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The
Apostolic Age
Sources for
this Study
Schaff, Philip,
History of
the Christian Church, Volume I, Chapter
III
Encyclopedia Brittanica
Josephus, Flavius,
Wars of the
Jews
Books of the New Testament
Introduction
The Acts of the Apostles give us the external, the
Epistles the internal history of early Christianity. The Acts bear on
the face all the marks of an original, fresh, and trustworthy narrative
of contemporaneous events derived from the best sources of information,
and in great part from personal observation and experience. The
authorship of Luke, the companion of Paul, is conceded by a majority of
the best modern scholars; and this fact alone establishes the
credibility. Renan (in his St. Paul, ch. 1) admirably calls the Acts “a
book of joy, of serene ardor. Since the Homeric poems no book has been
seen full of such fresh sensations. A breeze of morning, an odor of the
sea, if I dare express it so, inspiring something joyful and strong,
penetrates the whole book, and makes it an excellent
compagnon
de voyage, the exquisite breviary for
him who is searching for ancient remains on the seas of the south. This
is the second idyll of Christianity. The Lake of Tiberias and its
fishing barks had furnished the first. Now, a more powerful breeze,
aspirations toward more distant lands, draw us out into the open sea.”
General
Character of the Apostolic Age.
The apostolic period extends from the Day of Pentecost to the death of
St. John, and covers about seventy years, from AD 30 to 100. The field
of action is Palestine, and gradually extends over Syria, Asia Minor,
Greece, and Italy. The most prominent centers are Jerusalem, Antioch,
and Rome, which represent respectively the mother churches of Jewish,
Gentile, and United Catholic Christianity.
Next to them are Ephesus and Corinth. Ephesus acquired a special
importance by the residence and labors of John, which made themselves
felt during the second century through Polycarp and Irenaeus.
Samaria, Damascus, Joppa, Caesarea, Tyre, Cyprus,
the provinces of Asia Minor, Troas, Philippi, Thessalonica, Beraea,
Athens, Crete, Patmos, Malta, Puteoli, come also into view as points
where the Christian faith was planted. Through the eunuch converted by
Philip, it reached Candace, the queen of the Ethiopians.224
As early as AD 58 Paul could say: “From
Jerusalem and round about even unto Illyricum, I have fully preached the
gospel of Christ.” (Rom. 15:19)
He afterwards carried it to Rome, where it
had already been known before, and possibly as far as Spain, the western
boundary of the empire. (Rom. 15:24)
The nationalities reached by the gospel in the first century were the
Jews, the Greeks, and the Romans, and the languages used were the Hebrew
or Aramaic, and especially the Greek, which was at that time the organ
of civilization and of international intercourse within the Roman
empire.
The contemporary secular history includes the reigns of the Roman
Emperors from Tiberius to Nero and Domitian, who either ignored or
persecuted Christianity. We are brought directly into contact with King
Herod Agrippa I. (grandson of Herod the Great), the murderer of the
apostle, James the Elder; with his son King Agrippa II. (the last of the
Herodian house), who with his sister Bernice (a most corrupt woman)
listened to Paul’s defense; with two Roman governors, Felix and Festus;
with Pharisees and Sadducees; with Stoics and Epicureans; with the
temple and theatre at Ephesus, with the court of the Areopagus at
Athens, and with Caesar’s palace in Rome.
Sources of
Information
The author of Acts records the heroic march of Christianity from the
capital of Judaism to the capital of heathenism with the same artless
simplicity and serene faith as the Evangelists tell the story of Jesus;
well knowing that it needs no embellishment, no apology, no subjective
reflections, and that it will surely triumph by its inherent spiritual
power.
The Acts and the Pauline Epistles accompany us with reliable information
down to the year 63. Peter and Paul are lost out of sight in the lurid
fires of the Neronian persecution which seemed to consume Christianity
itself. We know nothing certain of that satanic spectacle from authentic
sources beyond the information of heathen historians. A few years
afterwards followed the destruction of Jerusalem, which must have made
an overpowering impression and broken the last ties which bound Jewish
Christianity to the old theocracy. The event is indeed brought before us
in the prophecy of Christ as recorded in the Gospels, but for the
terrible fulfilment we are dependent on the account of an unbelieving
Jew, which, as the testimony of an enemy, is all the more impressive.
