Church and State as Seen in the Formation of Christendom - The Original Classic Edition. Allies T

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Church and State as Seen in the Formation of Christendom - The Original Classic Edition - Allies T

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Extension of education given in great catechetical schools, 385

       The defence against error lodged in the Magisterium, 387

       The Magisterium lies in the Church's divine government and concrete life, 388

       Athanasius as the expounder of it; his fundamental idea, 389

       His Statement as to the authority of Scripture, 391[Pg xvi]

       As to the Rule of Faith, 392

       As to private judgment, 393

       His tests of heresy, 393

       Definitions, 394

       How the Magisterium embraces Scripture and Tradition, and employs them as a joint rule, 395

       Testimony of the Council of Arles to the above principles, 397

       And Constantine's public recognition that the Magisterium of Christ is lodged in the Bishops, 398

       CHAPTER VIII.

       The Church's Battle for Independence over against the Roman Empire.

       Alliance of the Two Powers in the Roman Empire at the Advent of Christ, 400

       The Emperor official guardian of all religions, 401

       The Christian religion a singular exception, 403

       Its cause the position of Christians towards heathendom, 404

       Contradiction in belief, worship, and government, 405

       The Christian people as the outcome of these three constituents, 411

       The course of the Roman Empire and the Christian Church in three hundred years, 414

       The ten persecutions from Nero to Diocletian, 417

       The Martyrs champions of a great army, 421

       St. Paul's account of this army's creation, 422

       The wonder of this creation, 424

       Supernatural character of the conversion wrought in these times, 426

       Accounted for only by the internal action of the Holy Ghost, 427

       Power of the kkkkkmk insisted on by Clement of Alexandria, 429

       Contrasted by him with the impotence of philosophy, 430

       Sufferings which followed on conversion according to Tertullian, 431

       7

       Martyrs enduring or God what heroes endured for goods of nature, 432

       Origen insists on the divine power shown in converting sinners, 434

       On miracles of conversion as greater than bodily miracles, 435

       The spread of the Church and the conversion of sinners viewed together, 436

       Miracles only could account for the spread of the Church, 437[Pg xvii] Statement of Irenaeus as to miraculous powers exercised in his time, 438

       Athanasius on the cessation of idolatry, oracles, and magic, 440

       And on the greatness of the conversion wrought by Christ, 442

       The necessity of miracles in proof of our Lord's mission, 444

       The connection between miracles and martyrdom, 445

       Parallel between them as to their principle, witness, power, and perpetuity, 449

       How the liberty of the Church was gained against the empire, 455

       How the Martyrs constructed a basis for civil liberty, 456

       The five conflicts of the Church with Judaism, Heresy, Idolatry, Philosophy, and the Roman State, 459

       PROLOGUE.

       THE KINGDOM AS PROPHESIED AND AS FULFILLED.

       [Pg xix] This volume, though entire in itself, is also the continuation of a former work, the "Formation of Christendom," already written and published by me in three volumes. It is, in fact, the further unfolding of the subject under a particular aspect. In truth, the relation between Church and State leads perhaps more directly than any other to the heart of Christendom; for Christendom, both in word and idea, means not only one and the same Church subsisting in all civil governments, but also a community of Christian governments, having a common belief and common principles of action, grounded upon the Incarnation of the Son of God, and the Redemption wrought thereby. For this reason, the Formation of Christendom can hardly be described, unless the relation which ought by the institution of God to subsist between the two great Powers, the Spiritual and Civil, appointed to rule human society, is first clearly established.

       In this volume, therefore, I treat first of the relation of these two Powers before the coming of Christ. Secondly, of their relation as it was affected by that coming, in order to show what position the Church of [Pg xx] Christ originally took up in regard to the Civil Power, and what the behaviour of the Civil Power towards the Church was. And, thirdly, the question of principles being thus laid down, the remainder of the volume is occupied with the historical exhibition of the subject during the first three centuries; that is, from the Day of Pentecost to the Nicene Council. The supreme importance of that period will appear to all who reflect that

       the Church from the beginning, and in the first centuries of her existence, must be the same in principles with the Church of the

       nineteenth and every succeeding century. And this volume is, in fact, a prelude to the treatment of the same subject in the last three centuries, down to the Ecumenical Council of the Vatican.

       The subject which I am treating is, then, strictly historical, being the action of a King in the establishment of a kingdom; the action of a Lawgiver in the legislation which He gave to that kingdom; the action of a Priest in founding a hierarchy, whereby that kingdom consists; but, moreover, which is something much more--the action of One who is Priest, Lawgiver, and King at once and always, and therefore whose work is at once one and triple, and indivisible in its unity and triplicity, and issuing in the forming of a people which is simply the creation of its King.

       1.--The Kingdom as Prophesied.

       As an introduction to it, let me refer to the distinct and explicit prediction of such an event at a point of [Pg xxi] time six centuries before it took effect, as well as now distant from us almost 2500 years, under circumstances upon which it is most instructive to look back. For not only did the secular and the religious histories of mankind then meet together, as they had met before, but they began to stand in a certain relation to each other, which continues from that time to this. The intersection of two societies which work themselves out in the one human history became permanent. At that moment a revelation was given, which is perhaps the most definite detailed and absolute prophecy concerning the whole compass of human society, as viewed in its relation to God, which is

       to be found in the Old Testament. And the occasion upon which it was given makes it even more significant, for it was like a burst

       of sunlight suddenly scattering the darkness of a storm and bathing the whole landscape in radiance.

       That

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