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ParkerD
Guest
NewSeeker,…In your opinion, which Greek philosophies were the culprit? Which Greek writings were used by Christians during the 1st Century and who did the corrupting? In an earlier post, you mentioned doctrines that crept into the Church asserting that matter was evil and only spirit was pure. … which Greek philosophies corrupted the Church in the 1st Century, creating an obviously very Catholic Church in both Rome and Antioch by the end of the 1st Century?
Sorry for the long post. I am looking forward to your answer.
NS
First, just because Aristotle’s writings weren’t available to be studied or found later, doesn’t mean his teachings hadn’t had influence on Greek thought from the time he taught them. To read the entire books of Acts, Thessalonians, and Corinthians is to read repeated examples and warnings about Greek philosophy and Greek thinking about their gods as well as about the body. Paul’s words that the body is a temple is an example of his teaching to counter the Greek philosophy that converts evidently struggled to leave behind them. Further, Paul certainly didn’t show an acceptance of the philosophy that had been taught by Aristotle about the “First Cause”. Rather, he showed an awareness and an understanding of a personal God, of the relationship God had with Adam and Eve, and of the mission of Christ as Redeemer which was planned from the foundation of the world, meaning before the creation of this earth.
It was not just Greek philosophy that had a part in the apostasy–it was also the very strong influence of the Pharisees converts. Both of these groups relied strongly on reasoning rather than on what Paul described in 1 Corinthians 2 and 3.
I would say a student studying this topic ought to read Acts and Paul’s epistles to the Thessalonians and the Corinthians at least three times for all of those Biblical writings, and look for Paul’s messages about Greek philosophy as part of the sub-text as well as direct references.
Again, when it comes down to the final “what does it mean to me?”, a person can choose their religion based on “reason”, and that will be exactly what they wanted for themselves, so have at it.
Hebrews 11 shows a very different approach to divine religion, with a very different result. “We seek a city whose builder and maker is God.”