Category Archives: Apostles and Saints

FAITHFULNESS

APOSTOLIC INSIGHT ~ What can the Apostles and Church Fathers tell us about our times? What advice do they have for our problems? Here are some of their thoughts ~

johnandprochorus

Often the question is raised about how we stay faithful? Everyone slips every now and then, but usually the error comes back to haunt us. How can we avoid making the same mistake again? One of the lessons we learn from the earliest believers is that they discovered the necessity of doing what was right regardless of their personal limitations. When they realized that the Messiah was walking with them, they did not turn back. Faithfulness is not avoiding mistakes, but continuing on the path God has given us to walk regardless of the cost.

Let’s see what we can learn from one of the first followers.

MEET PROCHORUS ~ In the Acts of the Apostles (Act 6:1-60), is the story of the Apostles choosing seven men who were filled with the Holy Spirit and wisdom. These key leaders were crucial for the endurance of the believers. In addition, other deacons were selected. Like Parmenas, Prochorus was one of the original seventy deacons selected by the Apostles to lead the first church that was in Jerusalem. Actually, James the brother of Jesus was the first leader of the Christians. Peter was chief among the Apostles, but James led the Church. We know more about Peter and Paul because of their key role portrayed in the Acts of the Apostles found in the New Testament. Moreover, James was martyred just shortly before the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in AD 70.

Along with Stephen, Philip, Nicanor, Timor, and Nicholas, Prochorus helped meet the practical needs of the early believers. Many were poor, sick, as well as widows and orphans that needed assistance. The first seventy deacons worked with these needy people.

Prochorus accompanied the Apostle Peter on some of his journeys. The history of the Church records that Peter made Prochorus the bishop of Nicomedia. In addition, Prochorus was a companion with Apostle John. The tradition of the Church remembers that Prochorus was banished along with John to the Isle of Patmos where John composed the book of The Revelation to John. While he was there, we can conclude that Prochorus must have been of some assistance to John as he wrote his apocalyptic book.

After Prochorus returned from Patmos, he brought the Gospel to both Nicomedia  and Antioch. Prochorus was martyred in Antioch. Even though his faithfulness led to his heroic death, his endurance crowned his life being numbered among the saints of God.

ENDURANCE

APOSTOLIC INSIGHT ~ What can the Apostles and Church Fathers tell us about our times? What advice do they have for our problems? Here are some of their thoughts ~

parmenas

Forty years ago at least 50% of the public were in a church every Sunday. Today that number has fallen to less that 30%. Today serious questions exist about public morality and the lack of truthfulness in politics. The Roman Catholic Church is fighting for its life around the world because of sexual abuse scandals. Once called Protestant mainline denominations have now become sidelined. Congregations continue to struggle and many are disconnected from historic denominations.

How can contemporary Christians view this situation? We need help from the first Church Fathers to keep the struggle in perspective. Here are some examples of how they endured when the ancient church was first beginning.

MEET PARMENAS ~ In a time more burdensome and troubled than our own. Parmenas stood up to teach about the importance of enduring under difficult condition. Never heard of him? Let me introduce you to the man they called Apostle Parmenas.

Parmenas was one of the original seventy deacons chosen by the Twelve Apostles to meet the needs of the Church of Jerusalem. After the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans in A.D. 70, history did not remember well how the Mother Church in Jerusalem had existed. James, the brother of Jesus, led that congregation and was considered the first leader of the Church. Peter was the leader of the Apostles and James directed the larger Church. Acts 15 has the story of Paul and the Gentiles coming for the first conference on church rules and procedures.

Parmenas was part of all of these incidents and issues. In Luke’s Gospel, chapter 10, Parmenas was one of the seventy sent out by Jesus. They came back saying, “Lord, even the demons are subject to us in your name.” Jesus gave them authority over all adversaries

The Orthodox Church has saved the record of Parmenas’ ministry. For years, he preached in Asia Minor before he settled down in Macedonia. In the writings of Hippolytus, we learn that Parmenas was the Bishop of Soli.

In the year 98 AD, he was martyred in Philippi, Macedonia. The Roman Emperor Trajan issued an empire wide persecution of the Christians and Parmenas was caught in this sweep of the various countries. His fidelity to the death reminds the 21st century that endurance eventually and inevitably overcomes all obstacles. Stay firm and endure!

MARY

EARLY CHURCH ISSUESThe Most Rev. Robert L. Wise

mary-and-jesus-590x295

MARY ~ In the post-Reformation world, the subject of Mary, the mother of Jesus, is difficult to approach. Some Protestants groups rail against her veneration in the Roman Catholic world. Other scholars believe the New Testament claims are a misunderstanding of the book of Isaiah while the conservatives call that idea nonsense. Many believers elevate her to the top of the list of saints. At the same time, the Orthodox Churches place the Virgin Mary in an elevated place on their icons with the baby Jesus next to her check.

How can we work through these various viewpoints? The best way is to return to the first century church and discover what they thought and practiced. Here are some insights.

The first non-biblical texts about Mary can be found in the Letters of St. Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch. He wrote, “And the virginity of Mary was hidden from the ruler of this world, as were her giving birth and likewise the death of the Lord—three secrets to be cried out aloud which were accompanied by the silence of God.” He also wrote that Jesus was born “out of Mary and out of God.” In other words, the earliest writings outside of the scripture affirmed belief in the virgin birth.

