2. Branches of Church History. | ||||
The kingdom of Christ, in its principle and aim, is as comprehensive as humanity. It is truly catholic oruniversal, designed and adapted for all nations and ages, for all the powers of the soul, and all classes of society. It breathes into the mind, the heart, andthe will a higher, supernatural life, and consecrates the family, the state,science, literature, art, and commerce to holy ends, till finally God becomesall in all. Even the body, and the whole visible creation, which groans forredemption from its bondage to vanity and for the glorious liberty of the children of God, shall share in this universal transformation; for we look forthe resurrection of the body, and for the new earth, wherein dwellethrighteousness. But we must not identify the kingdom of God with the visiblechurch or churches, which are only its temporary organs and agencies, more orless inadequate, while the kingdom itself is more comprehensive, and will lastfor ever. | ||||
Accordingly, church history has various departments, corresponding to the different branches of secular historyand of natural life. The principal divisions are: | ||||
I. The history of missions, or of the spread of Christianity among unconverted nations, whether barbarous orcivilized. This work must continue, till the fullness of the Gentilesshall come in, and Israel shall be saved. The law of the missionary progress is expressed in the two parables of the grain of mustard-seed which grows into a tree, and of the leaven which graduallypervades the whole lump. The first parable illustrates the outward expansion,the second the all-penetrating and transforming power of Christianity. It isdifficult to convert a nation; it is more difficult to train it to the highstandard of the gospel; it is most difficult to revive and reform a dead orapostate church. | ||||
The foreign mission work has achieved three great conquests: first, the conversion of the elect remnant of the Jews, and of civilized Greeks and Romans, in the first three centuries;then the conversion of the barbarians of Northern and Western Europe, in the middle ages; and last, the combined efforts of various churches and societiesfor the conversion of the savage races in America, Africa, and Australia, andthe semi-civilized nations of Eastern Asia, in our own time. The wholenon-Christian world is now open to missionary labor, except the Islamic,which will likewise become accessible at no distant day. | ||||
The domestic or home mission work embraces the revival of Christian life in corrupt or neglected portions of the church in old countries, the supply of emigrants in new countries with the means of grace, and the labors, among the semi-heathenism populations of largecities. Here we may mention the planting of a purer Christianity among the petrified sects in Bible Lands, the labors of the Gustavus Adolphus Society,and the Inner mission of Germany, the American Home Missionary Societies forthe western states and territories, the City Mission Societies in London, New York, and other fast-growing cities. | ||||
II. The history of PERSECUTION by hostile powers; as by Judaism and Heathenism in the first three centuries, and by Islam inthe middle age. This apparent repression of the church proves a purifyingprocess, brings out the moral heroism of martyrdom, and thus works in the endfor the spread and establishment of Christianity. The blood of martyrs isthe seed of the church. There are cases, however, where systematicand persistent persecution has crushed out the church or reduced it to a mereshadow, as in Palestine, Egypt, and North Africa, under the despotism of the Moslems. | ||||
Persecution, like missions, is both foreign and domestic. Besides being assailed from without by the followers of false religions, the church suffers also from intestine wars and violence. Witness the religious wars in France, Holland, and England, the Thirty Years'War in Germany, all of which grew out of the Protestant Reformation and the Papal Reaction; the crusade against the Albigenses and Waldenses, the horrors of the Spanish Inquisition, the massacre of the Huguenots, the dragonnades of Louis XIV., the crushing out of the Reformation in Bohemia, Belgium, and Southern Europe; but also, on the Protestant side, the persecution of Anabaptists, the burning of Servetus in Geneva the penal laws of the reign of Elizabs against Catholic and Puritan Dissenters, the hanging of witches and Quakers in New England. More Christian blood has been shed by Christians thanby heathens and Mohammedans. | ||||
The persecutions of Christians by Christians form the satanic chapters, the fiendish midnight scenes, in the history of the church. But they show also the gradual progress of the truly Christian spirit of religious toleration and freedom. Persecution exhaustedends in toleration, and toleration is a step to freedom. The blood of patriotsis the price of civil, the blood of martyrs the price of religious liberty. The conquest is dear, the progress slow and often interrupted, but steady andirresistible. The principle of intolerance is now almost universally disownedin the Christian world, except by ultramontane Romanism (which indirectlyreasserts it in the Papal Syllabus of 1864); but a ruling church, allied to the state, under the influence of selfish human nature, and, relying on the arm offlesh rather than the power of truth, is always tempted to impose or retainunjust restrictions on dissenting sects, however innocent and useful they may have proved to be. | ||||
