I don't believe that Acts 6 mentions the term "deacon". The seven people appointed in that passage aren't given a title.
Deacons today - and from antiquity - are indeed lower down the hierarchy than a priest. But my point was that originally they seem to have been a separate kind of organisation. When the diaconate and the priesthood came together, the priests ended up higher than the deacons.
Speaking of 'Thessalonians'...
Anyone know why the original acts of the Apostles accurate name of the two letters to the people of this glorious city () was maimed in English?
Epistles to the Thessalonicians doesn't particularly sound that more alien, and would have been far closer to the original.
(Original titles would be Προς Θεσσαλονικείς Α',Β').
I'm not sure what else you would call women leading a Christian community. Bishops? Or did I misread your affirmation that women did play leading roles, whereas within a few centuries they did not?
Really? You are unaware of a growing mysogyny in early Christianity? I don't think one can relegate the removal of women from all position of prominence simply to a matter of church organisation. That, for one, does not explain why all leading position should be exclusively male. One might, possibly, argue that it is a matter of growing conformism on the part of the church towards society in general. That is, if it weren't accompanied by Christian writers being, shall we say, unkind towards the female sex. which was coincidentally also the case. Of course one might still claim that these are entirely different and unrelated developments. But that would then be the least probable conclusion. Not impossible, but unlikely. Especially considering that patriarchalism has never really left the church thereafter.
I don't quite see what changing attitudes in modern Catholicism have to with changing church attitude towards women in antiquity.
H. Preisker, Christentum und Ehe in den ersten 3 Jahrhunderten, 1927, p. 184. (I don't know if there exists an English translation.)
I'm not sure if (and how) that relates to apostolic succession. I can see your point, but I would think that "early Christianity" starts with the death of Jesus. Irenaeus was a 2nd century bishop, Tertullian a Christian writer (theologian?) from Carthage of slightly later date (who, as I understand, also first mentioned the Trinity). So at this point there would already have been Christian communities in Roman Africa and Gaul. Perhaps I should have said earliest Christianity?
That would be a paradox, not a contradiction, because although Paul's letters predate the gospels, it is generally assumed that the gospels rely on an older source, whereas Paul's letters obviously do not - nor do Acts, as far as I'm aware.
None of this contradicts the assertion that Jesus did not practice baptism, as reference to this only occurs later. Which was my general assertion, because it seems the logical conclusion, seeing as 2 gospels don't mention it at all, Luke once, and John several times.
So, even if assuming that Jesus did baptize (which seems unlikely at best), it can either not have been of great importance to him or the importance of it escaped Marc and Matthew (again, not entirely impossible, but unlikely). So, in conclusion, one might say that Jesus probably didn't, but possibly did baptize - but in either case he did not lay great importance on it and it wasn't a customary ritual.
Speaking of 'Thessalonians'...
Anyone know why the original acts of the Apostles accurate name of the two letters to the people of this glorious city () was maimed in English?
Epistles to the Thessalonicians doesn't particularly sound that more alien, and would have been far closer to the original.
(Original titles would be Προς Θεσσαλονικείς Α',Β').
Why would the central need (of the passage) use the word διακονίᾳ or form of it three times? They separated 7 men for this very διακονίᾳ. Two of these men had accounts about their ministry and were considered the first two deacons. Why would this passage not be considered the formation of the concept of what a deacon was?
The problem with this argument is that you can find misogyny right there in the New Testament, notably 1 Corinthians 11:2-16 and 1 Timothy 2:12. So to talk of "growing" misogyny seems to me to be just mistaken. It was there right from the start.
The relevance is that this argument all started with your claim that the modern Catholic Church differs from the primitive church on this matter.
I take your point that there seem to have been more women in positions of leadership (of some kind) in the primitive church than at later times; but it was a very complex situation about which we know little. Different models of church leadership co-existed and we don't know how "formal" the various positions were. Certainly there were women acting as "prophets" and "deacons", but it would be a mistake to assume that these (or any other offices mentioned in the early texts, including that of "bishop") were necessarily formal positions as we would imagine them rather than just someone taking it upon themselves to organise things informally, or give people spiritual advice. My guess is that whatever "authority" most of these people had would be more akin to the "authority" of a dungeon master in a group of tabletop gamers than to a modern professional minister of religion.
There isn't, but really what I meant was a primary source, which Preisker doesn't seem to provide.
Certainly Paul uses older sources in his letters. They are full of doxological, liturgical, and doctrinal formulations which almost certainly predate him. They also contain a lot of parallels with the Gospels, suggesting that Paul knew - though did not explicitly cite - material about Jesus. As for Acts, there is less certainty, although Luke does at least claim to have consulted various sources.
By that logic Jesus was never born, since only two Gospels mention his birth. To make a positive assertion that Jesus didn't baptise (as opposed to the more cautious claim that we don't know whether he did) you'd need some good reason for thinking that he didn't. The mere absence of references to this in two of the Gospels isn't a good enough reason.
Yes, I think it's fair to say that if Jesus baptised, it was a relatively unprominent aspect of his ministry, or at least one that wasn't very important to his followers. That doesn't make it unlikely that he did it, though.
In Spanish it still remains as 'Tesalonicenses'.I can't work this out either. It's "Tessalonyans" in Tyndale's translation, which is where I assume the King James translators got it from. But I don't know why Tyndale would have dropped the κ.
Did he express hatred of Phoenicians and Arabs?What's the consensus on whether St. Augustine was anti-Semitic?
