Showing posts with label Augustine of Hippo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Augustine of Hippo. Show all posts

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Heresy in Early Christianity

Although many texts were written and shared in the ancient Christian community to explain Christian life and to guide individuals and churches, dissonance between different groups arose from difficult questions about practices and doctrine and what Christianity as a religion would look like.

Most controversial matters were unresolved by either consensus or church legislation until the fifth century councils. As the church developed orthodoxy, so too did it begin to define heresy, action or belief that opposes official principles of a religion.


Source

Yet one sect's orthodoxy could be another sect's heresy, even with common foundations. For example, when the church developed into the differing parties of the Orthodox-Catholic-Chalcedonian; Nestorian; and Monophysite-Jacobite-Coptic, each considered the others heretical, despite that all three held firmly to the 'Nicene Creed'.


Even the Islamic faith, now one of the world's most widely practiced religions, was once thought to be a Christian heresy. What is defined to be heresy – or orthodoxy or another religion altogether – is changeable over time and subjective to one group or another.

In the aptly titled text "On the Correction of the Donatists," Augustine understands the Donatists to be heretical and out of communion with the Catholic Church. So important is this restored communion - and for the Donatists to see the error of their ways - that Augustine justifies coercion in the form of fines and nonviolent means. Some who are "brought back" later express contentment and gratitude despite the means by which they were initially persuaded, and to Augustine this is a sign that it is better for heretics to suffer discipline but to be brought back to the church than it is for them to suffer in their old ways.

He does, however, show some reluctance to coercing the Donatists to the Catholic Church - primarily in not advocating corporal or capital punishment. Inflicted death leaves no space for earthly repentance and sacrament. He further believes it would be unjust if they were to coerce people and then not educate them; the suffering would have been in vain, and would not bring about the change that Augustine genuinely desires for them.

The Manichaeans were also among all those who were subjected to imperial coercion, repressed and persecuted for their heretical views, but they were the only dissident Christians to be executed in the fourth century.

An issue as seemingly simple as the veneration of a particular saint caused distinction among some medieval Christian sects: the question of the validity of St. Guinefort, the Holy Greyhound, thought to protect infants, among the most vulnerable of people.


Source

Those who embrace Guinefort as a saint understand this to mirror what Jesus lived to do: to protect the marginalized and those who do not have a voice. Notably, this heretical thirteenth century cult would continue well into the nineteenth century. Despite being maintained as a minor cult, it retains its adherents for a period of 600 years, and thus is not an easily quashed off-shoot of orthodox belief. While many other controversies developed about matters of life, death, and afterlife, the question of a dog as a saint was less influential church-wide, and yet was outwardly rejected as heresy by some groups.

It would seem that "heresy" is simply a word used by one group to dismiss the religious belief of others - and perhaps at times that is the case. The ancient western church's acceptance of Augustine's ideas of original sin and "Christian imperfection," for instance, are debatably an effort - deliberate or somewhat subconscious - not only to maintain order in the church but to reserve a space for it and for the sacraments and rituals.

Apart from the possibility that this is simply the case - that the church developed orthodoxy from concepts which would sustain it - there is additionally the consideration that those within the councils in the position to make such affirmations were indeed clerics. I propose that they genuinely believed in this method - even genuinely encountered some indication of the divine in it - perhaps because, as clerics, that was how they approached faith. They are already in a position to find merit to sacraments and rituals not only because it gives meaning to their work but also because these are the means by which they have personally experienced and articulated their own spirituality.

In this way, a claim of heresy may be at times an earnest appeal to the "other," a statement that they have indeed found "truth." If two or more concepts or practices cannot simultaneously be correct, they are logically compelled - even obligated - not only to believe that a conflicting view is incorrect but to intervene and educate those who are apparently misguided. Augustine certainly saw this as the case.



I love this concept, but I find it all the more complicated when we
consider how to decide what is "essential"... Good effort, though.
Source


One might be inclined to wonder if perhaps early Christians would have liked, in an ideal and effortless religious schema, to agree on all accounts and to have a clear, coherent, unified understanding of the faith. The church consistently struggles toward unity and dissolves into sects with each doctrinal challenge. Therefore this leads to at least two possible explanations for the claims of heresies: on one hand, perhaps it is indeed a power struggle arising from the need to declare one's view as "correct" or from the need for power itself, and/or perhaps an authentic and virtually immutable conviction in one's beliefs to the point of sensing urgency in others "realizing the error of their ways" and "learning the truth" - the expectation that such people will be better off and grateful about it once they finally understand the orthodox truth. Either explanation lends itself well to the example of the dissenting Christian groups which all claimed that the other groups were in fact heretical, or the disagreement between those who venerated Saint Guinefort the greyhound and the sects which specifically did not.

