sunilgill_87
Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2004
- Messages
- 318
Christianity has been under increasing assault from those who believe it to be a source of oppression, ignorance, prejudice and superstition. But the facts show that Christianity has had the most beneficial influence on humanity of any religion or philosophy in history!
Some 2,000 years ago, in a backwater of the vast Roman Empire, Jesus Christ came into this world. He was born in obscurity; during His lifetime we know of no ancient historian outside of the Bible who recorded His birth.
Surely at that time no mere human prognosticator could have predicted that His life and the instruction He passed on to His followers would affect the world as much as it has. The ripple effect of His work was destined to change history more than that of any other individual ever.
Jesus set an example and preached a way of life that drastically clashed with many basic values of the world that then was. Many of the fundamentals of Jesus' way were considered radical by the religious leaders of His day; some of Christ's teachings surprised even His disciples.
A world in which slavery was common
Jesus' first disciples were all Jewish, but the culture into which He came was heavily influenced by the Greek and Roman cultures. The Greek kingdoms that succeeded the Hellenistic Empire of Alexander the Great were absorbed into the Roman Empire, and the Romans retained many elements of Hellenistic culture.
The Greek language, for example, remained the means of international communication throughout most of the known world for centuries to come. The New Testament was originally written in Greek.
The Greco-Roman culture of that time lacked many of the traits of propriety and decency we take for granted today. For example, the Greek philosophers Aristotle and Plato held that most human beings are slavish by nature and suitable only for slavery.
Author Dinesh D'Souza describes the attitudes of Greek philosophers toward the common man: "Homer ignored them in his epics, concentrating entirely on life among the ruling class. Lesser men appeared, if at all, as servants. Aristotle too had a job for low men: slavery" (What's So Great About Christianity, 2007, p. 56).
A similar attitude carried over into Roman culture. "There were 60,000,000 slaves in the Roman Empire, everyone of whom was considered in law to be, not a person, but a thing, with no rights whatever" (William Barclay, The Daily Study Bible Series, 1976, Vol. 14, p. 208).
Jesus had no such bias against the downtrodden and the lowly. "His first disciples were fishermen and artisans. He moved in the everyday milieu of the humble folk. He talked with publicans and fallen women, the poor and the sick and children" (D'Souza, p. 56). This is illustrated in Mark 2:16, where the scribes and Pharisees noted with disdain that Jesus would eat with "tax collectors and sinners."
Jesus' disciples eventually accepted the fact that within their spiritual community (the Church) all members were equal before God. The apostle Paul wrote, "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28; compare Colossians 3:10-11).
Christ's teaching: All are equal before God
The Christian view on equality of freemen and slaves was radical to outsiders. It probably caused some awkward situations in Christian congregations. "It was quite possible in the early days that the slave should be the [leader] of the congregation and the master a member of it. This was a new and revolutionary situation" (Barclay, p. 212).
The appointment of any slave as leader of a congregation could have resulted in temptation on his part to behave rebelliously toward his master, and the master might have been tempted to retaliate. Perhaps this is why the apostle Paul addressed the dynamics between converted slaves and masters:
"Servants, do what is ordered by those who are your natural masters, having respect and fear for them, with all your heart, as to Christ . . . In the knowledge that for every good thing anyone does, he will have his reward from the Lord, if he is a servant or if he is free. And, you masters, do the same things to them, not making use of violent words: in the knowledge that their Master and yours is in heaven, and he has no respect for a man's position" (Ephesians 6:5-9, Bible in Basic English).
But if all men were equal before God in the Church, why didn't the early Christians try to have slavery abolished?
The fledgling Church knew they were not sent to force revolutionary change on others (Jesus said, "My kingdom is not of this world" in John 18:36), but to preach the good news of a new government to come at Christ's return.
Slavery was deeply entrenched in the culture, and Christ's little flock could not have changed it anyway. Recall that in the century before Christianity's beginning, a man named Spartacus led a slave revolt. The result of this was a brutal crushing of the movement and the crucifying of 6,000 slaves. Reform here would have to wait.
But didn't Christianity eventually take over the Roman Empire? Yes, but in many respects this was not the Christianity Jesus taught. Nevertheless a number of Christ's true teachings were advanced through this religion because of its use of the Bible—resulting in positive developments in society. Indeed, when efforts were begun to abolish slavery in the Western world, what was behind the movement? Convictions based on Christianity.
"Christians were the first group in history to start an anti-slavery movement . . . In England, William Wilberforce spearheaded a campaign that began with almost no support and was driven entirely by his Christian convictions . . . Eventually Wilberforce triumphed, and in 1833 slavery was outlawed in Britain. Pressed by religious groups at home, England then took the lead in repressing the slave trade abroad" (D'Souza, p. 71). Of course, Wilberforce was helped in his efforts by the spread and acceptance of Christian teachings on how to treat others.
Many other elements in our modern culture, when compared with that of the Greco-Roman era, show vast improvements in the way the common man is treated. This transformation is paying enormous dividends.
"The Christian priority of extending respect to ordinary persons . . . can also be seen in the emergence in the West of new political institutions. These political institutions existed nowhere else in the world, and they did not exist in ancient Greece or Rome. Something changed within the West to give rise to them. That something is Christianity" (p. 60).
