
Sign Constantine saw crescent
Huns =barbaric tribes
1,2,3 wave of Pentecostalism
2 major movements of Methodist movement
Zion 1924
Asceticism - extreme e self-denial
Simony – selling of office
Allah is great and Mohammed is his prophet
Four square gospel
Ireland – St. Patrick
Luther was part of Augustine order
Agnus Osmond – Bethel Bible Institute
Diocese – local district
Constantine battled Maxentius for empire
Ambrose wrote hymns
Catholic means universal
Charles Finney – born in Connecticut, raised in New York
Crusades not a success
Monasicism – good and evil results
Christine Gibson
Wycliffe
William Seymour
Charles Param
Phoebe Palmer