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Gabriel_of_12
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There were other canons including those listed by Catholic Saints in circulation, but none were officially canonized by the whole Catholic Church until Constantine united the Empire under the sign of the Cross and lifted the Roman laws that persecuted the Catholic Church. Granted there were periods when these Roman laws on the books were not exercised, never the less we have many Bishop’s of Rome, Saints who were Martyred by both Jews and Romans for their Catholic Faith in Jesus, these are recorded historical accounts you cannot refute. The blood of Martyrs for the first 400 years give witness to this account.DaddyGirl;14136763]As I recall, the first to put together a list of books for a Christian canon was Marcion of Sinope, a bishop from Asia Minor later categorized as a heretic and excommunicated.
One can micro manage their way around history to refute different ages of the persecution, but it is the blood of Martyrs that disprove such an overlook of the true history of the Church. Which no one can deny.
The Jews excommunicated the Christians from their synagogues. I don’t find a history where the Church ever **needed **to define Christianity from Judaism.Seeing a need to separate and define Christianity from Judaism.
I know of no history when “Christianity was to be it’s own religion” or if Christianity ever “needed it’s own book”. You may displaying an opinion that probably lacks the full picture of Church recorded history.If Christianity was to be it’s own religion, it needed it’s own good book.
It sounds like you are forcing a 19th century mindset into antiquity of the Church that does not exist.
Here’s the just of this subject. By the second century, The Church already possessed the letters from the Apostles and the four gospels, along with the Jewish bible books (Old Testament), by the way; the OT books were not yet canonized by the Church or by the Jews.Another reason the church took time to “canonize” the books is because during the first few centuries, everyone thought the end was near as per Jesus’ (and Paul’s?) words. The end was coming in their lifetime! Who needed any books?!
These books were already practiced in the Catholic Liturgy, it was Church apostolic Tradition which one the day in keeping Jesus revelations and the apostolic faith practices unchanged. You may be surprised that; it was not the bible alone which kept the apostolic faith fully intact, because the New Testament nor the Old Testament books were never canonized yet.
The Letters of the apostles and the gospels were read at every liturgy practiced in hiding for the first 400 years. While the apostles lived, the gospels were given orally, and when ever an apostle was not present, the Letters were read and the apostolic faith practices were well underway.
Imperial laws, Jewish laws and Eastern Kingdoms such as those where the Nestorians tried to take root, as one example. The Catholic Churches and their bishops were persecuted under imperial laws and violent acts were wrought against them from the locals.What Empire-wide laws are you talking about?
Christians were free to worship their God and follow their religion for a lot of the first four centuries.
How do you account for the Martyred blood of the first 34 bishops just from Rome?There was that ten-year period when Diocletian instigated the law in 303 that required Christians to give up their books and the demolition of the churches and imprisonment of the high ranking christian officials…that was bad.
This was one of the law on the books, to which Roman authorities at any time could exercise at the local levels, through out the Roman Empire. We have blood of Martyrs who give witness to these times, who refused to worship the pagan deities.And Trajan had that two year period from 249-251 where every Roman citizen had to perform a sacrifice to the Roman Gods or they would be executed (so this wasn’t a law against Christianity per se, it was a law to ensure everyone also worshipped the Roman Gods as well as any other they chose).
Are you aware of the Roman law against consuming the Eucharist?
Constantine was not the first Emperor to lift a ban against Christians.But other than that…christianity wasn’t “illegal”. The local governors dealt with any “problems” regarding Christians locally, sporadically, and occasionally over those first several centuries until Constantine came on the scene.
cont;