Some 2,000 years ago, in a backwater of the vast Roman Empire, Jesus Christ came into this world. He was born in obscurity; during His lifetime we know of no ancient historian outside of the Bible who recorded His birth.
Surely at that time no mere human prognosticator could have predicted that His life and the instruction He passed on to His followers would affect the world as much as it has. The ripple effect of His work was destined to change history more than that of any other individual ever.
Jesus set an example and preached a way of life that drastically clashed with many basic values of the world that then was. Many of the fundamentals of Jesus' way were considered radical by the religious leaders of His day; some of Christ's teachings surprised even His disciples.
A world in which slavery was common
Jesus' first disciples were all Jewish, but the culture into which He came was heavily influenced by the Greek and Roman cultures. The Greek kingdoms that succeeded the Hellenistic Empire of Alexander the Great were absorbed into the Roman Empire, and the Romans retained many elements of Hellenistic culture.
The Greek language, for example, remained the means of international communication throughout most of the known world for centuries to come. The New Testament was originally written in Greek.
The Greco-Roman culture of that time lacked many of the traits of propriety and decency we take for granted today. For example, the Greek philosophers Aristotle and Plato held that most human beings are slavish by nature and suitable only for slavery.
Author Dinesh D'Souza describes the attitudes of Greek philosophers toward the common man: "Homer ignored them in his epics, concentrating entirely on life among the ruling class. Lesser men appeared, if at all, as servants. Aristotle too had a job for low men: slavery" (What's So Great About Christianity, 2007, p. 56).
A similar attitude carried over into Roman culture. "There were 60,000,000 slaves in the Roman Empire, everyone of whom was considered in law to be, not a person, but a thing, with no rights whatever" (William Barclay, The Daily Study Bible Series, 1976, Vol. 14, p. 208).
Jesus had no such bias against the downtrodden and the lowly. "His first disciples were fishermen and artisans. He moved in the everyday milieu of the humble folk. He talked with publicans and fallen women, the poor and the sick and children" (D'Souza, p. 56). This is illustrated in Mark 2:16, where the scribes and Pharisees noted with disdain that Jesus would eat with "tax collectors and sinners."
Jesus' disciples eventually accepted the fact that within their spiritual community (the Church) all members were equal before God. The apostle Paul wrote, "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28; compare Colossians 3:10-11).
Christ's teaching: All are equal before God
The Christian view on equality of freemen and slaves was radical to outsiders. It probably caused some awkward situations in Christian congregations. "It was quite possible in the early days that the slave should be the [leader] of the congregation and the master a member of it. This was a new and revolutionary situation" (Barclay, p. 212).
The appointment of any slave as leader of a congregation could have resulted in temptation on his part to behave rebelliously toward his master, and the master might have been tempted to retaliate. Perhaps this is why the apostle Paul addressed the dynamics between converted slaves and masters:
"Servants, do what is ordered by those who are your natural masters, having respect and fear for them, with all your heart, as to Christ . . . In the knowledge that for every good thing anyone does, he will have his reward from the Lord, if he is a servant or if he is free. And, you masters, do the same things to them, not making use of violent words: in the knowledge that their Master and yours is in heaven, and he has no respect for a man's position" (Ephesians 6:5-9, Bible in Basic English).
But if all men were equal before God in the Church, why didn't the early Christians try to have slavery abolished?
The fledgling Church knew they were not sent to force revolutionary change on others (Jesus said, "My kingdom is not of this world" in John 18:36), but to preach the good news of a new government to come at Christ's return.
Slavery was deeply entrenched in the culture, and Christ's little flock could not have changed it anyway. Recall that in the century before Christianity's beginning, a man named Spartacus led a slave revolt. The result of this was a brutal crushing of the movement and the crucifying of 6,000 slaves. Reform here would have to wait.
But didn't Christianity eventually take over the Roman Empire? Yes, but in many respects this was not the Christianity Jesus taught. Nevertheless a number of Christ's true teachings were advanced through this religion because of its use of the Bible—resulting in positive developments in society. Indeed, when efforts were begun to abolish slavery in the Western world, what was behind the movement? Convictions based on Christianity.
"Christians were the first group in history to start an anti-slavery movement . . . In England, William Wilberforce spearheaded a campaign that began with almost no support and was driven entirely by his Christian convictions . . . Eventually Wilberforce triumphed, and in 1833 slavery was outlawed in Britain. Pressed by religious groups at home, England then took the lead in repressing the slave trade abroad" (D'Souza, p. 71). Of course, Wilberforce was helped in his efforts by the spread and acceptance of Christian teachings on how to treat others.
Many other elements in our modern culture, when compared with that of the Greco-Roman era, show vast improvements in the way the common man is treated. This transformation is paying enormous dividends.
"The Christian priority of extending respect to ordinary persons . . . can also be seen in the emergence in the West of new political institutions. These political institutions existed nowhere else in the world, and they did not exist in ancient Greece or Rome. Something changed within the West to give rise to them. That something is Christianity" (p. 60).