In the second century, St. Irenaeus, the Bishop of Lyon said even more:

Just as Eve, wife of Adam, yet still a virgin … became by her disobedience the cause of death for herself and the whole human race, so Mary, too, espoused yet a virgin, became by her obedience the cause of salvation for herself and the whole human race … And so, it was that the knot of Eve’s disobedience was  loosed by Mary’s obedience.

In other words, the earliest examples that we have of the convictions of the first Christians affirmed the virgin birth and the most significant role that a woman could occupy.

One of the most interesting affirmations came from the fourth-century hymnist Ephraim the Syrian. He wrote of Mary, she is “your mother, your sister, your spouse, your handmaiden.”

The Church paid such attention to Mary because she provided an important defense against Gnostic denial of the incarnation. Gnostic’s devised rituals to provide an escape from the flesh, but Jesus came in the flesh and that was a troubling problem for them. The Christians proclaimed that salvation was of the flesh. The Virgin Mary stood as a proclamation that Jesus came in the flesh and must be recognized as such. Today she remains a symbol of the importance that the Heavenly Father placed on our bodies as well as our souls. She is picture of the importance of the human body in the eyes of God.

The glory of Mary is that she allowed nothing to take priority over living out God’s will. She said “yes” when the angel came and thereafter entered into an impossible social position. Yet, that was the beginning of the Savior coming and bringing salvation.

We think a “virgin” birth to be strange, but is such a conception really that different from 90-year old Sarah conceiving Isaac? As the history of the Jewish people begins with Abraham and that birth, so the story of salvation begins with Mary.

The time has come to go back to the beginnings of the Christian faith and honor those earliest origins. We can all truly say, “Hail Mary, full of grace!”

THE STRUGGLES OF THE CHURCH

APOSTOLIC INSIGHT ~ What can the Apostles and Church Fathers tell us about our times? What advice do they have for our problems? Here are some of their thoughts—

St. Ambrose of Milan

In 1968 at least 50% of the public were in a church every Sunday. Today that number has fallen to less that 30%. At the same time, serious questions are being raised about public morality and the lack of truthfulness in politics. The Roman Catholic Church is fighting for its life around the world in the midst of sexual abuse scandals. Once called Protestant mainline denominations have now become sidelined. Congregations continue to struggle and many are disconnected from historic denominations.

How can contemporary Christians view this situation? We need help from the first Church Fathers to keep the struggle in perspective. Here are some of the comments they made when the ancient church was first beginning.

St. Hilary
The Church is like a ship, outside of which it is impossible to understand the Word of God.

St. Cyprian
Do not think that you maintain the true Gospel of Christ, if you separate yourself from the flock of Christ.

II Peter 1:21
Know this first: No prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation, for prophecy never came by the will of man, but men moved by the Holy Spirit may speak from God.

St. Cyprian
He who does not have the Church as his mother cannot have God for his Father.

St. Jerome
If the soul is not clothed with the teachings of the Church, it cannot have Jesus enthroned inside it.

St. John of Damascus
Even though the “gates of hell” will rise up against the church … the mouth of heretics, the tools of the demons, they will not conquer the Church, even though they will arm themselves, they will not defeat her.

St. Ambrose of Milan
“The Kingdom of the Church will abide unto the ages,” since God founded the Church and has foreordained to extend her existence unto the ages.

St. Hippolytus
Even though the Church will be exposed to cruel persecution, she will not cease to exist.

EVIL AND THE DEMONIC

APOSTOLIC INSIGHT ~ What can the Apostles and Church Fathers tell us about our times? What advice do they have for our problems? Here are some of their thoughts—

TheLORDsPrayer

While evil or an Evil One is not a popular subject today, we are being inundated by the demonic far beyond what society knew in previous decades. Insidious and degrading circumstances surround us daily from Washington, D.C., to the nightly news appear to give us endless accounts of murders, car wrecks, and mass killings in schools and bars. Do all of these catastrophes happen by themselves? Do they simply pop up like weeds in the Spring? Or, is there a motivating force lurking in the shadows?

The earliest Church Fathers had no misgivings. They knew that what the scripture called Satan and evil spirits were facts in human experience. These earliest believers knew that the Evil One had to be rebuked for anyone to have spiritual freedom and success. The word “devil” actually meant “slander.” His role in creating guilt, personal devaluation, impaired self-understanding, and inadequacy were great in the past, but have become even more omnipresent in contemporary society. If Satan dared to tempt Jesus, how much more so will he tempt us.

Here is what the Fathers said…

St. Ambrose
Sin comes from the evil one; Satan has, as it were, these riches in his patrimony. Just as the riches of Christ are virtues, so crimes are the devil’s wealth.

St. Gregory of Nyssa
If we are but instruments of heavenly rotations, then we do not have free will. And if mankind loses freedom, it loses everything.

St. John Cassian
The demons have no means if taking possession of a man’s spirit or body, no power to forcibly enter his soul, unless they first deprive him of all holy thought and make him empty and devoid of spiritual contemplation and prayer.

Tertullian
Satan … we call the angel of evil is the contriver of all error, the corrupter of the whole world.

St. Ignatius of Antioch
Be eager for more frequent gatherings for thanksgiving to God and his glory, for when you meet thus, the forces of Satan are annulled and his destructive power is cancelled in the concord of your faith.

Justin, Dialogue with Trypho the Jew
The clear insight I drew from scriptures and my trust in them have only been confirmed by the deceitful mimicking that the so-called Devil has circulated among the Greeks, and by all that he did likewise through Egyptian sorcerers and false prophets at the time of Elijah.

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