The remaining thirty years of the first century are involved in
mysterious darkness, illuminated only by the writings of John. This is a
period of church history about which we know least and would like to
know most. This period is the favorite field for ecclesiastical fables
and critical conjectures. How thankfully would the historian hail the
discovery of any new authentic documents between the martyrdom of Peter
and Paul and the death of John, and again between the death of John and
the age of Justin Martyr and Irenaeus.
Causes of
Success.
As to the numerical strength of Christianity at
the close of the first century, we have no information whatever.
Statistical reports were unknown in those days. The estimate of half a
million among the one hundred millions or more inhabitants of the Roman
empire is probably exaggerated. The pentecostal conversion of three
thousand in one day at Jerusalem, and the “immense multitude” of martyrs
under Nero, favor a high estimate. The churches in Antioch also,
Ephesus, and Corinth were strong enough to bear the strain of
controversy and division into parties.
But the majority of congregations were no
doubt small, often a mere handful of poor people. In the country
districts paganism (as the name indicates) lingered longest, even beyond
the age of Constantine.
The Christian converts belonged mostly to the
middle and lower classes of society, such as fishermen, peasants,
mechanics, traders, freedmen, slaves. St. Paul says: “Not many wise
after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble were called, but God
chose the foolish things of the world, that he might put to shame them
that are wise; and God chose the weak things of the world that he might
put to shame the things that are strong; and the base things of the
world, and the things that are despised, did God choose, yea, and the
things that are not, that he might bring to naught the things that are:
that no flesh should glory before God.” (1 Cor. 1:26-29)
And yet these poor, illiterate churches
were the recipients of the noblest gifts, and alive to the deepest
problems and highest thoughts which can challenge the attention of an
immortal mind. Christianity built from the foundation upward. From the
lower ranks come the rising men of the future, who constantly reinforce
the higher ranks and prevent their decay.
At the time of the conversion of Constantine, in the beginning of the
fourth century, the number of Christians may have reached ten or twelve
millions, that is about one-tenth of the total population of the Roman
empire. Some estimate it higher.
The rapid success of Christianity under the most unfavorable
circumstances is surprising and its own best vindication. It was
achieved in the face of an indifferent or hostile world, and by purely
spiritual and moral means, without shedding a drop of blood except that
of its own innocent martyrs. Gibbon, in the famous fifteenth chapter of
his “History,” attributes the rapid spread to five causes, namely:
1.
the intolerant but enlarged religious zeal of the Christians inherited
from the Jews;
2.
the doctrine of the immortality of the soul, concerning which the
ancient philosophers had but vague and dreamy ideas;
3.
the miraculous powers attributed to the primitive church;
4.
the purer but austere morality of the first Christians;
5.
the unity and discipline of the church, which gradually formed a growing
commonwealth in the heart of the empire.
But every one of these causes, properly understood, points to the
superior excellency and to the divine origin of the Christian religion,
and this is the chief cause, which the Deistic historian omits.
Significance of the Apostolic Age.
The life of Christ is the divine-human fountainhead of the Christian
religion; the apostolic age is the fountainhead of the Christian church,
as an organized society separate and distinct from the Jewish synagogue.
It is the age of the Holy Spirit, the age of inspiration and legislation
for all subsequent ages.
Here springs, in its original freshness and purity, the living water of
the new creation. Christianity comes down front heaven as a supernatural
fact, yet long predicted and prepared for, and adapted to the deepest
wants of human nature. Signs and wonders and extraordinary
demonstrations of the Spirit, for the conversion of unbelieving Jews and
heathens, attend its entrance into the world of sin. It takes up its
permanent abode with our fallen race, to transform it gradually, without
war or bloodshed, by a quiet, leaven-like process, into a kingdom of
truth and righteousness.
Modest and humble, lowly and unseemly in outward appearance, but
steadily conscious of its divine origin and its eternal destiny; without
silver or gold, but rich in supernatural gifts and powers, strong in
faith, fervent in love, and joyful in hope; bearing in earthen vessels
the imperishable treasures of heaven, it presents itself upon the stage
of history as the only true, the perfect religion, for all the nations
of the earth.
At first an insignificant and even contemptible sect in the eyes of the
carnal mind, hated and persecuted by Jews and heathens, it confounds the
wisdom of Greece and the power of Rome, soon plants the standard of the
cross in the great cities of Asia, Africa, and Europe, and proves itself
the hope of the world.