In the United States all Christian denominations and sects are placed on a basis of equality before the law, and alike protected by the government in their property and right of public worship, yet self-supporting and self-governing; and, in turn, they strengthen the moral foundations of society by training loyal and virtuouscitizens. Freedom of religion must be recognized as one of the inalienablerights of man, which lies in the sacred domain of conscience, beyond the restraint and control of politics, and which the government is bound to protectas much as any other fundamental right. Freedom is liable to abuse, and abusemay be punished. But Christianity is itself the parent of true freedom from the bondage of sin and error, and is the best protector and regulator of freedom. | ||||
III. The history of CHURCH GOVERNMENT AND DISCIPLINE. | ||||
The church is not only an invisible communion of saints, but at the same time avisible body, needing organs, laws, and forms, to regulate its activity. Intothis department of history fall the various forms of church polity: the apostolic, the primitive episcopal, the patriarchal, the papal, the consistorial, the presbyterial, the congregational, etc.; and the history of the law and discipline of the church, and her relation to the state, under allthese forms. | ||||
IV. The history of WORSHIP, or divine service, by which the church celebrates, revives, and strengthens her fellowship with her divinehead. This falls into such subdivisions as the history of preaching, of catechisms, of liturgy, of rites and ceremonies, and of religious art,particularly sacred poetry and music. | ||||
The history of church government and the history of worship are often put together under the title of Ecclesiastical Antiquities or Archaeology, and commonly confined to the patristic age, whence most of the, Catholic institutions and usages of the church date their origin. But they may as well be extended to the formativeperiod of Protestantism. | ||||
V. The history of CHRISTIAN LIFE, or practical morality and religion: the exhibition of the distinguishing virtues and vices of different ages, of the development of Christian philanthropy, the regeneration of domestic life, the gradual abatement and abolition of slavery and othersocial evils, the mitigation and diminution of the horrors of war, the reform of civil law and of government, the spread of civil and religious liberty, and the whole progress of civilization, under the influence of Christianity. | ||||
VI. The history of THEOLOGY, or of Christian learning and literature. Each branch of theology-exegetical, doctrinal, ethical, historical,and practical-has a history of its own. | ||||
The history of doctrines or dogmas is here the most important, and is therefore frequently treated byitself. Its object is to show how the mind of the, church has graduallyapprehended and unfolded the divine truths of revelation, how the teachings of scripture have been formulated and shaped into dogmas, and grown into creedsand confessions of faith, or systems of doctrine stamped with public authority. This growth of the church in the knowledge of the infallible word of God is aconstant struggle against error, misbelief, and unbelief; and the history of heresies is an essential part of the history of doctrines. | ||||
Every important dogma now professed by the Christian church is the result of a severe conflict with error. The doctrine of the holy Trinity, for instance, was believed from the beginning,but it required, in addition to the preparatory labors of the ante-Nicene age,fifty years of controversy, in which the strongest intellects were absorbed,until it was brought to the clear expression of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed. The Christological conflict was equally long and intense, until it was brought to a settlement by the council of Chalcedon. The Reformation of the sixteenth century was a continual warfare with popery. The doctrinal symbols of the various churches, from the Apostles' Creed down to the confessions of Dortand Westminster, and more recent standards, embody the results of the theological battles of the militant church. | ||||
The various departments of church history have not a merely external and mechanical, but an organicrelation to each other, and form one living whole, and this relation the historian must show. Each period also is entitled to a peculiar arrangement,according to its character. The number, order, and extent of the differentdivisions must be determined by their actual importance at a given time. | ||||