And if you look at the Church outside the priesthood, I don't think you get a sharp delineation about the end of female authority in the Church. Certainly Abbesses would count as leaders in the church, and quite formal ones.The whole point I was trying to make was that in primitive Christianity there was a number of different models of church leadership, not all of which involved bishops. A woman, or that matter a man, leading a Christian community at such a time might be a prophet, not a bishop; or a presbyter; or a deacon of some kind. Today, the Catholic Church excludes women from the priesthood. My point was that we know of no female priests in the primitive church either. We know of women in positions of leadership - so from that point of view, the primitive church differed from the modern church - but we don't know of female priests.
...
I take your point that there seem to have been more women in positions of leadership (of some kind) in the primitive church than at later times; but it was a very complex situation about which we know little. Different models of church leadership co-existed and we don't know how "formal" the various positions were. Certainly there were women acting as "prophets" and "deacons", but it would be a mistake to assume that these (or any other offices mentioned in the early texts, including that of "bishop") were necessarily formal positions as we would imagine them rather than just someone taking it upon themselves to organise things informally, or give people spiritual advice. My guess is that whatever "authority" most of these people had would be more akin to the "authority" of a dungeon master in a group of tabletop gamers than to a modern professional minister of religion.
And if you look at the Church outside the priesthood, I don't think you get a sharp delineation about the end of female authority in the Church. Certainly Abbesses would count as leaders in the church, and quite formal ones.
Can we even use the word priest as being a monopoly of the RCC? I am pretty sure that it would be correct to say that any part of the body of Christ can act as their own priest.
Not too mention a lot of deity worship involved a priest and/or priestess who acted as an intermediary for God. Why did the church feel the need to take that away form the laity?
My point was that we know of no female priests in the primitive church either. We know of women in positions of leadership - so from that point of view, the primitive church differed from the modern church - but we don't know of female priests.
If we forget Jesus, that is. And the exclusion of women from prominent positions. But that's not the point: you are quoting Paul to suggest there was misogyny in the early church. All that proves is that there was misogyny with Paul, which I presume is rather well known.
That's interesting. So Paul might have actually known the presumed Q source which is now missing. I did not know this.
That doesn't follow. The example of Jesus' birth was used because it fitted the narrative, and one of these is apocryphal to the core. Since Jesus is the protagonist in all gospels, the assumption that he was not born is quite illogical. Unless one assumes it is a fictional character, of course. So yes, by that logic (yours, not mine) Jesus was never born. That may be convincing to you, to me it is not.
You are comparing apples and pears - as well as ignoring the reasoning and conclusion drawn. If Jesus baptized, then it didn't occur to at least two evangelists as essential - or they were unaware of it (which again substantiates the presumption that baptism wasn't essential). This is the key point. Baptizing only became essential to the Church.
But leaving this issue apart, even contemplating the baptisms mentioned, it is certain, from the gospel texts, Jesus did not baptize newly-borns, as has become the Church practice. Or do you feel this is another too bold assertion?
What's the consensus on whether St. Augustine was anti-Semitic?
And if you look at the Church outside the priesthood, I don't think you get a sharp delineation about the end of female authority in the Church. Certainly Abbesses would count as leaders in the church, and quite formal ones.
Can we even use the word priest as being a monopoly of the RCC? I am pretty sure that it would be correct to say that any part of the body of Christ can act as their own priest.
Ute Eisen, Women Officeholders in Early Christianity: Epigraphical and Literary Studies gives several possible examples of female priests (and also gives the critical editions for the examples if you want to hunt down the primary sources). I will reproduce one just as an example a third century inscription:
Διογας εβισκοπος
Αμμιῳ πρεσβθτερᾳ
μνημης χαριν.
Bishop Diogas
to Ammion the Presbyter
In memorial
I also found the quotation from Atto of Vercelli's commentary on Canon 11 of the Synod of Laodocia interesting "For just as these women who were called priests (presbyterae) had assumed the duty of preaching, ordering, and instructing...(hae quae presbyterae dicebantur, praedicandi, iubendi, vel locendi...officium sumpserant), a practice which today is not at all in use." (I am pulling this quotation from the aforementioned Ute, 123). I read that to suggest that Atto knew of examples in the past when women functioned as priests but that by his day that practice had ceased.
But even if we go through all of Ute's examples and dismiss each one, I am puzzled why it matters for this conversation. You agreed that the earliest church showed a diversity of leadership models, and that women held positions which sometimes lead these churches (apostles, prophets, deacons). And we further know that some women taught/preached, and officiated over rituals such as the Eucharist and baptism. So even if they never were called "priest" if they have the exact same function as "priest" why split hairs over a term, especially when you yourself say that leadership titles are fluid in the earliest church?
You're quite right of course - I just like to split hairs
Yes, but I didn't merely cite Paul, I also cited the Pastorals, which are not by Paul.
No, that is not what I said. I said there are sources behind Paul's letters, since he seems to be familiar with some of the traditions also found in the Gospels, most notably the eschatological and the ethical material. That does not mean he knew Q (since this material is also found outside Q) and it doesn't even mean that his sources were written.
Let me put it more clearly. Obviously Jesus was born. But two of the Gospels do not mention his birth. Therefore, the fact that two of the Gospels do not mention an event does not show that it did not happen. Similarly, two of the Gospels do not mention Jesus baptising. This does not show that it did not happen.
It could just as well be the other way around: baptising was very important to Jesus, but the two Gospel writers who do not mention it rejected it. We just don't know enough to make such strong assertions as you do here.
No, that seems reasonable, as there's no evidence of Christians doing that before the end of the second century.
It seems to me you are making precisely such a bold assertion by claiming 2 gospel writers rejected baptism. On what grounds?
Yes, but I didn't merely cite Paul, I also cited the Pastorals, which are not by Paul.
Show how much you know about the Bible, very little.