Timeline Flashcards
(38 cards)
Fall of Rome
476 AD
Reformation
1517 AD
Medieval Period
Fall of Rome (476 AD) - Reformation (1517 AD)
Rise of Islam
600 AD - 700 AD
Crusade
1095 AD - 1291 AD; 4th crusade in 1204 AD destroyed the Byzantine Empire
Filioque added to Nicene Creed
1054 AD (end of early middle age)
Christian Empire
313 - 476 AD Edict of Milan (313) Fall of the Last Roman Emperor of the West - Romulus Augustus (476) *Goth sacked Rome in 410.
Early Middle Age
476 - 1054 AD
Fall of the Last Roman Emperor of the West - Romulus Augustus (476)
Schism Between East and West (1054)
–Byzantine empire’s conversion of Russia
High Pt of Middle Age
1054 - 1303 AD Schism (1054) Decline of Papacy (1303) --The rise of monastic orders - Franciscans and Dominicans, Aquinas. --The rise of Scholastic theology
Late Middle Ages
1303 - 1454 AD Decline of Papacy (1303) Fall of Constantinople (1453) --Papacy was moved from Rome to border of France --2 or 3 popes claiming to be the Pope
Conquest and Reformation
The Fall of Constantinople (1453)
–95 Thesis in 1517
Counter-Reformation
- 1534-1563
- Catholic response to Reformation, many of the abuses of the Catholic Church were corrected, and traditional Catholic doctrine re-affirmed.
- Led to Council of Trent
- Affirmed that Church/tradition were on par with Scripture, sacraments and transubstantiation, and justification is faith plus works.
Heidelberg Catechism
- 1563
- Olevianus and Ursinus
- form of a catechism, but content of a confession.
- Held by the Continental Reformed Church (European-German, Dutch). Many say the Heidelberg Catechism has a more personal feel than the Westminster Confession.
Synod of Dort
- 1618
- Reformed thinkers to answer the assertions of the Remonstrants. Response = TULIP
Westminster Assembly
- 1643-1652
- Puritan divines, assembled by the British Parliament to produce a Confession to unite the United Kingdom ecclesiastically.
- Confession of Faith, and the Larger and Shorter Catechisms would become the standard of faith for the Presbyterian, Congregational and Regular Baptist churches in Scotland, England and America.
- Borne out of Scotch and English Calvinism, structured upon the foundation of the “Irish Articles of Faith” of 1615.
Pietism
- 17th Cent
- Germany, it was a movement against dead orthodoxy in the
Lutheran Church. - Emphasis on individual conversion and living orthodoxy that lead to a changed life.
First Great Awakening
- 1741-1745, New England
- George Whitefield, Edwards
- “Religious Affections” written in response to some false/merely emotive conversions.
Second Great Awakening
- 1800-1825
- Went in to the frontier as well, longer duration and more fervor than concern for theology.
- Led to significant church growth, improvement of morals and national life, checking of the growth of Deism, growth of missions, and social reform movements.
- Left a permanent mark on the American evangelical scene with its revivalistic emphasis and Arminian theology.
Old Side/New Side
New Side (Pro-Revival): Edwards, Whiteside, Tennant (Calvinists). Old Side (Anti-Revival): Charles Chaucy (Arminian).
Old School/New School
- 1837
- Controversy over the Second Great Awakening. There was an effort to create a cooperative plan for reaching the frontier out of which emerged a debate over seeming doctrinal indifference.
- Old School: strict subscriptionists, skeptical about the excesses of the Cane Ridge revivals and the New Measures of Finny.
- New School: at best, lax subscriptionists, often Arminian or rationalists.
- Controversy split the Presbyterian Church in two, which would last until the reunification–only to split again along North-South line in Civil War.
Auburn Affirmation
- 1924
- Presbyterians
- Safeguard unity and liberty of the Presbyterian Church.
- Intended to display tolerance, but became a divider between conservatives and liberals. The Affirmation denied need of ordained to commit to five essentials:
1. Inspiration and inerrancy of Scripture;
2. The virgin birth;
3. Substitutionary atonement
4. Christ’s real and historical resurrection and
5. Jesus’ working of miracles
Scholasticism
11th - 14th Centuries
- System and method of learning for philosophy and theology during the medieval period as developed in European university contexts.
- Relied on philosophical methods and the use of reason to make clear divisions and distinctions within a body of knowledge.
- Aquinas, Peter Abelard, Anselm, Peter Lombard and Duns Scotus.
Babylonian Captivity
- 14th Century
- When popes lived in Avignon, France, due to the political situation.
- Term used by Luther in the 16th century to describe the Roman Catholic Church’s “captivity” to the papacy and need for gospel liberation.
Humanism
14th-16th Century, France
- Man was the measure of all things.
- Sought to base education on the Greek and Latin classics, interpreted from within a Christian context. Theologically, the term indicates the high value that Christianity places on humans as created and redeemed by God.