In virtue of this original purity, vigor, and beauty, and the permanent
success of primitive Christianity, the canonical authority of the single
but inexhaustible volume of its literature, and the character of the
apostles, those inspired organs of the Holy Spirit, those untaught
teachers of mankind, the apostolic age has an incomparable interest and
importance in the history of the church. It is the immovable groundwork
of the whole. It has the same regulative force for all the subsequent
developments of the church as the inspired writings of the apostles have
for the works of all later Christian authors.
Furthermore, the apostolic Christianity is preformative, and contains
the living germs of all the following periods, personages, and
tendencies. It holds up the highest standard of doctrine and discipline;
it is the inspiring genius of all true progress; it suggests to every
age its peculiar problem with the power to solve it. Christianity can
never outgrow Christ, but it grows in Christ; theology cannot go beyond
the word of God, but it must ever progress in the understanding and
application of the word of God. The three leading apostles represent not
only the three stages of the apostolic church, but also as many ages and
types of Christianity, and yet they are all present in every age and
every type.
The
Representative Apostles.
Peter, Paul, and John stand out most prominently as the chosen Three who
accomplished the great work of the apostolic age, and exerted, by their
writings and example, a controlling influence on all subsequent ages. To
them correspond three centres of influence, Jerusalem, Antioch, and
Rome.
Paul was called last and out of the regular order, by the personal
appearance of the exalted Lord from heaven, and in authority and
importance he was equal to any of the three pillars, but filled a place
of his own, as the independent apostle of the Gentiles. He had around
him a small band of co-laborers and pupils, such as Barnabas, Silas,
Titus, Timothy, Luke.
Nine of the original Twelve, including Matthias, who was chosen in the
place of Judas, labored no doubt faithfully and effectively, in
preaching the gospel throughout the Roman empire and to the borders of
the barbarians, but in subordinate positions, and their labors are known
to us only from vague and uncertain traditions.
The labors of James and Peter we can follow in the Acts to the Council
of Jerusalem, AD 50, and a little beyond; those of Paul to his first
imprisonment in Rome, AD 61-63; John lived to the close of the first
century. As to their last labors we have no authentic information in the
New Testament, but the unanimous testimony of antiquity that Peter and
Paul suffered martyrdom in Rome during or after the Neronian
persecution, and that John died a natural death at Ephesus. The Acts
breaks off abruptly with Paul still living and working, a prisoner in
Rome, “preaching the kingdom of God and teaching the things concerning
the Lord Jesus Christ, with all boldness, none forbidding him.” A
significant conclusion.
It would be difficult to find three men equally great and good, equally
endowed with genius sanctified by grace, bound together by deep and
strong love to the common Master, and laboring for the same cause, yet
so different in temper and constitution, as Peter, Paul, and John. Peter
stands out in history as the main pillar of the primitive church, as the
Rock-apostle, as the chief of the twelve foundation-stones of the new
Jerusalem; John as the bosom-friend of the Saviour, as the son of
thunder, as the soaring eagle, as the apostle of love; Paul as the
champion of Christian freedom and progress, as the greatest missionary,
with “the care of all the churches” upon his heart, as the expounder of
the Christian system of doctrine, as the father of Christian theology.
Peter was a man of action, always in haste and ready to take the lead;
the first to confess Christ, and the first to preach Christ on the day
of Pentecost; Paul a man equally potent in word and deed; John a man of
mystic contemplation. Peter was unlearned and altogether practical; Paul
a scholar and thinker as well as a worker; John a theosophist and seer.
Peter was sanguine, ardent, impulsive, hopeful, kind-hearted, given to
sudden changes, “consistently inconsistent” (to use an Aristotelian
phrase); Paul was choleric, energetic, bold, noble, independent,
uncompromising; John some what melancholic, introverted, reserved,
burning within of love to Christ and hatred of Antichrist. Peter’s
Epistles are full of sweet grace and comfort, the result of deep
humiliation and rich experience; those of Paul abound in severe thought
and logical argument, but rising at times to the heights of celestial
eloquence, as in the seraphic description of love and the triumphant
paean of the eighth chapter of the Romans; John’s writings are simple,
serene, profound, intuitive, sublime, inexhaustible.
We would like to know more about the personal relations of these
pillar-apostles, but must be satisfied with a few hints. They labored in
different fields and seldom met face to face in their busy life. Time
was too precious, their work too serious, for sentimental enjoyments of
friendship.
