Constantine was not an apostles, that is true, but he took a leadership roll in the church as if he was. If Constantine said this, the church did this. If Constantine said that, the church did that. Perfect example is Athanasius of Alexandria, one of the great men of Alexandria, that the people loved and were devoted to, but yet Constantine said I do not want him as bishop of Alexandria, and so he wasn't, and was exhiled out of view. Why would the church allow this to happen, because the mighty men of the church depended upon their positions upon the real head of the church who just had an army to back him up. They did not want to lose their thrones, by disagreeing with the emperor. So Constantines authority over the church was complete, for he was able to exhile and replace one of the greatest bishops of his time. Of course he did not get into every decision, but the big ones he certainly did. And that was the case for hundreds of years after him, as the emperors dabbled in church affairs, some more than others.
There are many things to say here. The first thing is that you are confusing the Spiritual authority of the Church with the secular power of the State. Constantine and any Roman Emperor technically always had a leadership role over the Church since the Emperor was the sovereign to whom Christians were expected to submit to. Jesus told as much.
Secondly, you accrue to Constantine a power and status which I think is undeserved. Did Constantine’s theological priorities prevail in the end or was it the theologians of the Church who continued to resist Imperial will while they were Arians and even Pagans that prevailed?
I’m willing to admit Emperors did dabble in Church affairs but by reducing it to a matter of state control you’re simplifying to a degree that doesn’t seem plausible. In any given society there will be power vacuums and they must be filled, be it by the state or the clergy or the rich or anyone. Your suggestion is that by the Emperor endorsing Christianity over another religion this has compromised the Church. I don’t know how you could make a cumulative case that ignores all the influence on the other end, of the Church influencing the state. That Rome itself became Christian. That worshipping of pagan gods was abandoned. That education began to include in the west a decent understanding of the bible. That law changed to reflect the Christian nature of the government (no more crucifixions for example).
It’s not that you’re necessarily wrong about the state being involved in the Church, it’s that you overestimate the influence the state had on the Church. You’re not pausing to consider that the Church also had an effect on secular society. That Europe went from a place of many gods to only one god. To instead of sacrificing people to Odin or whomever they now had the Eucharist.
What I fail to see is how if the situation we Christians were given were handed to you Mormons, how you would be any less affected. If Mormons had dominated the Americas by a miracle in the 18th century the USA would look like a radically different country today.
[QUOTE="Peter1000, post: 75574316, member: 382212] Yes the church came out the other end, but was it the same church? Heads of governments were always pushing their noses into church affairs. European governments were essential to protestantism and ran the churches and secular buisness. It was all one big business. [/QUOTE]
Well we can talk about the continuation of the Church if you like. I have a fairly standard Orthodox view. We all acknowledge the mutual breaks in the Church between the Oriental Orthodox, Catholics and Eastern Orthodox but I don’t fail to see a continuity between these groups and those who came before them. Each has a legitimate historical claim though I favour the Eastern Orthodox claim to continuity.
As a Mormon where you are left to draw the dividing line of continuation is limited. The second century Fathers represent a theological world at radical odds with the religion revealed to Joseph Smith. This could indicate that either the truths revealed to Joseph Smith were not revealed until he was around (this to me is the only plausible explanation for why second century Christendom doesn’t at all resemble 18th century Mormonism). Or that the apostasy was so sudden and rapid as to be done within two generations to such a degree as to change the very fundamentals of the faith. Polygamy was undone. Sacred marriage abandoned. True baptism abandoned. Temple services were abandoned. Apostles were abandoned. All the distinctive markers of Mormonism utterly disappeared, within two-three generations? The years 60-120? When Ignatius or Ireneaus or Justin Martyr describes the Church I don’t see Mormonism therein.
[QUOTE="Peter1000, post: 75574316, member: 382212] Yes it was, but when the emperor started to be the one that chose the patriarch, then God no longer had his had in it, and was replaced by the emperor and appointments were made for political purposes rather than for the good of the people of the church. [/QUOTE]
It depends on the Emperor and the Church leader doesn’t it? John Damascus wasn’t Patriarch but he was Bishop of Constantinople. He was chosen explicitly for his moral fibre and seriousness in the faith. It ultimately killed him in the end when he offended the Empress was sentenced to exile.
Orthodoxy doesn’t necessarily depend on who the Patriarch is in order to secure legitimacy. I think it was a Patriarch who helped to kill Maximos the Confessor through torture because he wouldn’t recant his theological opinions. It was Maximos the Confessor, a layman monk who has influenced Orthodoxy more so than the Patriarch. Though I’m not of the mind to condemn all the Patriarchs, like Gregory the V or Patriarch Jeremias II.
I’m by no means an expert and I suspect what you say is right about a good deal of the Patriarchs, especially in the heyday of the Byzantine Imperial authority. Yet it doesn’t provide a defeater for Orthodoxy because strangely enough it isn’t the Patriarchs in of themselves who are the driving force of Orthodoxy.
[QUOTE="Peter1000, post: 75574316, member: 382212] He did not want an emperor type, he wanted an apostle and prophet type like in the bible. JS was the perfect modern apostle and prophet for God.[/QUOTE]
I think Dezrhemi had the best response to this. Did your Church originally have theocratic aims? I’m not going to criticize it on that basis, it’s actually kind of based in my opinion. But it doesn’t reflect well on your previous criticism of Christians being involved in the secular world.
I simply look at the Christian participation in the secular world as a necessary thing. If Christians were continually gorwing it would only be natural that one day they would want to have as their King or ruler a Christian. That involves getting dirty. That involves a lot of sin but the alternative is chaotic anarchism which to my mind can never work. Despite what deranged libertarians say.