T
Tannhauser_1509
Guest
I’d like everyone’s thoughts on this article from Ensign Magazine, an LDS publication, talking about Polycarp, Clement of Rome, and Ignatius of Antioch. A particularly interesting quote comes from the second paragraph:
Anyone arguing for Christian continuity has little evidence from the decades after the second century began, even though by the end of that century …] a rich literature pours from Christian apologists, administrators, scholars, and historians. Doctrine during this time was chaotic, and would not stabilize until the Council of Nicea in A.D. 325 crystallized Christian orthodoxy with the arm of secular tyranny. The pre-Nicene church visibly shows the shock of losing apostolic leadership; the earlier the writing, the deeper that shock.
P.S. Please don’t post a reply unless you’ve actually read the article, at least most of it.
Anyone arguing for Christian continuity has little evidence from the decades after the second century began, even though by the end of that century …] a rich literature pours from Christian apologists, administrators, scholars, and historians. Doctrine during this time was chaotic, and would not stabilize until the Council of Nicea in A.D. 325 crystallized Christian orthodoxy with the arm of secular tyranny. The pre-Nicene church visibly shows the shock of losing apostolic leadership; the earlier the writing, the deeper that shock.
P.S. Please don’t post a reply unless you’ve actually read the article, at least most of it.