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Church History
- Chapter 1: Introduction and General View
- Later Literature
- Third Period: From Constantine the Great to Gregory the Great (A.D. 311–590)
- Chapter 204: Eusebius, Lactantius, Hosius
- Chapter 203: Victorinus of Petau
- Chapter 202: Arnobius
- Chapter 201: Commodian
- Chapter 200: Novatian
- Chapter 199: Cyprian
- Chapter 198: Minucius Felix
Historical Periods
Category Archives: 2. Ante-Nicene (101-325 AD)
Chapter 111: Character and Tenets of Montanism
Montanism was not born from rebellion against Christian truth, but from an impassioned overreach—a spiritual intensification of authentic elements within the Church. Rooted in orthodoxy, animated by visions, and driven by rigorous moral fervor, the movement claimed to usher in a final and higher dispensation of the Holy Spirit. It stood in sharp contrast to both the speculative abstractions of Gnosticism and the institutional pragmatism of early Catholicism, seeking instead… Read more
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Chapter 110: External History of Montanism
Montanism emerged as a fiery eruption within the early Church, embodying a radical zeal that sought to reclaim the apocalyptic spirit, moral rigor, and charismatic vitality of primitive Christianity. Not originally heretical in doctrine, it was rather an over-intensification of legitimate Christian aspirations: holiness, prophecy, and purity. Montanism stood not in denial of the faith, but in an austere overreach—hyper-Christianity in opposition to Catholic leniency and Gnostic speculation. As such,… Read more
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Chapter 109: Montanism — Literature
Montanism, a vibrant and controversial movement in the second-century Church, provoked both fierce opposition and deep fascination. Arising from the fervent prophetic claims of Montanus and his female companions Prisca and Maximilla, this movement demanded renewed holiness, apocalyptic vigilance, and an uncompromising moral rigor. The literature surrounding Montanism—both supportive and adversarial—offers a vivid portrait of early Christian diversity, revealing theological tensions, ecclesiastical debates, and the struggle to define spiritual authority… Read more
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Chapter 108: Celibacy of the Clergy
Flowing from the deep wellspring of asceticism and theological idealism, the doctrine and discipline of clerical celibacy emerged as both a hallmark of consecrated service and a battleground of ecclesiastical controversy. While the Scriptures and early apostolic tradition permitted and honored clerical marriage, the tide of church discipline, especially in the West, turned inexorably toward the imposition of celibacy—not as a mere ideal, but as a mandatory ecclesiastical law. This… Read more
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Chapter 107: Voluntary Celibacy
Exalted as an ideal of angelic purity, voluntary celibacy gradually rose to a place of privilege within early Christianity. While rooted in a few passages of Scripture and motivated by a sincere desire for holiness in a morally corrupt world, the veneration of celibacy soon extended far beyond biblical warrant. The growing esteem for virginity reflected both Christian reaction against pagan vice and subtle borrowings from heathen and Gnostic sources.… Read more
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Chapter 106: Voluntary Poverty
Voluntary poverty, in the ancient church, stood not as a lamentable destitution, but as a luminous sign of radical discipleship—a conscious choice to forsake earthly gain in pursuit of heavenly treasure. Inspired by Christ’s own renunciations and by his solemn counsel to the rich young ruler, this ideal of self-imposed poverty came to symbolize spiritual perfection. Yet not all Christian thinkers embraced a literalist path; within the tradition, voices of… Read more
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Chapter 105: Heretical and Catholic Asceticism
Amid the fervor of early Christian renunciation, two asceticisms emerged—one pure and luminous, the other shadowed by error. Catholic asceticism sprang from a desire to master the body in devotion to God; heretical asceticism, rooted in Gnostic dualism, despised the body as evil and creation as corrupt. Though the church resisted the heresies of Manichaean and Gnostic self-abasement, it often unconsciously adopted their impulses in practice, blurring the line between… Read more
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Chapter 104: Ascetic Virtue and Piety
Amid the ruins of collapsing empires and the moral exhaustion of paganism, there arose within the early church a deep yearning for sanctity untethered from worldly corruption. This yearning found expression in the ascetic life—a radical discipline of the soul and body that sought purity not through dominion over the world, but through retreat from it. Yet the ascetic path, though radiant in its self-denial and moral intensity, often strayed… Read more
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Chapter 103: Summary of Moral Reforms
Amid the moral ruins of antiquity, Christianity arose as a luminous constellation in a darkened sky—each teaching a radiant spark, each virtue a gleam of divine purpose. Against the entrenched corruptions of heathen society, the gospel advanced not by sword or statecraft, but through the gentle yet unyielding force of spiritual truth, reforming the human heart and reshaping the fabric of civilization from its lowest depths to its loftiest heights.… Read more
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Chapter 102: The Treatment of the Dead
From the dim corridors of pagan ritual to the radiant hope of Christian resurrection, the care of the dead unveils not only human reverence for the departed but a theology of eternal life that transfigures death itself. In the early church, burial was not a grim necessity but a sacred act—an expression of love, hope, and profound eschatological conviction. The treatment of the body became a liturgy of faith, where… Read more
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