The Rise of Christianity
Explained
Christianity either is of divine origin, or it is not. If it is not of divine
origin, then it is of human origin. If it is of human origin, then it is a
false religion, because it claims to be of sacred design. On the other hand,
if Christianity is of God, as it claims, there ought to be compelling evidence
to buttress that affirmation.
In this lesson, I would like
for us to focus on several factors which argue for the sacred origin of the
religious system founded by Jesus Christ.
Factors Involved in the
Rise of Christianity
There are a number of traits
that characterized primitive Christianity that demand an explanation if one is
to identify its originating force. Let us consider some of these.
Christianity: A New
Religion
The Christian movement was not a religious system that gradually evolved out
of the cultural elements of society. It had a dramatic point of beginning.
There are no traces of its roots in either Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, Greece or
Rome. Prior to the spring of A.D. 30, Christianity did not exist. It had been
in a state of preparation for the more than three years that spanned the
ministries of John the Baptizer and Jesus of Nazareth. As a matter of
fact, even though the Mosaic system was designed to prepare the way for the
coming of Christianity (Gal.
3:24-25), the religion of Jesus was so strikingly different from the
Jewish, that it aroused the hostility of many Jews for the first forty years
of its existence, until A.D. 70. From the time of its beginning,
however, Christianity was a significant religious force, not only in the
Mediterranean world, but also in remote corners of the Roman empire.
Seemingly, it came from nowhere; and yet, very soon was everywhere. How did
that happen?
A fundamental logical principle
proclaims: Every effect must have an adequate cause. What is the cause
behind the origin of the Christian religion? There must be some reasonable
explanation for the abrupt genesis of this movement. If no satisfactory answer
can be found in naturalism, one must look to a supernatural cause as an
explanation.
A Religious Explosion
For some reason the religion of Christ exploded in the first century. Jesus
had only a handful of men (the apostles). From this tiny group came the
Christian movement. On the day of its birth the community of believers
consisted of at least of 3,000 persons (Acts
2:41). If the numeral 3,000 constituted only those immersed that
day, and not those disciples previously baptized by John the Baptist (Matthew.
3:5-6) and the Lord's disciples (John
4:1-2), the total was
significantly larger. Not long after, the number of saints was computed at
5,000 adult men (Acts
4:4), not to mention the thousands of women who were added to the
church.
It has been estimated that by
the time Stephen was martyred (Acts
7:60), the Jerusalem church consisted of no fewer than 20,000
souls. This represented more than one-third of the estimated 55,000 citizens
in Jerusalem at that
time. Beyond that, the gospel rapidly spread from Palestine into Africa
(Acts 8), Syria (Acts
9), Asia Minor (Acts
13ff), and finally into Europe (Acts
16ff). Paul, whose missionary journeys equaled about 12,000
miles, evangelized from
Jerusalem to Rome.
Clement of Rome (c. A.D. 95)
says that Paul reached "the boundary of the west" (1 Clement 5), which could
be an allusion to Spain. Both Irenaeus and Tertullian confirm the presence of
Christians in Spain in the 2nd century A.D.
Christianity swept over the Roman empire like a tidal wave. The New Testament
pays tribute to this phenomenal growth. The Christians were charged with
having "turned the world upside down" (Acts
17:6). Their "sound
went out into all the earth" (Romans
10:18); and was "bearing fruit" everywhere (Colossians.
1:6).
Historian Will Durant argued
that by A.D. 300, a quarter of the eastern Roman empire was Christian, and
about one twentieth of the western. .It has noted that studies of the
catacombs beneath the city of Rome (about 600 miles of galleries) contain
somewhere between 1,750,000 and 4,000,000 "Christian" graves. It is estimated
that in the middle Empire at least twenty percent of Rome's population was
made up of Christians, and at times the percentage was greater even. The
catacombs represent ten generations of believers. This would suggest that the
city of Rome itself
had somewhere between 175,000 to 400,000 Christians, for each of the ten
generations represented!
The testimony of Tertullian is
most dramatic: "Men proclaim that the state is beset with us. Every age,
condition, and rank is coming over to us. We are only of yesterday, but
already we fill the world" We need to remember that this growth was
achieved under the most adverse circumstances. Again, the question cries out
for an answer: What was the
cause for this amazing growth? What natural circumstances can account for
this?