Paul went to Jerusalem AD 40, three years after his conversion, for the
express purpose of making the personal acquaintance of Peter, and spent
two weeks with him; he saw none of the other apostles, but only James,
the Lord’s brother. He met the pillar-apostles at the Conference in
Jerusalem, AD 50, and concluded with them the peaceful concordat
concerning the division of labor, and the question of circumcision; the
older apostles gave him and Barnabas “the right hands of fellowship” in
token of brotherhood and fidelity.
Not long afterwards Paul met Peter a third time,
at Antioch, but came into open collision with him on the great question
of Christian freedom and the union of Jewish and Gentile converts.
The collision was merely temporary, but
significantly reveals the profound commotion and fermentation of the
apostolic age, and foreshadowed future antagonisms and reconciliations
in the church. Several years later (AD 57) Paul refers the last time to
Cephas, and the brethren of the Lord, for the right to marry and to take
a wife with him on his missionary journeys.
Peter, in his first Epistle to Pauline churches, confirms them in their
Pauline faith, and in his second Epistle, his last will and testament,
he affectionately commends the letters of his “beloved brother Paul,”
adding, however, the characteristic remark, which all commentators must
admit to be true, that (even beside the account of the scene in Antioch)
there are in them “some things hard to be understood.”
Peter was the chief actor in the first stage of apostolic Christianity
and fulfilled the prophecy of his name in laying the foundation of the
church among the Jews and the Gentiles. In the second stage he is
overshadowed by the mighty labors of Paul; but after the apostolic age
he stands out again most prominent in the memory of the church.
He is chosen by the Roman communion as its special patron saint and as
the first pope. He is always named before Paul. To him most of the
churches are dedicated. In the name of this poor fisherman of Galilee,
who had neither gold nor silver, and was crucified like a malefactor and
a slave, the triple-crowned popes deposed kings, shook empires,
dispensed blessings and curses on earth and in purgatory, and even now
claim the power to settle infallibly all questions of Christian doctrine
and discipline for the Catholic world.
Paul was the chief actor in the second stage of the apostolic church,
the apostle of the Gentiles, the founder of Christianity in Asia Minor
and Greece, the emancipator of the new religion from the yoke of
Judaism, the herald of evangelical freedom, the standard-bearer of
reform and progress. His controlling influence was felt also in Rome,
and is clearly seen in the genuine Epistle of Clement, who makes more
account of him than of Peter.
But soon afterwards he is almost forgotten, except by name. He is indeed
associated with Peter as the founder of the church of Rome, but in a
secondary line; his Epistle to the Romans is little read and understood
by the Romans even to this day; his church lies outside of the walls of
the eternal city, while St. Peter’s is its chief ornament and glory. In
Africa alone he was appreciated, first by the rugged and racy
Tertullian, more fully by the profound Augustine, who passed through
similar contrasts in his religious experience; but Augustine’s Pauline
doctrines of sin and grace had no effect whatever on the Eastern church,
and were practically overpowered in the Western church by Pelagian
tendencies.
For a long time Paul’s name was used and abused outside of the ruling
orthodoxy and hierarchy by anti-catholic heretics and sectaries in their
protest against the new yoke of traditionalism and ceremonialism. But in
the sixteenth century he celebrated a real resurrection and inspired the
evangelical reformation. Then his Epistles to the Galatians and Romans
were republished, explained, and applied with trumpet tongues by Luther
and Calvin. Then his protest against Judaizing bigotry and legal bondage
was renewed, and the rights of Christian liberty asserted on the largest
scale. Of all men in church history, St. Augustine not excepted, Martin
Luther, once a contracted monk, then a prophet of freedom, has most
affinity in word and work with the apostle of the Gentiles, and ever
since Paul’s genius has ruled the theology and religion of
Protestantism. As the gospel of Christ was cast out from Jerusalem to
bless the Gentiles, so Paul’s Epistle to the Romans was expelled from
Rome to enlighten and to emancipate Protestant nations in the distant
North and far West.
St. John, the most intimate companion of Jesus, the apostle of love, the
seer who looked back to the ante-mundane beginning and forward to the
post-mundane end of all things, and who is to tarry till the coming of
the Lord, kept aloof from active part in the controversies between
Jewish and Gentile Christianity. He appears prominent in the Acts and
the Epistle to the Galatians, as one of the pillar-apostles, but not a
word of his is reported. He was waiting in mysterious silence, with a
reserved force, for his proper time, which did not come till Peter and
Paul had finished their mission.
