WHAT IS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHRISTIANITY?
What is Roman Catholic Christianity?
“Celebrating our Diversity Now”
St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Cathedral of Montreal
(January
24th, 2018)
Good
morning! First of all, I would
to offer my sincere thanks to the organizers of this conference as well as to
the head of the community that gathers to worship in this cathedral for
granting me the honour of addressing you this morning.
What I will attempt to do this morning is to briefly present Roman Catholic
Christianity by offering three answers to my question:
·
Overview of the distinctiveness of the Roman Catholic
tradition (= RC is under papal authority).
·
Discussion of Jesus of Nazareth in his historical
context as well as the central claims that the New Testament makes about him (=
RC is centred on the person of Jesus of
Nazareth).
·
Survey of early Christian beliefs about Jesus that
would eventually lead to the development of the doctrine of the Trinity (= RC has a Trinitarian understanding of God).
Roman
Catholicism is Roman in
the sense that it is the branch of Christianity (“the Church”) that considers
the city of Rome to be its geographical centre.
It is Catholic in the sense
that it understands itself to be the “universal” Church under the leadership of
the Bishop of Rome (i.e. the Pope).
- · Pope Francis (baptized Jorge Bergoglio).
- · Elected Pope on March 13, 2013.
- · 266th “Successor of Peter”, “Supreme Pontiff of the Universal Church”.
- · There are presently 1.2 billion Roman Catholics in the world.
Petrine
factor. First of all, let us
look at the “petrine factor” within Roman Catholicism. This factor allows us to grasp the Catholic
understanding of “authority”. According
to the Catholic tradition, Jesus delegated his authority to his 12 “apostles”
(i.e. representatives). Among the
apostles, Peter was chosen to be the “head” of the Church (primus inter pares). This
understanding of Peter’s unique role is based on the words of Jesus addressed
to Peter in the Gospel according to St. Matthew:
“…you are Peter, and on this rock I
will build my church …I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven…” (Matthew
16.18-19)
So what
links St. Peter to Rome? Tradition
teaches that St. Peter was martyred in Rome during the persecution of the
Church carried out by the Emperor Nero (reign:
54-68 AD), probably around 65 AD. As the
Church expanded outwards from its point of origin in Jerusalem, authority over
Christian believers in a given region was invested in “bishops”, whose “see”
was usually a large metropolitan area, the most prominent of which were called
“patriarchates” (Jerusalem, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Rome = the
“Pentarchy”). Due to its connection with
Peter (one of the original apostles
of Jesus) & Paul (the greatest
Christian missionary of the first century; also
martyred in Rome), the patriarchate of Rome took on special prominence and
the Bishop of Rome acquired unique status.
Since Peter was held to have been the
first Bishop of Rome and due to the fact that Jesus had endowed him with
special authority, each of Peter’s successors in Rome came to be considered the
supreme leader (“Pope”) of the (Western/Latin) Church.
Imperial
Factor. Besides the “petrine”
factor, there is also the “imperial factor” that will help us understand the
roots of the Roman Catholic tradition.
The city of Rome was, of course, the capital of the Roman Empire, the geographical and political context within
which early Christianity spread. Not
possessing the status of religio licita,
Christianity was sporadically persecuted during its first 3 centuries. Finally, in the year 312, the Emperor
Constantine “the Great” converted to Christianity following his experience of a
vision and a subsequent military victory.
The following year, Constantine issued the “Edict of Milan”, which
granted the right to Christians to freely practice their faith without fear of
persecution. Later, the emperor Theodosius
I (347 – 395 AD) would issue the Edict of
Thessalonica, making Christianity the official religion of the Roman
Empire. Eventually, tensions would
develop between the Church located in the Western half of the empire and the
Church located in the East. The Western
Empire was predominantly Latin-speaking, while Greek was spoken in the
East. Interestingly enough, the first 7
ecumenical councils (4th – 8th Centuries AD) were all held in the general
vicinity of Constantinople (& Ephesus in 431).
