<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>LESSON LII</h2>
<h3>RETROSPECT: THE FIRST CHRISTIAN CENTURY</h3>
<p>The apostolic example can be applied intelligently to the problems
of our time only if there be some understanding of the intervening
centuries. We are connected with the apostolic Church by an
unbroken succession. A study of Church history would help us to
apply the New Testament teaching to our own age.</p>
<p>The Christian writings which have been preserved from the
early part of the second century show a marked decline from the
spiritual level of the apostles. Evidently the special inspiration
which had made the New Testament a guide for all ages had been
withdrawn. Yet the Spirit of God continued to lead the Church.
Even in the darkest periods of Church history God did not forget
his people.</p>
<p>Only scanty Christian writings have been preserved from the
first three-quarters of the second century; the extant works of the
so-called "Apostolic Fathers" and of the "Apologists" are of limited
extent. About the close of the century, however, the record becomes
more complete. Clement of Alexandria, Irenæus of Asia
Minor and Gaul, and Tertullian of North Africa, give a varied
picture of the Christian life of the time. The Church had gained
rapidly in influence since the conclusion of the apostolic age; persecutions
had not succeeded in checking her advance. Finally,
under Constantine, in the first part of the fourth century,
Christianity became the favored religion of the Roman Empire.</p>
<p>About the same time, in A.D. 325, the first ecumenical council,
at Nicæa, undertook the work of formulating the belief of the
Church. The creeds which were adopted at the great ancient
councils are accepted to-day in all parts of Christendom. During
the same general period, the power of the bishop of Rome was
gradually increased until it culminated in the papacy.</p>
<p>After the conquest of the western part of the Roman Empire in
the fifth century, Christianity was accepted by the barbarian conquerors,
and during the dark ages that followed the Church
preserved the light of learning and piety until a better day should
dawn. During the middle ages, though there was for the most<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>
part little originality in Christian thinking, great scholars and
theologians formed striking exceptions to the general condition.
The political power of the papacy became enormous, but was
hindered by the personal weakness and immorality of many of
the popes. The degraded moral and spiritual condition of the
Church was counteracted here and there by the establishment of
monastic orders, whose purpose at the beginning was good, by the
writings of certain mystics, and by the work of the three "pre-reformers,"
Wyclif in England, Huss in Bohemia and Savonarola
in Italy.</p>
<p>A genuine advance, however, did not come until the Reformation
of the fifteenth century, when Luther in Germany and Zwingli in
Switzerland, almost at the same time and at first independently,
became the leaders in a mighty protest. A little later Calvin
carried out the principles of the Reformation in a comprehensive
theological system, and by the power of his intellect and the
fervency of his piety exerted an enormous influence throughout the
world. The Reformation was distinctly a religious movement,
though it had been prepared for by that revival of learning which
is called the Renaissance. The work of Luther was a rediscovery
of Paul. Not the performance of a set of external acts prescribed
by the Church, but, as Paul taught, the grace of God received by
faith alone, is, according to Luther, the means of salvation.</p>
<p>The Reformation brought about a counter-reformation in the
Roman Catholic Church, and the western European world was
finally divided between the two great branches of Christendom.
After a period of controversy and wars between Protestants and
Catholics, the Church was called upon to fight a great battle
against unbelief. That battle, begun in its modern form about the
middle of the eighteenth century, continues unabated until the
present day. We are living in a time of intellectual changes. To
maintain the truth of the gospel at such a time and to present it
faithfully and intelligently to the modern world is the supreme task of
the Church. The task to some extent has been accomplished; and
the missionary movement of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
attests the vitality of the ancient faith. God has not deserted
his Church. There are enemies without and within, compromise
will surely bring disaster; but the gospel of Christ has not lost its
power. This is not the first time of discouragement in the history
of the Church. The darkest hour has always been followed by
the dawn. Who can tell what God has now in store?</p>
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