Then, after their departure, he revealed the hidden depths of his genius
in his marvellous writings, which represent the last and crowning work
of the apostolic church. John has never been fully fathomed, but it has
been felt throughout all the periods of church history that he has best
understood and portrayed the Master, and may yet speak the last word in
the conflict of ages and usher in an era of harmony and peace. Paul is
the heroic captain of the church militant, John the mystic prophet of
the church triumphant.
Far above them all, throughout the apostolic age and all subsequent
ages, stands the one great Master from whom Peter, Paul, and John drew
their inspiration, to whom they bowed in holy adoration, whom alone they
served and glorified in life and in death, and to whom they still point
in their writings as the perfect image of God, as the Saviour from sin
and death, as the Giver of eternal life, as the divine harmony of
conflicting creeds and schools, as the Alpha and Omega of the Christian
faith.
Chronology
of the Apostolic Age.
The chronology of the apostolic age is partly
certain, at least within a few years, partly conjectural: certain as to
the principal events from AD 30 to 70, conjectural as to intervening
points and the last thirty years of the first century. The sources are
the New Testament (especially the Acts and the Pauline Epistles),
Josephus, and the Roman historians. Josephus
b. 37, d. 103) is especially valuable here,
as he wrote the Jewish history down to the destruction of Jerusalem.
The following dates are more or less certain and accepted by most
historians:
1.
The founding of the Christian Church on the feast of Pentecost in May AD
30. This is on the assumption that Christ was born BC 4 or 5, and was
crucified in April AD 30, at an age of thirty-three.
2.
The death of King Herod Agrippa I. AD 44 (according to Josephus). This
settles the date of the preceding martyrdom of James the elder, Peter’s
imprisonment and release Acts 12:2, 23).
3.
The Apostolic Council in Jerusalem, AD 50 (Acts 15:1 sqq.; Gal. 2:1-10).
This date is ascertained by reckoning backwards to Paul’s conversion,
and forward to the Caesarean captivity. Paul was probably converted in
37, and “fourteen years” elapsed from that event to the Council. But
chronologists differ on the year of Paul’s conversion, between 31 and
40.245
4.
The dates of the Epistles to the Galatians,
Corinthians, and Romans, between 56 and 58. The date of the Epistle to
the Romans can be fixed almost to the month from its own indications
combined with the statements of the Acts. It was written before the
apostle had been in Rome, but when he was on the point of departure for
Jerusalem and Rome on the way to Spain,246 after having finished his
collections in Macedonia and Achaia for the poor brethren in Judaea;247
and he sent the epistle through Phebe, a deaconess of the congregation
in the eastern port of Corinth, where he was at that time.248
These indications point clearly to the
spring of the year 58, for in that year he was taken prisoner in
Jerusalem and carried to Caesarea.
5.
Paul’s captivity in Caesarea, AD 58 to 60, during
the procuratorship of Felix and Festus, who changed places in 60 or 61,
probably in 60. This important date we can ascertain by combination from
several passages in Josephus, and Tacitus.249
It enables us at the same time, by
reckoning backward, to fix some preceding events in the life of the
apostle.
6.
Paul’s first captivity in Rome, AD 61 to 63. This follows from the
former date in connection with the statement in Acts 28:30.
7.
The Epistles of the Roman captivity, Philippians, Ephesians, Colossians,
and Philemon, AD 61-63.
8.
The Neronian persecution, AD 64 (the tenth year of Nero, according to
Tacitus). The martyrdom of Paul and Peter occurred either then, or
(according to tradition) a few years later. The question depends on the
second Roman captivity of Paul.
9.
The destruction of Jerusalem by Titus, AD 70 (according to Josephus and
Tacitus).
10.
The death of John after the accession of Trajan, AD 98 (according to
general ecclesiastical tradition).
The dates of the Synoptical Gospels, the Acts, the Pastoral Epistles,
the Hebrews, and the Epistles of Peter, James, and Jude cannot be
accurately ascertained except that they were composed before the
destruction of Jerusalem, mostly between 60 and 70. The writings of John
were written after that date and towards the close of the first century,
except the Apocalypse, which some of the best scholars, from internal
indications assign to the year 68 or 69, between the death of Nero and
the destruction of Jerusalem.