Gavana
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- Jul 19, 2008
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Emergence of a Bishop at Rome
Before 120 AD there had been no bishop of Rome. One of the earliest elders whom we can be confident actually existed, Clement (81-97), though often referred to as a bishop or even as a ‘pope’ was actually a presbyter. He is credited as the author of a letter to fellow Christians in Corinth, defending the presbyters there who had been deposed by dissatisfied members. But he does not identify himself in the letter. Unlike popes of later centuries, he claims no highfalutin pre-eminence. Just possibly he is the author of Shepherd of Hermas, usually given an early second century date, which refers only to elders in charge of the church.
The office of bishop, emerging from the body of presbyters, occurred in Rome later than elsewhere – sometime in the mid-second century. Anicetus (156-166) was the first to be identified as a bishop in correspondence with Polycarp of Smyrna. By Anicetus’s day, Christian hopes of an imminent Judgement Day (and, in consequence, Christian rejection of the material world) had finally passed away. The Church had become a property owner, as dying believers bequeathed to her their estates. It became clear that the management of a religion, and control of its justifying doctrine, were now paramount. Earthly minds had to make decisions having profound secular consequences. The newly elevated bishop moved first to establish discipline over the warring cohorts. As patriarch of the great city Anicetus was none too happy to play second fiddle to any cleric in the east. But as yet, the Church in Rome could offer no clear lead in doctrine. Church ‘Fathers’ from the east continued to interfere in the nascent Roman Church and were themselves appealed to as authoritative figures in schismatic feuding.
The venerable Polycarp of Smyrna (he was in his eighties at the time) visited the city and held discussions with Anicetus over the dating of Easter. In the eastern sees, the Jewish Passover festival, held on the 14th of Nisan, had been modified into a Christian ‘Easter’ pageant. In Rome, there was as yet no special annual festival, the ‘passion’ being marked in some fashion on every Sunday. Anicetus would not give way to the eastern practice and continued to expel any of the brethren who followed the so-called ‘Quartodeciman’ calendar.
Anicetus may not have been able to compete with Polycarp on theology but he was certainly struck by how Polycarp constructed his argument. The old man claimed to have known the Apostle John when they had both lived in Ephesus and that the Easter festival had been taught him by the apostle himself! Who could argue with the authority handed down from an apostle? Anicetus must have had his shovel ready before the old sage had left the city, and lo! – nearly a century after the supposed event – he was able to find the very spot where the apostle Simon (aka Peter) had been buried! Anicetus had a so-called ‘trophy’ – a pagan-style altar – built on the spot. Adding to his delight he was soon able to identify the place where Paul had been intered – linking Rome to not one but two apostles! Says the leading Church scholar, W. H. Frend, with charming disingenuousness:
"Why it was only after nearly a century that the Roman Christians selected this spot as the burial place of Peter (and Paul) is a mystery."
– Friend (The Rise of Christianity, p27)
With an apostolic connection provided by a grave, the first pious drop of sanctity in a veritable holy flood to come, the age of shrines had arrived in Rome! Fortunately a supply of holy relics was assured by the extensive catacombs and pagan graveyards just beyond the city walls. Anicetus was among the first of a new breed of ‘worldly’ clerics. The physical ‘evidence’ of bones was useful but a doctrinal problem for the ‘Roman Church’ was that the whole ‘birth/ resurrection’ story, and the meanderings of apostles, had been played out in distant lands in the east, which gave the churches there so much more authority. How, then, could Rome claim a grander role?
jee alipokuwa anaandika hiyo pumba agizo hili fundisho