We must also remember that the
initial impact of the gospel was among the Jews. Many thousands of Jews
converted to Christianity. And it is an indisputable historical fact that the
Jews were strict monotheists. To them, there was but one deity. And yet,
without controversy is the fact that Jesus made the claim of being divine (cf.
John 5:18;
8:58;
10:30).
Surely only the strongest sort of evidence would persuade a Jewish mind to
acknowledge the humble Nazarene as "God" (cf.
John 20:28).
An Unlikely Place of
Origin
Consider the place from which Christianity took its rise. The movement was
established in the city of Jerusalem in that rather obscure country called
"Palestine". Palestine hardly merited any attention in the first century.
This tiny land was only about 150 miles from north to south. From Jaffa to
Jericho, west to east, it is only about 45 miles in width. The land
encompassed about 10,000 square miles, smaller than the state of
Massachusetts.
In 63 B.C. the Roman commander
Pompey conquered Jerusalem and the Jews came under the rule of Rome. The Jews
of the first century were a dangerous people. In A.D. 49/50, Claudius Caesar
expelled 20,000 of them from Rome (cf.
Acts 18:2).
The Jews had the disillusioned expectation of a "political messiah" who would
overthrow the iron fist of Rome (cf.
John 6:15) and
reestablish an "Israel" reminiscent of David's era. Bands of Hebrew cutthroats
(called
sicarii, Lat. "daggermen") roamed the land looking for Romans to kill.
Palestine was a dangerous place, ready to ignite at any time. Could any
ordinary man, seeking to establish a purely spiritual regime (cf.
John 18:36),
possibly be successful in this volatile environment?
The point is this: It was a
time of extreme unrest, and Canaan was an unlikely place from which to produce
the world's most influential religion. How did, therefore, such a
powerful force derive from such a humble and troubled background?
An Unlikely Leader
Jesus Christ, viewed as a leader from a purely humanistic vantage point,
possessed none of those traits normally associated with the formation of
armies or empires. He was not physically appealing. "He has no stately form
or majesty that we should look upon Him, nor appearance that we should be
attracted to Him" (Isa.
53:2, NASB). There is not a line about his physical appearance in
the New Testament.
In his famous speech on St.
Helena, Napoleon exclaimed: "I
know men, and I tell you that Jesus Christ is not a man. Superficial minds see
a resemblance between Christ, and the founders of empires and the gods of
other religions. That resemblance does not exist. There is between
Christianity and any other religion the distance of infinity. Alexander,
Caesar, Charlemagne, and myself founded empires. But upon what did we rest the
creations of our genius? Upon force. Jesus Christ alone founded his empire
upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for him".
Jesus had no wealth with which
to launch a significant movement (Luke.
9:58;
2 Corinthians 8:9).
He was reared in one of the most despised communities of his country (see
Matthew 2:23;
John 1:46;
7:52).
Christ had no formal training (John
7:15). Even his own people had little regard for him (John
1:11; 7:5;
6:66).
And yet, somehow, he changed the world forever.
The following tribute is
sometimes credited to Phillip Brooks, who wrote the hymn, "O Little Town Of
Bethlehem." "He
was born in an obscure village, the child of a peasant woman, He grew up in
another village, where He worked in a carpenter shop until He was thirty.
Then for three years He was an itinerant preacher. He never wrote a book. He
never held an office. He never had a family or owned a home. He didn't go to
college. He never visited a big city. He never traveled two hundred miles from
the place where he was born. He did none of the things that usually accompany
greatness. He had no credentials but Himself. He was only thirty-three
when the tide of public opinion turned against Him. His friends ran away. One
of them denied Him. He was turned over to His enemies and went through the
mockery of a trial. He was nailed to a cross between two thieves. While
He was dying, His executioners gambled for His garments, the only property He
had on earth. When He was dead, He was laid in a borrowed grave through the
pity of a friend. Nineteen centuries have come and gone, and today He is the
central figure of the human race. All the armies that ever marched, all
the navies that ever sailed, all the parliaments that ever sat, all the kings
that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the life of man on this
earth as much as that one solitary life"
Christian Intolerance: An
Unpopular Concept
It was common ideology and practice in the Roman world to tolerate, and even
accommodate, varying elements of society. The historian Edward Gibbon observed
that in the world of the Caesars, most different and even hostile
nations embraced, or at least respected, each other's superstitions. The
Christians, however, did not go with the flow. They flexed their spiritual
muscles and would not bow to the pressures of paganism. They taught that the
truth was associated exclusively with Jesus of Nazareth, (Acts
4:11-12). Theirs was a "one Lord, one faith..." system. A line was
drawn in the sand which could not be compromised. The popular religions
of Roman society catered to the basest of human passions. For example,
according to the ancient geographer, Strabo (8.6.20), in Corinth 1,000
priestesses or slave girls of the Temple of Aphrodite were employed in
religious harlotry, which was one of the city's chief sources of
revenue.
