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Showing posts in 'Recovering our Memory Series'

Recovering our memory: Anselm

Carl Laferton | 6 Dec 2012

Name: Anselm
When: 1033 – 1109
Where: Archbishop of Canterbury, England

So what?

Anselm was a “schoolman”, or “scholastic”, from an era when Christian thinkers were trying to ally reason to faith, showing that the Christian faith was reasonable, and using reason to further understand their faith. Anselm’s legacy was in three main areas:

  • He offered evidence of God’s existence. God is by definition perfect. Something that exists is more perfect than something that doesn’t exist. Therefore, if you imagine a perfect Being, He must exist, since if He doesn’t exist He isn’t perfect. So there must be a perfect God. This is a headscratcher…

Recovering our memory: Augustine (of Hippo)

Carl Laferton | 5 Dec 2012

Name: Augustine (of Hippo)
When: 354 – 430
Where: Bishop of Hippo in modern-day Algeria

So what?

Augustine is one of the most important Christian thinkers of any age. He is really helpful for thinking through the relationship between church and state; what baptism is and does; the difference between the “visible” and “invisible” church; and loads of other things. But probably his most important contribution was in response to the writings of a British monk named Pelagius, and to the thought of “semi-Pelagians”. Here is an attempt to outline these three complex theological views through three pictures of animals…... continue reading

Recovering our memory: Ambrose

Carl Laferton | 4 Dec 2012

Name: Ambrose
When: 339-397
Where: Bishop of Milan in Italy

So what?:

Ambrose was close friends with the Emperor of the western Roman Empire (essentially, today’s western Europe and north African coast). But he was also absolutely clear that the emperor was just a member of the church, rather than its head. In spiritual matters, he came under the leadership and discipline of the church.

This led to a huge confrontation in 390. Theodosius had ordered the massacring of the inhabitants of Thessalonica after the Roman governor was killed in a riot. Ambrose excommunicated him, and told him to repent. When Theodosius turned up at church the next Sunday, Ambrose wouldn’t let him in. The Emperor walked through the streets of Milan doing public penance; was banned from entering church services for eight months; and then had to kneel before the whole congregation and ask for God’s forgiveness—all of which he did.... continue reading

Recovering our memory: Athanasius

Carl Laferton | 4 Dec 2012

Name: Athanasius
When: 296 - 373
Where: Bishop of Alexandria in Egypt

So what?:

Athanasius lived in a time of furious arguments about exactly who Jesus was. Christians today take it for granted that the church teaches that God the Son is fully God, but distinct from the Father. But in Athanasius’ time, the church was being torn apart by disagreement on this point. There were four basic “camps”:

  • “Arians” argued that Jesus was a created being, semi-divine but not God Himself.
  • “Origenists” said Jesus was uncreated, but not quite as divine as God because he was of a different substance.
  • “Nicenes” held that Jesus was God the Son—of the same nature (the Greek summary word they used was homoousia—same essence) as God the Father. Jesus was totally divine, but not identical to the Father.
  • “Sabellianists” said that Father and Son were the same person in different appearances (a bit like a man can “look like” a father, an accountant, and a runner, at different times of his week).
... continue reading

Recovering our memory: Introduction

Carl Laferton | 4 Dec 2012

“A society without its history is like a man without his memory”, someone once told me. It would be equally true to substitute “church” for “society”.

Christianity is a historical faith—it is based on the mysterious yet historical facts of the virgin birth, the cross, and the empty tomb. Each time we read the Bible, we are reading history—living history, Spirit-applied history, but still history. In a sense, we are all historians.

But a lot of Christians have lived, died and gone to heaven in the 2,000 years or so since Christ walked this earth. The vast majority lived faithful but unremarkable lives before heading off to surround His throne. A few have been so greatly used by God that they shaped the way His people thought, worshipped and gathered in their lifetime. And a very few have shaped the church not just in their own generation, but for centuries to follow.... continue reading

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