Tumgik
#tertullian
janersm · 3 months
Quote
You can judge the quality of their faith from the way they behave. Discipline is an index to doctrine.
Tertullian
582 notes · View notes
church-history · 1 year
Text
Geological and Historical Evidence for Jesus’ Crucifixion Account
Tumblr media
At Jesus’ crucifixion, Matthew (27:45-54) reported “From noon until three in the afternoon darkness came over all the land. About three in the afternoon Jesus cried out in a loud voice ‘My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’ (cf., Psalm 22)…And when Jesus had cried out again in a loud voice, he gave up his spirit. At that moment, the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom. The earth shook, the rocks split and the tombs broke open. The bodies of many holy people who had died were raised to life. They came out of the tombs after Jesus’ resurrection and went into the holy city and appeared to many people. When the centurion and those with him who were guarding Jesus saw the earthquake and all that happened, they were terrified, and exclaimed, ‘Surely he was the son of God!’”
Matthew’s passage includes two events that can be historically and geologically confirmed: (1) Darkness covered the land for three hours (c.f., Matthew 27:45; Mark 15:33; Luke 23:44-45) and (2) An earthquake occurred.
“At that same moment about noontide, the day was withdrawn; and they, who knew not that this was foretold concerning Christ, thought it was an eclipse. But this you have in your archives; you can read it there. Yet nailed upon the cross, Christ exhibited many notable signs, by which his death was distinguished from all others. At his own free-will, he with a word dismissed from him his spirit, anticipating the executioners’ work. In the same hour, too, the light of day was withdrawn, when the sun at the very time was in his meridian blaze. Those who were not aware that this had been predicted about Christ, no doubt thought it was an eclipse.” 
-  Tertullian (197 AD), Jewish Consul
“In the 4th year of the 202nd Olympiad, there was a great eclipse of the sun, greater than had ever been known before, for at the 6th hour the day was changed into night and the stars were seen in the heavens. An earthquake occurred in Bythinia and overthrew a great part of the city of Nicaea.”
- Phlegon (2nd century AD) Greek historian, “Olympiads”
“With regard to the eclipse in the time of Tiberius Caesar, in whose reign Jesus appears to have been crucified, and the great earthquakes which then took place, Phlegon too I think has written in the 13th or 14th book of his Chronicles…Celsus imagines also that both the earthquake and darkness were an invention, but regarding these, we have in the preceding pages made our defense, according to our ability, adducing the testimony of Phlegon, who relates that these events took place at the time when our Savior suffered.” 
- Origen (184 – 253 AD), Greek scholar and early Christian father who confirmed Phlegon’s writings
“Jesus Christ underwent his passion in the 18th year of Tiberius [33 AD]. Also at that time in another Greek compendium we find an event recorded in these words: ‘the sun was eclipsed, Bithynia was struck by an earthquake, and in the city of Nicaea many buildings fell.”
- Eusebius (315 AD), Historian of the Emperor Constantine.
What Caused the Three-hour Period of Darkness?
Before determining that the three-hour period of darkness is due to supernatural causes, we must rule out the natural possibilities. We have experienced natural events that have caused darkness during the daylight hours. These include when volcanoes erupt and emit dark clouds and when storms occur and cover the sky with clouds. Yet no Biblical or secular sources indicate any support for a volcanic explosion or storms, so we can rule out those two natural events.
What about an eclipse? The positioning of the sun and moon is required to answer this question. We have much support for the dating of Jesus’ crucifixion on Friday the 14th of Nissan in the year 33 (April 3, 33). This date was further predicted in the book of Daniel (9). Passovers only occurred during a full moon, so an eclipse would not have been possible due to the moon’s location on the far side of the earth away from the sun. Even if the positioning were conducive to an eclipse, eclipses only darken the earth for short moments, not for three hours, so we have another reason to rule out that natural option.
Is the Best Explanation to Explain this Event a Supernatural Explanation?
I will let readers answer that question for themselves.
Geological Support for the Earthquake                                     
Tumblr media
Scholars have reported that devastating earthquakes occurred in Jerusalem during Christ’s death (Mallet, 1853; Rigg, 1941). This occurred in a region that includes the Dead Sea fault, which is a plate boundary that separates the Arabian plate and the Sinai sub-plate (Garfunkel, 1981). This fault has been active since the Miocene (Kagan, Stein, Agnon, & Neuman, 2011) and the fault is still active today (De Liso & Fidani, 2014). The fault extends from the Red Sea in the south to the Taurus Mountains in the north.
