Since things are slow, I thought I would post a couple of things on an earlier argument that Christine and I were having, about the very early Church:
ENCYCLOP’DIA BRITANNICA Ignatius Of Antioch, Saint d. c. 110,, Rome also called IGNATIUS THEOPHOROS (GREEK: "GOD BEARER"), bishop of Antioch, Syria, known mainly from seven highly regarded letters that he wrote during a trip to Rome, as a prisoner condemned to be executed for his beliefs. He was apparently eager to counteract the teachings of two groups--the Judaizers, who did not accept the authority of the New Testament, and the Docetists, who held that Christ's sufferings and death were apparent but not real. The letters have often been cited as a source of knowledge of the Christian church at the beginning of the 2nd century. Record of his life.
Although St. Ignatius, bishop of Antioch, was an influential church leader and theologian, he is known almost entirely from his own writings. There is no record of his life prior to his arrest, but his letters reveal his personality and his impact on the Christianity of his time. Ignatius represented the Christian religion in transition from its Jewish origins to its assimilation in the Greco-Roman world. He laid the foundation for dogmas that would be formulated in succeeding generations. His advocacy of a hierarchical structure of the church with emphasis on episcopal authority, his insistence on the real humanity of Christ, and his ardent desire for martyrdom are subjects that have generated much discussion.
Eusebius of Caesarea, whose Ecclesiastical History is the chief primary source for the history of the church up to 324, reported that Ignatius' arrest and his condemnation to the wild beasts in the Roman arena occurred during the reign of the Roman emperor Trajan (98-117). Eusebius, on unknown grounds, dates the event to 107 or 108. Ignatius' letters contain the only reliable information about him, but only one of them--that to the church in Rome--is dated (August 24), and even then no year is given.
Ignatius, surnamed Theophoros, was bishop of Antioch at the time of his arrest. Whether he was a native of the city is uncertain; his Greek prose, however, does have an Oriental flavour characteristic of that part of the Hellenistic world. His thought is strongly influenced by the letters of St. Paul and also by the tradition connected with the apostle John. It is possible that he knew John personally.
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