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Yeshua Explored

The City of God

todayMarch 12, 2014 4

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Augustine wrote a book, City of God, as a defence of Christianity against the paganism that surrounded it in the final days of the Roman Empire. Ironically it contained a visible attack on Platonism, but Plato got in his retaliation first as the unseen influence, the invisible director working behind the scenes in the writing of this book.

So how did Plato posthumously pull the strings? It’s all down to his “big idea”, embedding the falsehood known as dualism in the early Christian minds, from Clement of Alexandria, Origen and others, to Augustine himself. It’s the idea that the physical, material world is bad (or evil) and that the spiritual, heavenly world is good and to be eagerly sought. To be blunt, it’s a death cult masquerading as a philosophy of life and these early Christian thinkers had a theology thoroughly infiltrated by it.

In the book, Augustine consoled his readers that one should not concern oneself with such worldly matters as the destruction of Rome, the City of Man, but should rather look heavenwards at the “city yet to come”, the City of God, the New Jerusalem of the Book of Revelation. On the face of it this is a noble mission, a thoroughly Christian pursuit, but to measure the true worth of a book is to examine its legacy. What sort of influence did the City of God have on those who read it, on those who converted its words into action?

It was a very large book, full of challenging ideas and it was to be read in many different ways, by different people. Some saw the book as a handbook for a theocratic society, governed by the Church, or those appointed by it, whether king or pope, as the best way forward. Others took a different view. By holding out hope for the Christian, by saying in effect, don’t worry about the mess in this world you have to live in, there’s a better world to come, many saw, in these words, justification for the acceptance of a life of disappointment, deprivation and disaster as there’s better to come in the next life! As the publication of this book was swiftly followed by the Dark Ages, there’s a strong possibility that this seminal book from the most influential Christian thinker in a society that considered itself a Christian one, had something to do with it!

The new kind of Christians, after the fall (of Rome), had little interest in their bodies as such. They cared about the health of their souls. They had no interest in consumption. They could lose their reputation rather than gain it for possessing wealth in a society where poverty was next to godliness. Roman wealth was replaced by Christian poverty. (A History of Knowledge, Charles Van Doren p.96, Ballantine Books 1992)

Just as we, living in the affluent West in the 21st Century, believe that progress is determined by the number of cars in the garage, the size of our plasma screens or the availability of exotic foreign spices in our supermarkets, our 10th Century friends would have considered themselves living in enlightenment, devoting their lives to the well-being of their souls, that precious commodity, their ticket to a good afterlife. In a way, perhaps they got it right! The trouble is that their objective may have been a good one, but the way of getting there was eminently flawed.

Sacraments were the way into Heaven at that time. Ordinary folk couldn’t understand a word of the liturgies in their local church, as it was all in Latin. Neither did they have a correct balanced understanding of Jesus, as Bibles were just not available for the common man and, if they had been, no-one would have been able to read them. Yet they were told that if they followed the actions dictated by the sacraments they would be alright. Sacraments controlled their daily lives. Baptism at the start of life was absolutely necessary, as was regular penance – confessing your sins (with payment to the Church) and regular Holy Communion. Real, considered, saving faith didn’t come into it. You were “saved” through one’s actions, as if the act itself was sufficient. It is a sad and sobering thought to consider how many from those times had a nasty shock in the next world. You must also wonder whether someone with an incomplete, even false, understanding of the historical Jesus and the purpose of his death is any better off than an ignorant native in the heart of the Amazon jungle. Only the Lord has the answer to that one.

Steve Maltz
September 2013

(This is an abridged extract from Steve’s book How the Church Lost the Truth)

Written by: Rufus Olaniyan

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Yeshua Explored

The Dark Ages

The sun had set on Europe. The light of the World had been dimmed, lost in the shadows in most places. We are near the end of that period, known historically (and controversially if the revisionists are to be believed) as the Dark Ages. It is 920 AD.So what was the state of the nation in that year? The liberating truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ had been around for nearly nine centuries, plenty of time to clean up […]

todayMarch 12, 2014 9


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