Tumblr media
Kagan and colleagues (2011) analyzed seismites in the Holocene Dead Sea basin by constructing two age-depth chronological models based on atmospheric radiocarbon ages of short-lived organic debris with a Bayesian model. Seismites are sedimentary beds and structures, which are deformed by seismic shaking. The scholars analyzed seismites in different areas of the basin, finding that several synchronous seismites appeared in all sections during particular years, including 33 AD (+/- 2 sigma; 95% confidence interval). Other years in which earthquakes occurred as evidenced by seismites are (AD unless otherwise noted): 1927, 1293, 1202/1212, 749, 551, 419, 33, 31 BC, and mid-century B.C.
After analyzing laminated sedimentary cores recovered at the shores of the Dead Sea, Migowski, Agnon, Bookman, Negendank, and Stein (2004) also confirmed an earthquake in 33 AD with a magnitude of 5.5. They documented earthquakes around 33 AD in 31 BC and 76 AD. The scholars analyzed seismites using radiocarbon dating.
Ben-Menahem (2014) conducted a literature review of empirical studies over 4,000 years of seismicity along the Dead Sea Rift. The scholar referenced the aforementioned studies along with one by Enzel, Kadan, and Eyal (2000) before concluding that earthquakes occurred in Masada in 31 BC, Jerusalem in 33 AD, and near Nablus in 64 AD.
In summary, the literature on seismicity along the Dead Sea basin supports the assertion that an earthquake occurred either in or very close to the year 33 AD.
We can pinpoint the date even closer – to April 3, 33. A United States government federal agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, has documented the major earthquakes throughout history. According to their website (NOAA.gov), in 33 AD, an earthquake occurred at the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in Bithynia and Palestine and Palestine, Jerusalem.
Conclusion
In summary, we have extensive extra-biblical support for the accounts of darkness and the earthquake during Jesus’ crucifixion. Taken together, these events support the historicity of the account of Jesus’ crucifixion.
source: abbreviated from  https://christian-apologist.com/2019/01/05/geological-and-historical-evidence-for-jesus-crucifixion-account/
268 notes · View notes
apenitentialprayer · 3 months
Text
There is then, besides the evil which supervenes on the soul from the intervention of the evil spirit, an antecedent, and in a certain sense natural, evil which arises from its corrupt origin. […] Still, there is a portion of good in the soul, of that original, divine, genuine good, which is its proper nature. For that which is derived from God is obscured rather than extinguished. It can be obscured, because it is not God; extinguished, however, it cannot be, because it comes from God. […] Thus some men are very bad, and some very good; but yet the souls of all form but one genus; even in the worst there is something good, and in the best there is something bad.
- Tertullian of Carthage (On the Soul, Chapter 41)
No one is all good or bad. I know this, of course. I had to learn it at a young age. But sometimes it's easy to forget just how true it is. That it applies to everyone.
Until you're sitting in front of the woman who put your father's dead body in the driver's seat of a car to save the reputation of her best friend — and you realize she held on to a letter for almost three decades because she wanted you to know how much you were loved.
- Monique Grant (Taylor Reid's The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, pages 366-367)
6 notes · View notes
catholicpriestmedia · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
"The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church." - #Tertullian
September 16 is the #FeastDays of Saints Cornelius (Pope) and Cyprian (Bishop), Martyrs. #HolyMartyrs 
📷 Crown of Thorns / © AIPortraiture / #GettyImages. #Catholic_Priest #CatholicPriestMedia #CanvaPro
7 notes · View notes
dramoor · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
(Via Gebre Menfes Kidus)
12 notes · View notes
eternal-echoes · 1 year
Text
Tertullian, addressing the Roman Empire:
“We are not a new philosophy but a divine revelation. That’s why you can’t just exterminate us; the more you kill the more we are. The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church. You praise those who endured pain and death – so long as they aren’t Christians! Your cruelties merely prove our innocence of the crimes you charge against us… And you frustrate your purpose. Because those who see us die, wonder why we do, for we die like the men you revere, not like slaves or criminals. And when they find out, they join us.”
