Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity Online

Get access Subject: Biblical Studies And Early Christianity
General Editors: David G. Hunter, Boston College, United States, Paul J.J. van Geest, Tilburg University, Netherlands, Bert Jan Lietaert Peerbolte, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands.

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 The Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity focuses on the history of early Christian texts, authors, ideas. Its content is intended to bridge the gap between the fields of New Testament studies and patristics, covering the whole period of early Christianity up to 600 CE. The BEEC aims to provide a critical review of the methods used in Early Christian Studies and to update the historiography.

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Christology, 02: 3rd Century CE

(2,310 words)

Author(s): Ramelli, Ilaria L.E.
From the historical viewpoint, the 3rd century CE was crucial to the development of thoughts about Christ both in his relation to the two other persons of the Trinity and in his composition of humanity and divinity.In the early 3rd century CE, Bardaisan of Edessa, a Christian philosopher and theologian influenced by Middle Platonism and Stoicism and well versed in Greek and Syriac, developed a remarkable logos Christology that revolved around the notion of the cosmic Christ (Ramelli, 2009a; 2013b). He elaborated a Middle Platonic concept of Christ- logos as the seat of the id…
Date: 2024-01-19

Christology, 03: 4th Century CE and Later

(3,072 words)

Author(s): Fernández, Samuel
The Christology of the patristic period directly confronted three great questions. The first two concerned the relationships between humanity and divinity in Christ and between the Son and God the Father, with the first of these being specific to Christology and the second pertaining to Trinitarian theology. In this overview, both questions are considered, since a drastic separation between Christology and Trinitarian theology is untenable. The third question revolves around the salvific …
Date: 2024-01-19

Chromatius of Aquileia

(1,622 words)

Author(s): Boddens Hosang, F.J. Elizabeth
Chromatius was born around 335 or 340 CE (d. 407 CE), probably at Aquileia, a north Italian city on the Adriatic coast. The town was of strategic importance during the later Roman Empire and an important seat of the western church. Legend has it that the apostle Mark came to the city, although the earliest Christian evidence dates from the 3rd century CE. In the course of the 4th century CE, the city became the chief ecclesiastical center for this region, later known as Venetia and Istria…
Date: 2024-01-19

Chronograph of 354

(2,013 words)

Author(s): Burgess, R.W.
The Chronograph of 354 is a compilation produced in late 353 or early 354 CE for an otherwise unknown Roman senator by the name of Valentinus. He employed the well-known calligrapher Furius Dionysius Filocalus to copy the text of his manuscript, and Filocalus probably provided the artist(s) for its many illustrations. There can be no doubt that the result was an expensive deluxe codex that was a treasured family heirloom. Apart from the dedication, nothing in this codex was written specifically for this compilation; it was compiled from preexisting works and illustrations.A Descriptio…
Date: 2024-01-19

Church and Empire

(6,916 words)

Author(s): Ramelli, Ilaria L.E.
This essay will investigate the relations between the Christian church and the Roman Empire in the patristic age, mainly from the institutional point of view. It will first examine the possible reasons for the persecution of Christians in the empire, vetting the information regarding the  senatusconsultum  under Tiberius, attested by Tertullian, by the Acts of Apollonius, by Porphyry of Tyre or the “pagan” (Pagan/Paganism) polemicist in Macarius’  Apocriticus, and, indirectly, by Origen. Then, the essay will examine, in chronological order, the sources concer…
Date: 2024-01-19

Church Authority

(1,329 words)

Author(s): Schöllgen, Georg
The sources pertaining to the early church concur that all church authority comes from God (Ring, 1975, 64). Jesus (Christ, Jesus, 01: Survey) himself already gave the church all essential rules of discipline during his lifetime. The authoritative mediators and interpreters of these rules are the twelve apostles (Apostle/Disciple), insofar as they genuinely witnessed the proclamation of Jesus with their own eyes and ears. God himself caused many of these rules to be written down in the Ne…
Date: 2024-01-19

Church Buildings, 01: Survey and Development

(2,069 words)

Author(s): de Blaauw, Sible
Buildings specifically intended for Christian worship, especially for the eucharistic synaxis, are known as church buildings (Church Buildings, 02: Basilica and Baptistery). It can be assumed, that only after public recognition of the Christian religion in 313 CE, new buildings were designed specifically for the liturgical meetings of the Christian community in the Roman Empire.Until then, Christian communities celebrated the liturgy in existing buildings, which had been adapted for that purpose. The only archaeological evidence from this period is the so-called domus eccles…
Date: 2024-01-19

Church Buildings, 02: Basilica and Baptistery

(4,033 words)

Author(s): Alçada Cardoso, Isabel Maria
Eucharist on Sunday is part of Christian worship since the 1st century CE, following the mandate of Jesus Christ during the Last Supper (see e.g. Luke 22:19). Later, Justin Martyr (1 Apol . 67.7; 2nd cent. CE) and Cyprian of Carthage ( Ep. 63.16.2; 3rd cent. CE) martyrs stressed that resurrection (Resurrection of Jesus Christ), the Paschal Mystery of Christ, is what Christians celebrate on Sunday Eucharist. On the other hand, Jesus Christ asked his followers to go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the…
Date: 2024-01-19

Churches of Lyons and Vienne, Letter of the

(2,993 words)