But Christianity went against
the grain of society, forbidding all sexual activity except that authorized
within the bounds of monogamous, heterosexual marriage. Paul's first
Corinthian letter emphasizes this repeatedly. How could Christianity challenge
this licentious lifestyle and be so successful? The answer is clear: it
had a power that cannot be explained in human terms!
Christianity: A Dangerous
Proposition
Being a Christian was very dangerous in the Roman world. Christianity had
barely begun when persecution became a bloody reality. The book of Acts
presents a stark picture of the violence which was inflicted upon the new
believers. Peter and John were imprisoned (Acts
4:3; 5:18),
Stephen was stoned (Acts
7:54ff), and James was killed (probably decapitated) with the
sword (Acts 12:2).
Some of the persecution Paul endured is vividly summarized in
2 Corinthians
11:24ff. Tertullian would later say that "the blood of the martyrs
is the seed of the kingdom."
In A.D. 112, Pliny, governor of
Bithynia, sent a letter to the emperor Trajan, inquiring as to how to deal
with Christians.
"I ask them if they are Christians. If they admit it I repeat the question a
second and a third time, threatening capital punishment; if they persist I
sentence them to death" (10.16.3 as cited in Bettenson, p. 7). The
demanding question has to be this: Why would thousands of early Christians
allow themselves to be so abused, stoned, decapitated, sewn into
animal skins and thrown to wild beasts, crucified, burned alive, etc.? Was it
all for a myth? Some religious hunch?
Conclusion
If it is true that every effect must have and adequate cause. What
possible natural explanation is there for the success of the early church? No
theory, grounded strictly in ordinary events, can explain it. What is
reasonable is this: Those early believers had witnessed the miracles that
Jesus and his apostles performed. Carefully examining the evidence,
they knew that no person could work those "signs" unless empowered by God (John
3:1-2). Too, the Lord himself had been raised from the dead, and
observed by many witnesses during that forty-day span between the time of
his resurrection and his ascension back into heaven (Acts
1:1-3;
10:40-41;
1 Corinthians 15:1-8).
It was, therefore, on the basis of these well-established, historical facts
that the Christian movement was born. Its amazing commencement and expansion
was divinely orchestrated!
So what does this mean to us today? It means that we can have confidence in
what the Word of God teaches. It means we can grow even if others consider us
to be a sect or cult like the Jews in the first Century thought of Christianity. It means that it is possible, with committed people to take the
gospel to all creation. It means that even Granby, Missouri, a very unlikely
place by the world's standards, could be a place for a religious stronghold.
It means that you and I, can be leaders of a renewed commitment to Christ,
even if no one else in the world wanted to be. It means that no matter how
unpopular the truth becomes in America or the rest of the world we can
proclaim it and not be ashamed to call ourselves Christians. It means no
matter how dangerous it becomes to be a Christian that you and I
are up to the task. We can be just like those early Christians that faced
severe persecution and death, and faced it with determination to remain true
to our Savior. Do we want there to be a Christian explosion, today, like
there was in the first century? If so we need to be willing to do what the
early church did! We need to be willing to go where they went! We need to be
willing to say what they said! And we need to be willing to face what they
faced! If you and I are willing to do that, we too can be part of something
that will defy any natural explanation, because God will be with
us and with God's help, (Philippians
4:13), we can do anything.
Invitation
If you understand that Jesus is the Son of God, that you have sins that you
must rid yourself of, are willing to confess Christ before this audience and
want to be baptized for the remission of your sins, you can do so and become
a part of God's family this very morning. If you are a Christian who has
strayed away, perhaps you may have forgotten what an awesome family you became
a part of when you were baptized. If you want to re-energize your spiritual
batteries because of some fault of your own and need the prayers of this
congregation we can help you with that as well. Won't you come now, what ever
your need as we stand and as we sing.
Sermon prepared by Pat Cowden.
January 16, 2005
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