15 notes · View notes
hillbilly-thomist · 1 year
Quote
The truth is that the flesh is the very condition on which salvation hinges. And since the soul is, in consequence of its salvation, chosen for the service of God, it is the flesh which actually renders it capable of such service. The flesh, indeed, is washed, in order that the soul may be cleansed; the flesh is anointed, that the soul may be consecrated; the flesh is signed (with the cross), that the soul too may be fortified; the flesh is shadowed with the imposition of hands, that the soul also may be illuminated by the Spirit; the flesh feeds on the body and blood of Christ, that the soul likewise may fatten on its God.
Tertullian, De Resurrectione Carnis
4 notes · View notes
Text
What are we to think of it, that most people so blindly knock their heads against the hatred of the Christian name; that when they bear favourable testimony to any one, they mingle with it abuse of the name he bears? A good man, says one, is Gaius Seius, only that he is a Christian. So another, I am astonished that a wise man like Lucius should have suddenly become a Christian. Nobody thinks it needful to consider whether Gaius is not good and Lucius wise, on this very account that he is a Christian; or a Christian, for the reason that he is wise and good. They praise what they know, they abuse what they are ignorant of, and they inspire their knowledge with their ignorance
-Apologeticus by Tertullian (3rd century Church Father)
4 notes · View notes
poetailurofilica · 2 years
Text
Farsa tertulia
El alba besa al horizonte Y sin rumbo aparente Vuelan feroces Las gaviotas imberbes
Mientras los alcornoques Avanzan inertes Hacia los pies de las nubes Al son del clarinete
Al otro lado del mundo Yace el silencioso orgullo Que en fugitivos segundos Escapó del augurio
Saben las mareas Y aún así trepan la vereda Arenosas muecas De una claridad serena
Se la pasan revoloteando Y de vez, de tanto en tanto, Cae algún que otro rayo UltravioleNta
-¿A qué le debo esta visita?- Dijo la cornisa Y un sol trémulo y sonrojado Dió la vuelta a la esquina
Esquivando hidrometeoros A toda prisa El día más corto Refunfuñó a su nodriza
Más temprano que tarde El ocaso abrazó su despedida Pintando en el aire Frías gotas de agonía
Todo aquello en "buen plan" Así lo quieren recordar Himno que ahora Otros han de cantar
© Todos los derechos reservados
13 notes · View notes
anastpaul · 2 years
Text
Quote/s of the Day – 12 June – ' ... In all our undertakings ...'
Quote/s of the Day – 12 June – ‘ … In all our undertakings …’
Quote/s of the Day – 12 June – Trinity Sunday “In all our undertakings –when we enter a place or leave it,before we dress,before we bathe,when we take our meals,when we light the lamps in the evening,before we retire at night,when we sit down to read,before each new task —we trace the Sign of the Cross on our foreheads” Tertullian (c155- c240)Father of the Church In the Name of the Father, Son…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
7 notes · View notes
barbelo-babe · 1 year
Text
World would be in a better place is Valentinus had become pope don’t know how but it would
3 notes · View notes
jackass-noir · 2 months
Text
“For if we regard the world itself as a prison, we shall deem you rather to have gone forth from prison than to have gone into prison. The world has a greater darkness which blindeth the hearts of men. The world puts on the heavier chains which bind the very souls of men.”
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Tertullian, An Address to the Martyrs. // Jevil, Deltarune.
1 note · View note
mkbtheologie · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
apenitentialprayer · 8 days
Text
Prayer is the one thing that can conquer God.
Tertullian of Carthage (On Prayer, Chapter 29) Original Latin: sola est oratio quae Deum vincit.
3 notes · View notes
catholicpriestmedia · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
"The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church." - #Tertullian
March 7 is the Feast of Saints Perpetua and Felicity, Martyrs. #SaintsoftheDay #OrateProNobis
📷 Crown of Thorns / © AIPortraiture / #GettyImages. #Catholic_Priest #CatholicPriestMedia #PeaceNow #SeasonofLent2024 #TheSeasonofLent #Lent2024
6 notes · View notes
dramoor · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
“Our religion commands us to love even our enemies, and to pray for those who persecute us.   For everyone loves those who love them.   It is unique to Christians to love those who hate them.”
~Tertullian
(Image by Katia Berestova reblogged from vonsalomon)
16 notes · View notes