Author(s): Mateo Donet, M. Amparo
This is the Acts of Martyrs in the form of an epistula (“letter”) written by the Churches of Lyons and Vienne, and it was sent to the sister communities of Asia and Frygia in order to inform them about the events of the year 177 CE, that is to say, the martyrdom suffered by the Christians of Gaul on that date and of which the victim was a very numerous group of individuals from those two cities.Authenticity, Date and ContentIn spite of the fact that almost all the historians from Christianity’s first centuries came across this memorable letter and accepted it as authenti…
Date: 2024-01-19

Church Membership

(1,354 words)

Author(s): Schöllgen, Georg
Soon after the Easter events, baptism became the act through which believers were incorporated into the church (Gaudemet, 1989, 55–69; Ferguson, 2009, 132–198), a relationship that was exclusive. According to early Christian understanding, it precludes all other paths to salvation in the sense of a religious pluralism. Accordingly, excommunication signifies the forsaking of salvation in this world and the next, at least as long as it is not rescinded. Membership in the church always has two dime…
Date: 2020-04-14

Church of Rome

(6,752 words)

Author(s): Cohen, Samuel
The early history of the Roman church can be divided into two distinct but overlapping topics: first, the structure and administration of the church headed by the city’s bishop, the pope; and second, Rome’s wider claims to leadership across the Christian world. Neither development was linear nor inevitable. While its association with the apostle Peter meant that the Roman church was widely considered to be special, the evolution of its bureaucratic infrastructure and authority, both within and beyond its traditional episcopal jurisdiction, was haphazard and often contested.The Ch…
Date: 2024-01-19

Church Organization

(1,247 words)

Author(s): Schöllgen, Georg
From the very beginning, the organization of the ancient church found itself in a process of increasing complexity that remains without parallel in the history of ancient religions.Development of the Local Congregation in the First Three Centuries CEThe process began with a variety of different congregational models. While the Corinthian congregation of Paul’s (Paul [Apostle])  lifetime only exhibited a low degree of organization and probably got by without a formal congregational leadership, officials vested with leadership f…
Date: 2024-01-19

Circumcision

(2,933 words)

Author(s): Jacobs, Andrew S.
Circumcision, the surgical removal of the foreskin, which functions among male Jews a sign of covenant membership, was early on rejected by Christian groups of predominantly gentile membership. Nevertheless, gentile Christians remained fascinated with the practice of Jewish circumcision, and it appears regularly throughout early Christian texts in both literal and symbolic forms.Circumcision as a Jewish Mark and StereotypeAlthough other ethnic groups practiced routine male circumcision in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East (Hdt. 2.36; 2.104; Diod. Sic. Bib. hist. 1.28…
Date: 2024-01-19

Claudian

(1,834 words)

Author(s): Döpp, Siegmar
Claudian (Claudius Claudianus), circa 370–404 CE, probably a native of Greek-speaking Alexandria, came to Italy as a young man no later than 394 CE, where he first gained access to the Christian Anicii family (in Rome), and then to the court of Honorius, the Christian ruler of the western Roman Empire (first in Milan and from 402 CE in Ravenna), to hold the rank of tribunus et notarius (“tribune and imperial secretary”).Claudian composed an impressive series of longer Latin poems in dactylic hexameters ( carmina maiora; some have prefaces in elegiac distichs): a mythological ep…
Date: 2024-01-19

Claudius

(1,486 words)

Author(s): van der Lans, Birgit
Tiberius Claudius Nero Germanicus (10 BCE–54 CE) was the fourth emperor of Rome and ruled between 41 and 54 CE. A member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, he was the son of Antonia Minor and Nero Claudius Drusus, brother of Germanicus, nephew of Tiberius, and uncle of Gaius Caligula. Due to a youthful physical ailment (the ancient sources mention a limp and a stammer), he was marginalized in the imperial family and kept from public office until later in life. Instead Claudius turned to intel…
Date: 2024-01-19

Cleanthes

(1,750 words)

Author(s): Ramelli, Ilaria L.E.
Cleanthes (c. 330–233/231 BCE) was the second school leader of the ancient Stoa, after Zeno and before Chrysippus, who was Cleanthes’ disciple.Cleanthes is especially famous for his Hymn to Zeus, which manifests his profound religiosity in a Stoic framework. He did not divide philosophy into logic, physics, and ethics, which is the standard Stoic partition, but into six parts, which result from the duplication of the aforementioned three: dialectics and rhetoric, ethics and politics, and physics and theology ( SVF 1.482; Ramelli, 2011). The last two, physics and theology,…
Date: 2024-01-19

1 Clement

(3,595 words)

Author(s): Drake Williams, H.H.
1 Clement is one of the earliest extant works of Christian literature apart from New Testament. It contains 65 chapters and encourages peace and concord in the church ( 1 Clem. 1:1; 63:1–2).Manuscripts and EditionsFew manuscripts survive with 1 Clement from early antiquity. The Codex Alexandrinus (5th cent. CE) is a reliable witness, although it has some orthographic errors and lacks 1 Clem. 57:7–63:3. The complete Greek text of 1 Clement survives in only the Codex Hierosolymitanus (1056 CE). It exhibits many formal corrections whether from the scribe who identi…
Date: 2024-01-19
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