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Self
Learning
Page:
Contents
I. Canons of the New Testament
II. The Fathers
- 1st
Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians
[ca 96]: A formal letter written on behalf of
the Roman Christian community urging Christians
who had been rebelling against church authority
to be submissive and obedient. Tradition
attributes it to Clement, allegedly one of the
first bishops of Rome.
- 2nd
Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians
[ca 150]: Sermon thought not to be the writing
of Clement himself. Advocates sound view of
Christ, the resurrection, and holiness unto
God. Enter into battle against the ways of
this world, work out salvation through
strength in Christ.
- The
Epistle of Barnabas [ca 130]: This
letter, probably not authored by the NT
Barnabas, repudiates the claims of Jewish
Christians at the time who advocated adhering
to observance of the Mosiac Law. Argued that
Christ provided salvation and man is no longer
bound by the Law. Compares holy life to
unrighteousness.
- Didache
(Teaching of the Lord through the Apostles):
Eleventh century MS discovered by Philotheus
Bryennios. The Didache consists of various
parts, starting with the "Two Ways"
ethical instruction (see Barn 18-21) and
including community rules for liturgical
practices and leadership conduct, before
ending with a short apocalyptic section. While
some of the material might go back before the
year 100, the current form of the document is
probably mid-second century at earliest.
- The
Shepherd of Hermas [ca. 150]: Written
by Hermas, who is believed to be brother of
Pius, the Bishop of Rome. The Shepherd of
Hermas is an apocalyptic document (in the
sense that it claims to be revealed), modelled
after the Book of Revelation. It deals with
practical matters of church purity and
discipline in second century Rome.
- The
Epistle of Polycarp to the Philippians
[ca 130?]: Polycarp was a church leader
(bishop) in Smyrna, Asia Minor. Exhorted the
Philippians to holy living, good works,
steadfast faith. Interested in ministry and
practical aspects of daily life of Christians.
- The
Martyrdom of Polycarp: The earliest
preserved Christian martyrology, probably from
the latter part of the second century (not too
long after the event). Records the tradition
of the trial and execution (burned at the
stake) of Polycarp.
- The
Writings of Ignatius: Bishop of
Antioch in Syria [ca 1-2 century] martyred in
Rome by beasts (ca 105-116). On his way to
Rome, he visits and then writes to various
churches, warning and exhorting them. He also
writes ahead to Rome, and writes to Polycarp,
bishop of Smyrna. Warned the church against
heresies that threatened peace and unity,
opposed Gnosticism and Docetism. In the
Epistle to Smyrna, insisted Christ came in the
flesh not just in spirit.
III. Patristic Texts
- The
Epistle of Mathetes (Believer/Disciple) to
Diognetus:
This Apologetic treatise? written perhaps ca
200, presents a rational defense of Christianity
and shows the folly of idolatry. The document
also discusses Christian influence in the world.
- Origin
(ca AD 185-254):
- The
Writings of Tertullian: Our earliest
extensively preserved Latin Christian author
[140-230], who aligned himself around 207 with
the "Montanist" Christian movement
that was considered "heretical" by
the representatives of emerging mainstream
Christianity.
- The
Writings of Cyprian: Cyprian [200-258]
was the Overseer of the church in Carthage,
Northa Africa, during a period of fierce
persecution. After many years of persecution
during which the church existed underground he
was captured and executed by the Romans.
- Athanasius:
On the Incarnation. Athanasius
[270-336] was the overseer of Alexandria after
the death of Alexander. He worte several
theological treatises and was the chief
defender of the Nicene Creed.
- The
Writings of Augustine: Augustine
[354-430] was Overseer of the church at Hippo,
North Africa, and is considered by many to be
the father of western theology. Unlike earlier
Christian writers, Augustine was not
well-versed in the Greek Language. Thus, he
did not use the Greek NT or the Original texts
of the early Christian writers as his sources
but rather the Latin Vulgate and Latin
translations of Greek texts.
IV. Creeds And Canons
V. Later Text
- The
Summa Theologica
[1265/1266-1273] (translated by Fathers of the
English Dominican): Aquinas' classical
exposition of the theology of the Roman Catholic
Church. Aquinas is known for his development of
a systematic theology based on reason and faith.
- (Gregory
of Nyssa) [ca 330-395] One of the
Cappadocian Fathers. Deposed by Arian bishops
in 376 because he supported the Nicene faith,
but he regained his position win 378. His
style was devotional and he tended toward
spiritualizing.
VI. Related Documents
VII. Miscellaneous Documents
VIII. Relevant Internet Sites
- Apologia
- The
Ecole Initiative Building a Hypertext
Encyclopedia of Early Church History.
- Doctrine
of the Trinity by Dr. Francis Beckwith
- The
Trinity Defenders' Home Page by Frank
DeCenso.
- The
Church Fathers page, Wesley Center for
Applied Theology, Northwest Nazarene College.
- CHURCHRODENT:
R.A. Tatum's Glossary of Church History
- The
Early Church Fathers collection at the
Christian Classics Ethereal Library, Wheaton
College.
- The
Internet Medieval Sourcebook, a
comprehensive project that includes Readings in
Medieval History, Full Texts for Readings, etc.
- The
Christian History Institute provides an
ample archive of Church History documents for
all periods of history in its Glimpses archive.
Particularly germaine are two sections on Early
Church History that include: Foundations of Our
Faith, Whatever Happened to the Twelve
Apostles?, The Spread of the Early Church,
Accusation, The Canon, and biographical
information on Polycarp, Constantine, Clement of
Rome, Justin Martyr, Blandina, Irenaeus,
Tertullian, Origin, Jerome.
Readings on Music
Brent Hugh's
Music Instruction Software page This has a free-ware program to train
people in singing and reading music. It is a fine program to train those
who have no musical background and those who would like to strengthen
their skills. This site has both software for PCs and MACs.
Freeware site for music
composition and vocalist music training.
MusiNum
- The Music in the Numbers, by Lars Kindermann - freeware.
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