·         worship?”  Constantine 
                        ordered the Donatist churches to be confiscated  and their 
                        leaders banished.  
                        Constantines efforts were to no avail and he 
                        revoked his order.  
                        The Donatists survived for 300 more 
                        years
                         
                        312  
                        Arius
                        ·         The 
                        bishop of Alexandria put him in charge of one of the big 
                        churches in the city, Baucalis
                        ·         As 
                        a pastor he found success and gained a large following 
                        with his teaching and ascetic life
                        ·         Arius 
                        published  
                        “Thalia” where he established the unity and 
                        simplicity of the eternal God and the superiority of the 
                        Son over other created beings.  The Son being 
                        created by God before time began.
                        ·         The 
                        new bishop of Alexandria, Alexander, had began to teach 
                        what Arius thought was blasphemy.  Alexander taught 
                        “as God is eternal, so is the Son – when the Father, the 
                        Son, - the Son is present in God without birth, 
                        ever-begotten, an 
                        unbegotten-begotten.”
                        ·         Eusebius 
                        of Bicomedia and Eusebius of Caesarea defended 
                        Arius
                        ·         Bishop 
                        Alexander excommunicated him.
                        ·         Emperor 
                        Constantine arrived in the East in 324 and attempted 
                        himself to settle this “trifling and foolish verbal 
                        difference, the meaning of which would be grasped only 
                        by the few.”
                         
                        325  Council of 
                        Nicea
                        ·         Emperor 
                        Constantine ordered this church 
                        council
                        ·         It 
                        was the second church council
                        ·         Nicea 
                        is modern Iznik, Turkey, a little town near the Bosporus 
                        Straits which flows between the Black Sea and the 
                        Mediterranean Sea.
                        ·         July 
                        4, 325 about 300 bishops and deacons from the Eastern 
                        half of the empire
                        ·         Constantine 
                        arrived in his imperial clothing overlaid with jewels 
                        but without his customary train of 
                        soldiers.
                        ·         Constantine 
                        spoke only briefly saying that “Division in the church 
                        is worse than war.”
                        ·         At 
                        stake was the most profound church question yet, “Who is 
                        Jesus Christ?”
                        ·         It 
                        was a new day for the church.  Many of the 
                        bishops and deacons had scars from previous persecution 
                        from the emperors.  
                        A pastor from Egypt was missing an eye.  One was crippled 
                        in both hands as a result of red-hot 
                        irons.
                        ·         Most 
                        of the bishops were impressed with Constantine and were 
                        willing to compromise.
                        ·         A 
                        young deacon from Alexandria, Athanasius, was not 
                        willing to compromise.  Athanasius 
                        insisted that Arius’s doctrine left Christianity without 
                        a divine Savior.
                        ·         Also 
                        present was the church historian, friend of the emperor, 
                        and half-hearted supporter of Arius, Eusebius.  Eusebius put 
                        forward his own creed for council 
                        approval.
                        ·         The 
                        council wanted something more specific and added, “True 
                        God of true God, begotten not made, of one substance 
                        with the Father. . .”
                        ·         The 
                        expression “one substance” was the “homo 
                        ousion.”
                        ·         After 
                        long debate only two bishops did not agree with “in one 
                        Lord Jesus Christ, . . .true God of true 
                        God.”
                        ·         Constantine 
                        was pleased thinking the issue was 
                        settled.
                        ·         For 
                        the next 100 years the two views of Christ, the Nicene 
                        (Athanasius’) view and the Arian (Arius’) view battled 
                        for supremacy.
                        ·         Church 
                        people were banished, exiled and killed as power shifted 
                        as the emperor’s and church leadership 
                        switched.
                        ·         The 
                        Council of Nicea laid the cornerstone for the orthodox 
                        understanding of Jesus Christ
                        ·         The 
                        next council at Chalcedon would develop it 
                        further.
                         
                        
                        ·         worship?”  Constantine 
                        ordered the Donatist churches to be confiscated  and their 
                        leaders banished.  
                        Constantines efforts were to no avail and he 
                        revoked his order.  
                        The Donatists survived for 300 more 
                        years
                         
                        312  
                        Arius
                        ·         The 
                        bishop of Alexandria put him in charge of one of the big 
                        churches in the city, Baucalis
                        ·         As 
                        a pastor he found success and gained a large following 
                        with his teaching and ascetic life
                        ·         Arius 
                        published  
                        “Thalia” where he established the unity and 
                        simplicity of the eternal God and the superiority of the 
                        Son over other created beings.  The Son being 
                        created by God before time began.
                        ·         The 
                        new bishop of Alexandria, Alexander, had began to teach 
                        what Arius thought was blasphemy.  Alexander taught 
                        “as God is eternal, so is the Son – when the Father, the 
                        Son, - the Son is present in God without birth, 
                        ever-begotten, an 
                        unbegotten-begotten.”
                        ·         Eusebius 
                        of Bicomedia and Eusebius of Caesarea defended 
                        Arius
                        ·         Bishop 
                        Alexander excommunicated him.
                        ·         Emperor 
                        Constantine arrived in the East in 324 and attempted 
                        himself to settle this “trifling and foolish verbal 
                        difference, the meaning of which would be grasped only 
                        by the few.”
                         
                        325  Council of 
                        Nicea
                        ·         Emperor 
                        Constantine ordered this church 
                        council
                        ·         It 
                        was the second church council
                        ·         Nicea 
                        is modern Iznik, Turkey, a little town near the Bosporus 
                        Straits which flows between the Black Sea and the 
                        Mediterranean Sea.
                        ·         July 
                        4, 325 about 300 bishops and deacons from the Eastern 
                        half of the empire
                        ·         Constantine 
                        arrived in his imperial clothing overlaid with jewels 
                        but without his customary train of 
                        soldiers.
                        ·         Constantine 
                        spoke only briefly saying that “Division in the church 
                        is worse than war.”
                        ·         At 
                        stake was the most profound church question yet, “Who is 
                        Jesus Christ?”
                        ·         It 
                        was a new day for the church.  Many of the 
                        bishops and deacons had scars from previous persecution 
                        from the emperors.  
                        A pastor from Egypt was missing an eye.  One was crippled 
                        in both hands as a result of red-hot 
                        irons.
                        ·         Most 
                        of the bishops were impressed with Constantine and were 
                        willing to compromise.
                        ·         A 
                        young deacon from Alexandria, Athanasius, was not 
                        willing to compromise.  Athanasius 
                        insisted that Arius’s doctrine left Christianity without 
                        a divine Savior.
                        ·         Also 
                        present was the church historian, friend of the emperor, 
                        and half-hearted supporter of Arius, Eusebius.  Eusebius put 
                        forward his own creed for council 
                        approval.
                        ·         The 
                        council wanted something more specific and added, “True 
                        God of true God, begotten not made, of one substance 
                        with the Father. . .”
                        ·         The 
                        expression “one substance” was the “homo 
                        ousion.”
                        ·         After 
                        long debate only two bishops did not agree with “in one 
                        Lord Jesus Christ, . . .true God of true 
                        God.”
                        ·         Constantine 
                        was pleased thinking the issue was 
                        settled.
                        ·         For 
                        the next 100 years the two views of Christ, the Nicene 
                        (Athanasius’) view and the Arian (Arius’) view battled 
                        for supremacy.
                        ·         Church 
                        people were banished, exiled and killed as power shifted 
                        as the emperor’s and church leadership 
                        switched.
                        ·         The 
                        Council of Nicea laid the cornerstone for the orthodox 
                        understanding of Jesus Christ
                        ·         The 
                        next council at Chalcedon would develop it 
                        further.