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The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation

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Luke Timothy Johnson

17:51:07

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  • 01--Historical Study of Christianity.mp4
    30:45
  • 02--First Cultural Context--Greece and Rome.mp4
    28:28
  • 03--First Cultural Context--Judaism.mp4
    29:33
  • 04--Jesus Movement and the Birth of Christianity.mp4
    29:45
  • 05--Paul and Christianitys First Expansion.mp4
    30:30
  • 06--Diversity of Early Christianity.mp4
    30:06
  • 07--Unpopular Cult--Persecution.mp4
    30:19
  • 08--Forms of Witness--Martyrdom and Apologetic.mp4
    28:58
  • 09--Extreme Christianity in the 2nd and 3rd Centuries.mp4
    29:20
  • 10--Shaping of Orthodoxy.mp4
    30:03
  • 11--Institutional Development before Constantine.mp4
    28:42
  • 12--Beginnings of Christian Philosophy.mp4
    29:59
  • 13--Imperial Politics and Religion.mp4
    29:10
  • 14--Constantine and the Established Church.mp4
    28:03
  • 15--Extension of Christian Culture.mp4
    29:57
  • 16--Monasticism as Radical Christianity.mp4
    29:22
  • 17--Emergence of Patriarchal Centers.mp4
    29:37
  • 18--Theological Crisis and Council--The Trinity.mp4
    28:33
  • 19--Theological Crisis and Council--Christology.mp4
    29:02
  • 20--Distinctive Issues of the Latin West.mp4
    29:47
  • 21--Expansion beyond the Boundaries of Empire.mp4
    30:42
  • 22--Court of Justinian and Byzantine Christianity.mp4
    29:13
  • 23--Rise of Islam and Threat of Iconoclasm.mp4
    29:37
  • 24--Eastern Orthodoxy--Holy Tradition.mp4
    29:52
  • 25--From Roman Empire to Holy Roman Empire.mp4
    29:32
  • 26--Benedictine Monasticism and Its Influence.mp4
    28:25
  • 27--Evangelization of Western Europe.mp4
    28:32
  • 28--Great Divorce between East and West.mp4
    31:02
  • 29--Monastic Reform.mp4
    30:09
  • 30--Cathedrals and Chapters.mp4
    29:53
  • 31--Crusades.mp4
    30:29
  • 32--Papal Revolution.mp4
    28:57
  • 33--Universities and Theology.mp4
    31:05
  • 34--Great Plague.mp4
    29:00
  • 35--Corruption and the Beginnings of Reform.mp4
    31:54
  • 36--Ever-Adapting Religion.mp4
    32:46
  • History of Christianity.pdf
  • folder.zip
  • Description


    Christianity is the largest and most global religious tradition in history. For nearly 2,000 years, the Christian faith has remained at or near the center of Western moral debate and conceptions of human identity, just action, and ultimate meaning. It has both shaped history and responded to history, showing an extraordinary adaptability within greatly differing cultures. Its practice and influence appears in every land and every language, and one-third of humanity now affiliates in some way with Christianity.

    How did this happen? How did a persecuted sect in 1st-century Palestine rise to command such a massive influence on human culture, imagination, and spirit? How did Christianity weather the first critical stages of its historical development and attain its fundamental and enduring cultural role?

    Discovering the answers to these questions allows you to

    • understand one of the most significant and integral currents of history, and to correct misconceptions about Christianity’s past;
    • gain deep insight into the origins of Western societies, and to understand the relation of faith to politics, economics, and culture;
    • grasp how Christian institutions, theology, and liturgy originated and developed;
    • better comprehend the cultural present, where 7 out of 10 Americans hold Christian beliefs; and
    • deepen your appreciation of the majestic sweep of history that Christianity’s rise represents.

    Speaking incisively to all of this and more, The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation tells the phenomenal story of Christianity’s first 1,500 years, in all its remarkable diversity and complex dimension.

    In the company of popular Great Courses Professor Luke Timothy Johnson of Emory University, you follow the dramatic trajectory of Christianity from its beginnings as a “cult of Jesus” to its rise as a fervent religious movement; from its emergence as an unstoppable force within the Roman Empire to its critical role as an imperial religion; from its remarkable growth, amid divisive disputes and rivalries, to the ultimate schism between Eastern Orthodoxy and Western Catholicism; and from its spread throughout the Western world to its flowering as a culture that shaped Europe for 800 years.

    In 36 enthralling lectures, you meet the towering figures of Christian history, such as Paul of Tarsus, Augustine, the emperor Constantine, and Pope Gregory VII, as well as many other pivotal players—kings, popes, saints, monastic figures, scholars, and mystics. And you delve deeply into the rituals, doctrinal issues, and fascinating theological controversies that defined the faith.

    The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation brings to life a truly epic story, giving you a multilayered knowledge of Christianity’s origins, rise, and civilization-shaping presence in our world.

    The Forging of a Global Faith

    Across the arc of the story, you reckon with the historical and theological milestones that formed Christianity, including these seminal moments:

    • The Jesus movement: Investigate the passionate claims of the first believers to an experience of ultimate, transforming power—and the means by which the movement exploded in the decades following Jesus’s death.
    • Critical challenges to the faith: Witness the early Christians’ implacable commitment to the new religion, creating strong institutional and ideological structures even as they answered persecution through martyrdom and “apologetic” literature.
    • Christianity and empire: Learn how the faith, once it was instated as the official religion by Rome, expanded geographically under imperial authority; how Christian culture developed through architecture, art, and ceremony; and how the religion became fatefully enmeshed in politics in the interface of patriarchs, popes, and emperors from Rome to Constantinople.
    • Great controversies of theology: Dig deeply into the Trinitarian and Christological controversies that divided Christians between the 4th and 7th centuries, centering on differing conceptions of the nature of Christ and fiercely contested in the famous Councils of Nicaea, Ephesus, and Chalcedon.
    • The rupture between East and West: Grapple with the overlapping factors of cultural distance, misunderstandings, political rivalries, and doctrinal disputes that led to the final split between Orthodoxy and Catholicism in the 11th century.
    • The flowering of European Christendom: Experience the extraordinary richness of Christian culture in the Middle Ages, including the complex institution of monasticism, the glory of medieval cathedrals, the birth of universities, and the commanding presence of the papacy.