The
tensions between the Western & Eastern Church were partly due to
the political situation. In 330 AD,
Constantine consecrated the city of “Constantinople” as the new imperial capital
(a “new Rome”). Following the death of
Theodosius in 395, the empire was divided in two: the Western Empire, ruled by a Caesar in Rome, and the Eastern Empire, ruled by a Caesar in
Constantinople. This state of affairs
lasted until the fall of the Western Empire in the year 476 AD. After the sack of the city of Rome, the
bishops of Rome would step into the resulting power (and social) vacuum and
play an invaluable role in the organization of society. The Popes of the late 5th century
and early 6th century would prove to be able diplomats, frequently
negotiating with various barbarian warlords for the welfare of the city’s
inhabitants.
How many
Churches? Besides the political
tensions between the Eastern & Western Emperors, there were mounting
theological tensions between the Latin and Greek-speaking segments of the Church. Finally, things came to a head with the
“Great Schism” of 1054, which was made official by the mutual excommunication
of the heads of the Eastern and Western Church.
The Eastern Church would become known as the “Orthodox” Church. After 1054, the RC Church is that
Latin-speaking Church in Western Europe, centred in Rome. Turmoil would erupt again in the Western
Church in 1517, as the “Protestant” Reformation got under way. After the various 16th-century reformations,
the RC Church is that (Western) Church under the leadership of the Bishop of
Rome (i.e. the Pope). Beginning in the
16th century, Catholicism and Protestantism would expand through the
colonization/conversion, by European powers, of the inhabitants of the Americas,
Africa and southern Asia; Christianity was also spread around the world through
heroic missionary efforts, including massive Protestant efforts beginning in
the 19th century – efforts that did not “piggy-back” on
colonialization. Today, the Orthodox,
Catholic and (many) Protestant Churches are truly global in scope.
As we know, Roman Catholicism is not the only Christian
tradition. So how many Churches are
there? (It’s a bit of a trick
question). The Nicene-Constantinopolitan
Creed states “I believe in one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.” Theologically speaking, there is one Church of Jesus Christ. What we see around us are many Churches, all
loyal to Jesus, yet not fully “in communion” with each other. However, great efforts are being made to reconcile
the different Churches to one another. With
this, we conclude our brief look at how Roman Catholicism came to be a distinct
tradition within Christianity.
So, how did
Christianity begin in the first place? It all
began with Jesus of Nazareth, a
first-century (Palestinian) Jew. At
first glance, it may seem strange that Jesus became the center of a global
religion. He was not a political ruler,
nor was he a leader within one of the branches of Judaism. In fact, Jesus was an obscure figure from a rural hamlet of Galilee; however, he is now
worshipped by 2.2 billion people worldwide.
Jesus. Let’s look at the two central
claims that the New Testament (Christian Scripture) makes about Jesus:
·
Jesus is
the true “Son of David”, the King of Israel.
o The title of
“Anointed One” (Messiah/Christ) refers to the
KING.
·
Jesus is
the true “Lord” of the world.
o The
Scriptures of Israel (OT) prophesied that YHWH would rule the world through
Israel’s king (cf. Pss. 2, 89; 2 Sam. 7.14, etc.).
The NT claims that Jesus is the fulfillment of the biblical
hope for the Creator to establish his rule (kingdom)
of justice and peace over the entire world.
The NT claims that the message about Jesus is “gospel”, i.e. “good
news”. St. Mark makes that very plain at
the beginning of his account (“Gospel”) of Jesus’ life and death. But why exactly is this message good news? What do the NT authors believe happened in
the events surrounding Jesus? The only
way we can hope to understand what the NT is saying about Jesus is to consider
Jesus within the context of the people of
Israel, their history and their relationship to God (YHWH).
