Jersey Girl wrote:Loran,
I've decided to extract a comment you made and the question I asked out of an existing thread in order to isolate the topic for discussion. This thread is for the purpose of serious discussion that is to say, if you don't have a serious or thoughtful contribution to make, please do not post here. If a poster comes in here with off hand/off topic comments, I'm going to ask mods to move your posts. Thanks.
Loran
And the Church simply fell to pieces when this reached critical mass.
Jersey Girl
I want to know exactly when you think the falling apart of the church reached "critical mass".
By roughly the middle of the Second Century, but perhaps even earlier. The primitive Church was essentially dead by the beginning of the Third (even though there were still pockets of believers in rural areas, as late as the early Fourth Century, who, according to Augustine, still clung to some of the old ideas, such as the Anthropomorphic form of God etc.).
The early Church Fathers retained a number of primitive beliefs, even if not in complete form, but were already far too steeped in Alexandrian philosophy to be considered to have any real continuity with the First Century Saints. The Clementines, Hermes,
The Ascension of Isaiah,
The Hymn of The Pearl, and a few other documents are as close as you get, and in some ways this is quite close (The Pearl could have been, with a little reworking, written by Joseph Smith himself, or John Taylor or Parley Pratt). Ignatius, Polycarp, Origen, Irenaeus, and a few others retain, mixed in with the pervasive Alexandrian philosophical template, some interesting concepts as well, which were later completely dropped from Christianity.
Very interesting are the Five Catechetical Lectures of Cyril of Jerusalem (around 350 A.D.) in which the incomplete and modified endowment enjoyed a brief resurgence. The manner in which this compliments the modern Endowment is startling, but the form is clearly corrupt. The entire thing disappeared after Cyril.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
- Thomas S. Monson