    The Rich Diversity of Christian Experience

    In charting the remarkable rise of Christianity, you uncover the specific social and cultural realities that drove the development of the faith.

    Early in the course, you locate the birth of the religion—and the movement’s powerful appeal—not in the life of Jesus itself, but in the first Christians’ life-altering experience of the Resurrection. You see how early Christianity was not “one thing,” grasping its startling variety of expression through figures such as the preacher Thecla, who dressed as a man and baptized herself, and in the extreme ascetic practices and ideology of the Marcionist movement.

    You investigate the origins and deep influence of monasticism, its specific practices and ways of life, and you see how monasticism became the dominant formal expression of medieval Catholicism. You travel the geographic expanse of the Christian world, from Persia and Egypt to Byzantium, Rome, and the British Isles, and you glimpse the lives of ordinary Christians in all eras, from the first, embattled Christian communities in Palestine to the sophisticated Catholic culture of the Middle Ages.

    Faith, Politics, and Civilization

    In the course’s middle section, the formerly countercultural faith becomes the pillar of the world’s greatest military and political power. Here you grapple with the tensions and challenges of this new role, as the Roman Empire “converts” and pagan sacrifice is declared high treason.

    You track the rivalries of patriarchal centers, as the cities of Antioch, Alexandria, and Constantinople vie for supremacy within the imperial faith. In Byzantium, you witness the increasing intermingling of faith and politics, as the bishop Ambrose of Milan demands public repentance of the brutal emperor Theodosius I, and the emperor Justinian intervenes between factions contesting the true nature of Christ.

    In the “Carolingian Renaissance” of 9th-century Europe, you see how the emperor Charlemagne responded to papal patronage by sponsoring ecclesiastical reforms and supporting the Latin Mass. And you observe how the papacy—aided by royalty and monk-missionaries—became the central force in bringing the Christian message to all of Europe.

    Extraordinary Treasures of Christian Culture

    Throughout the course you observe the profoundly literary quality of this faith, taking note of the diverse Christian writings in Syriac, Coptic, and Armenian, the formulation of Christian orthodoxy in the works of Tertullian and Irenaeus,the philosophical treatises of Clement and Origen, and the scholastic theology of Abelard and Thomas Aquinas.

    You study the long and colorful development of Christian liturgy in the traditions of ritual, architecture, and public works. You taste the splendor and sensuality of Eastern Orthodox worship, with its ornate vestments, incense, and processions. You learn how the medieval cathedral embodied allegorical symbolism in its form, with its vaulted nave (from navis, “ship”) shaped as an inverted “ship of salvation.” And you observe the role of Christian art in the long conflict in Byzantium over the veneration of religious icons.

    Finally, you witness the flourishing of contemplative mysticism in the dark era of the Inquisition, and you uncover the misuses of doctrine and forms of corruption that roused the first courageous reformers, boldly anticipating the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century.

    A Story for the Ages, Masterfully Told

    In recounting the astonishing narrative of Christianity’s unfolding, Professor Johnson draws on his own background as a passionate participant in this tradition, both as a former Benedictine monk and as a world-class scholar. In his powerful and evocative words, this grand tapestry of history comes vibrantly alive as he takes you to the defining moments of Christianity’s past.

    In The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation, you’ll look deeply into the nature and role of faith, the ethos of our civilization, and the core conceptions of identity and ethics that underlie the Western worldview. This is history in the most vivid and meaningful sense of the word: an inquiry into the past that opens a compelling awareness of our present—of our living origins, our ultimate horizons, our deeper selves.

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    Luke Timothy Johnson
    Luke Timothy Johnson
    Instructor's Courses

    Dr. Luke Timothy Johnson is the Robert W. Woodruff Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins at Emory University's Candler School of Theology in Atlanta, Georgia. Professor Johnson earned a Ph.D. in New Testament Studies from Yale University, as well as an M.A. in Religious Studies from Indiana University, an M.Div. in Theology from Saint Meinrad School of Theology, and a B.A. in Philosophy from Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans. A former Benedictine monk, Professor Johnson has taught at Yale Divinity School and Indiana University, where he received the President's Award for Distinguished Teaching, was elected a member of the Faculty Colloquium in Teaching, and won the Brown Derby Teaching Award and the Student Choice Award for teaching. At Emory University, he has twice received the On Eagle's Wings Excellence in Teaching Award. In 2007 he received the Candler School of Theology Outstanding Service Award. His most recent award is the 2011 Louisville Grawemeyer Award in Religion for the ideas set forth in his 2009 book, Among the Gentiles: Greco-Roman Religion and Christianity. Professor Johnson is the author of more than 20 books, including The Real Jesus: The Misguided Quest for the Historical Jesus and the Truth of the Traditional Gospels and The Writings of the New Testament: An Interpretation, which is widely used as a textbook. He has also published several hundred scholarly articles and reviews.

    The Teaching Company, doing business as Wondrium, is a media production company that produces educational, video and audio content in the form of courses, documentaries, series under two content brands - Wondrium and The Great Courses
    • language english
    • Training sessions 36
    • duration 17:51:07
    • English subtitles has
    • Release Date 2023/06/07

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