Israel. According to Israel’s Scriptures (OT), the
Creator had promised to save his world through the descendants of Abraham; i.e. the nation of Israel. At the beginnings of the people of God, the
Creator was first known as the God “of Abraham (Isaac & Jacob)”. The Creator then revealed himself to Moses as
YHWH (“I AM”). At the time of the Exodus
from Egypt, YHWH renewed the covenant with the nation of Israel, the covenant that
he had first established with Abraham. Israel
was to be YHWH’s instrument of salvation for
the entire world. However, according
to the (Hebrew) Scriptures, Israel had been unfaithful to the covenant with
YHWH and incurred the judgment of exile (to Babylon). In order for the Creator’s plan of salvation
to go forward, the covenant with Israel must be renewed; Israel needed to be restored as God’s people in order for the
promised blessings of the covenant to extend to all nations. The term
that summed up this hope for the renewal & salvation of Israel as well as the
entire world was the “kingdom of God”.
Jesus’ main activity was to proclaim
the kingdom (often by parables) and to demonstrate
the kingdom’s presence through his many healings and exorcisms.
Strange
fulfillment. The Gospels (and the
rest of the NT) advance the claim that Jesus
of Nazareth had fulfilled the hope of Israel for the establishing of the
kingdom of God. And yet, Jesus had
not appeared to have accomplished any of those things that had been foretold by
the Scriptures and that composed the expectations of God’s people at the time. In fact, Jesus’ life, by all appearances, had
ended in utter disaster. After a brief period of public ministry, Jesus
was condemned by the ruling council
of Judaism (the Sanhedrin) as a false prophet and then publicly executed (crucified) by the Romans as an
insurgent (revolutionary). To make
matters worse, this was not the first
time in recent memory that a would-be Messiah had made grandiose claims of
being YHWH’s chosen one who would liberate Israel, only to end up on a Roman cross.
This pattern of the rise of a would-be saviour followed by his downfall,
death and the subsequent disbanding of his movement had happened often enough
for a respected member of the Sanhedrin, Gamaliel, to be able to offer several
historical examples to his colleagues while the apostles of Jesus were standing
trial for blasphemy (cf. Ac. 5.36-37). As
the Emmaus road narrative from St. Luke’s Gospel demonstrates so well, the death of a would-be Messiah spelled the
end of his movement and gave the lie to his pretensions to be God’s
anointed deliverer (cf. Lk 24.19-21).
And yet, in the case of the movement begun by Jesus of Nazareth, things turned out differently. Shortly after his cruel death on the cross,
Jesus’ followers began to publicly proclaim him to be, in fact, the
long-awaited Messiah (“King”) of Israel and indeed, the “Lord” of all the
nations. Never before had a messianic,
kingdom-of-God movement continued to exist – and thrive! – after the death of the movement’s leader… unless
something had happened on the third day following the crucifixion of
Jesus. Indeed, it was the resurrection
of Jesus of Nazareth from the dead that explains the continuance, as a coherent
community, of his disciples. If the
death of Jesus on the cross had been the
end, we would not be discussing him today.
There would have never been a
Christian Church, the New Testament documents would never have been written;
if the cross had been the end, the memory of Jesus of Nazareth would have faded
with the death of those who had followed him during his lifetime. The
resurrection of Jesus from the dead gave rise to everything that happened
after the events of (what we now call) Good Friday. Indeed, if Jesus had been raised from death
by YHWH, then the kingdom had come, the
promises had been fulfilled, albeit in a very surprising and
counter-intuitive way. It would be up to
people like St. Paul to “intuit” the rich, transformative (biblical) meaning of
the cross and resurrection of Jesus.
Towards the
Trinity. So, the
“end” turned out to be a new “beginning”.
Firm in their conviction that Jesus of Nazareth had been raised from
death by the God of Israel and was now “enthroned at YHWH’s right hand” in an
embodied state of immortality, the early Christians began to boldly proclaim
far and wide that Jesus was the Lord of
the world and that all people owed him their allegiance. Christianity was, from its very beginnings, a missionary religion. By the end of the first century AD, the young
Church had “parted ways” with Judaism and had become a distinct “religion”. As Christianity expanded throughout the Empire,
the vast majority of converts had a pagan background and Jewish Christianity
was reduced to small communities in and around Palestine. Christianity had rapidly become separate –
theologically, geographically and ethnically – from Judaism, its “mother”.
