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thephilosopher6
Guest
Are you saying Christians believe matter is evil? Um… yeah I think you got the Gnostics, particularly the Docetism, mixed up with Christianity. LOL!“The early Apostles took the gospel into a Greco-Roman world that espoused Neoplatonism—a philosophy derived from Plato’s teachings on idealism. One idea that came down from Plato was that matter is essentially evil. (James L. Barker, Apostasy from the Divine Church, Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1960, pp. 229–35.)”
Well, not necessarily. Paul certainly warns us against false Philosophies (Colossians 2:8) but the apostle were never against the use of Philosophy. Indeed, Paul uses Philosophy to convince the Athenians that they worship God.“As long as Apostles led the Church, they opposed the philosophies of the day. Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians is an example of this. Apparently, some who held to the belief that matter was evil were baptized but had difficulty accepting the physical resurrection of Jesus. They reasoned that since Jesus was perfectly good, he could not have a material body. In his letter, Paul addressed the Greek belief in the body’s corruptibility by bearing testimony that a resurrected body, like Christ’s, is incorruptible. (1 Cor. 15:3–8, 12–20, 35–42.)”
*“For as I walked around and looked carefully at your objects of worship, I even found an altar with this inscription: to an unknown god. So you are ignorant of the very thing you worship–and this is what I am going to proclaim to you.” - Acts 17:23
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Furthermore, Paul quotes Greek Philosophers and Poets including in the chapter I just quoted. (Acts 17:28, 1 Corinthians 15:33, Titus 1:12) The Gospel of John also uses Greek Philosophy to explain Jesus. The Concept of the Logos (λόγος) (the Word) is a Greek concept that stretches as far back at Heraclitus and was found as a central Philosophy in the Stoic view of God, and even Philo of Alexandria, a Hellenized Jew, believed the Logos was a being that connect God to the material world. John uses the Greek concept of the Logos to better explain Jesus.
Well, Polycarp, one of the apostolic Fathers, lived well into the middle of the second century, he was martyred in 155 A.D. Ignatius of Antioch also lived to about 110 A.D.“Likewise the Apostle John asserted in his gospel and epistles that Jesus was a divine being of flesh in mortality to counteract the heresy that he was not or could not have been flesh because matter was evil. (John 1:14; 1 Jn. 1:1–3; 1 Jn. 4:3.)”
Indeed, that is one of the reasons John was written.
“The dilemma of the church after the first century was how to sustain a unified church without a body of general authorities. By the early second century, the church had gone through three major persecutions by the Roman emperors Nero (A.D. 54–68), Domitian (A.D. 81–96), and Trajan (A.D. 98–117), and apostasy and heresy were rampant. The Apostles were gone—all martyred except for John—and church leaders who had known the Apostles but did not have their apostolic keys, like Papias, Clement of Rome, and Polycarp, were dead.”
They used Greek Philosophy to help better explain Christianity, even the apostles did as I have shown in a former paragraph. They were not trying to make Christianity “compatible”, but rather were trying to better explain Christianity to better evangelize. Furthermore, they used it to battle heretics, notably the Gnostics. There really is nothing wrong with the use of Philosophy. After all, it is the love of wisdom.“The defenders of the church in the late second and third century were Christian apologists and scholars, many of whom were trained in Greek philosophy and in rhetoric and logic.”
“They brought the classical culture of Greece into the church for two reasons: first, to rhetorically and logically “prove” the Christian gospel to a world steeped in Greek culture; second, to make Christianity intellectually respectable. Their efforts were an understandable human reaction to counteract the persecution that the church had suffered for two centuries. But it made the church compatible with the very culture the church had once disdained.”