In examining the effect of declarations of heresy on the physical division of the church and monastic sects, it would seem that heresy is more an ecclesiastical issue than a theological one. This claim, however, would be an oversimplification. Perhaps schisms are the stuff of ecclesiology, as the church communities struggle to define themselves and maintain unity on one level while causing fragmentation on another.



Based primarily upon The Word Made Flesh: A History of Christian Thought by Margaret R. Miles (Blackwell Publishing 2005) and the lectures of Dr. Catherine Peyroux, Drew University, Fall 2010. Conclusions made in the last four paragraphs are my input.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

If Dr. House Solved Theological Mysteries

And now for something completely different:

A script!

Sort of.

Meet Dr. House's new team: St. Augustine of Hippo, Pelagius, and Julian of Norwich.

Yes. Yes, I went there. And you're coming with me.

This will serve best as a review for those who took Church History I (up to late 15th century). Everybody else, it might just - dare I say - tempt you to read these authors' works...

...or convince you to avoid them like the plague. (But that's a House/Church History crossover for another day.)




[Deep Announcer Voice] You're watching House, M.D., episode: "Damned If You Do" "Deception" "House vs. God" "Human Error" "Saviors"

...Yeesh. All the good ones are taken, aren't they? Fine then.

[Resume Deep Announcer Voice] Episode: "Sin."

Fade in.

House: "Okay, Hippo, what have you got?"

Augustine: "Patient's a chronic liar."

House: "Everybody lies. Tell me something I don't know about him."

Pelagius: "Mates with anything that moves." (Pointed glare at Augustine.) "Steals food even when he is not hungry." (Second pointed glare.) "Prays for forgiveness of sinful behavior but never actually changes said behavior. I could go on."

House: "Please don't. Theories of origin?"

Augustine: "Inherited from the first human."

Pelagius: "Socialization. Culture. Habit."

Augustine: "Exacerbated by habit. Originated in the first human."

House (already bored of them): "Julian, you're awfully quiet today. You forget how to interact with other human life during your long career as an anchorwoman?"

Julian: "Anchoress, Dr. House."

House: "Same thing. So you have something to contribute, or do you want to think on it for another 25 years first?"

Julian: "I think the patient was just doing his best. He couldn't help but stumble, but he only stumbled because he wanted so greatly to please his Lord."

House: "God help us. Pelagius? You have a diagnosis rolling around in that perfect little head of yours?"

Pelagius: "Maybe it's lup-"

(House glares.)

Pelagius: "Uh, loop-de-loops. Terrible things. Everyone should walk the straight and narrow, I always say. We're all perfectly capable of avoiding spiritual detours."

Augustine (adding insistently): "God willing."

House: "Fine. We've established that it's sin. We don't know how it got there, but we know we want to get rid of it. Julian, they're a lost cause. I'm looking at you for a prognosis."

Julian: "All shall be well."

House: "That's not funny, Julian. You said that about the last three patients. We're trying to save a life here."

Augustine: "Salvation isn't in our hands, House. It is by God's mercy that--"

House (losing patience...no pun intended): "Okay, Hippo, I get it. Could you just tell the anchoress here that she can't give the same prognosis for every patient without even considering the nature of their illness? A guy could be wheeled in here on a gurney after being hit by a bus and she'd still say the same damned thing."

Julian (bristling at the use of 'damned'): "Just because you don't understand it doesn't mean it can't happen."

House: "Wilson, is that you? You've done something to your hair. And voice. And..." (looks down her body and prickles)

Julian: "What I meant was what is impossible for you is not impossible for--"

House (sighs dramatically): "Pelagius, go break into Sinbad's house and look for some dirt on the man."

Pelagius: "I can't."

House: "Can't what?"

Pelagius: "Break into his house."

House: "Oh, for Christ's sake."

(Team members exchange glances.)

House: "That's it. You span 1000 years of church history among you and you still can't even fathom the basis of sin. How the hell do you expect to be able to figure out how it's treated?"

(Team members exchange glances. Then: uproar, chaos, heated arguments. House takes his cane and Vicodin and heads for the door.)

House: "We're missing something."

End scene.
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