Jesus &
YHWH. In light of the
resurrection and in light of what Jesus was remembered to have said and done
during his life, the early Christians began to speak of Jesus in “divine”
terms. For example, in the “prologue” of
the Gospel of St. John (1.1-18), Jesus is equated with the 5 ways that YHWH
interacted with his creation in the Scriptures (OT).
- · The “Word” with which God spoke all things into existence (cf. Gn. 1.3, etc.).
- · The wisdom through which God created the world (cf. Proverbs 8.22-31; Wisdom 9.1-2, 4, 9).
- · The “glory” of God (cf. Numbers 12.5) that hovered over and filled
- · The tabernacle/Temple (cf. Ex. 40.34; 1 Kings 8.10-11).
- · The Torah (Law, instruction) of Moses (cf. Ex. 20.1-17, etc.).
This way, John has equated Jesus with YHWH, the God of
Israel, who was understood by his people as being the Creator of all
things. John identifies Jesus of Nazareth with the Creating and Redeeming God
of the Old Testament! John does not,
like the Church would do later on, use philosophical categories to speak of
Jesus’ “divinity”; rather, he describes Jesus in the ways that the Old Testament describes God (i.e. using
biblical categories).
Three
things we know about what the early Christians believed about “God”.
1. The early
Christians were Jewish, they were accustomed to hearing the Jewish Scriptures
(OT) read aloud in the synagogues, and they practiced Judaism (observance of
Sabbath and kosher laws, prayers, pilgrimages to the Jerusalem Temple,
etc.). Therefore, the early Christians
were monotheists; i.e. they believed
in one God:
v Shema Y’Israel: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord
our God, the Lord is one.” Dt. 6.4.
2. The early
Christians worshipped, praised, and prayed to Jesus in the same way they
had been used to worshipping, praising and praying to YHWH. They somehow “included” Jesus within YHWH’s
divinity (divine “status”, identity).
v Roman jurisprudence concerning the early Christians: “… [The
Christians] declared that the sum of their guilt …only amounted to this, that
on a stated day they had been accustomed to meet before daybreak and to recite
a hymn among themselves to Christ, as though he were a god…”
·
--Letter of Pliny the Younger, governor of the
province of Bithynia, to the emperor Trajan (early 2nd
century AD)
3. The first
Christians had a powerful experience of YHWH’s Spirit and quickly began to
speak, not only of “God”, but of “God/the Father and the
Son/Lord/Christ and the Spirit”.
Suddenly, “God” had a tripartite nature (i.e. God was somehow “3”).
The rise of
Christian “orthodoxy”. During the
4th and 5th centuries AD, the full-orbed doctrine of the Trinity was worked out. At the first ecumenical council, held at
Nicaea in the year 325, Jesus was declared to be divine in the same way as the Father (“consubstantial”). In 381, at Constantinople, the Holy Spirit
was declared to be fully divine. In 451, at Chalcedon, Jesus was declared to
have two natures, divine and human,
and yet remains one person. And so, due to their experience of Jesus and
the Holy Spirit, the Christians of the early centuries of the Church came to
formulate their understanding of “God” as being three divine “persons” sharing one
divine “substance”. They retained the
monotheism they had inherited from Judaism, yet redefined it in terms of Jesus and the Spirit. One God, three persons.
Excellent address.
ReplyDelete“The inability to form a mental picture or to develop a complete explanation has caused many to wrongly conclude that the doctrine of the Trinity is contradictory or rationally incoherent.”
The early Christians incomprehensibly put this aside when they equated Jesus with YHWH.
The Trinity (and of course the Resurrection) makes Christianity truly unique amongst all world religions.
“The charge that “Trinitarians” accept a mathematical absurdity would seem appropriate if the biblical God were confined to the same dimensional realm as humans. Fortunately he has shown us abundant evidence that he is not.” ..Hugh Ross