Tuesday, May 7, 2024

John F. McCue on the Importance of the City of Rome in Early Christianity

  

Ignatius of Antioch’s address to Rome as prokathēmenē tēs aghathēs—“pre-eminent in love”—coupled with his identification of Rome as hētis . . . prokathētai en tropō chōriou Rōmaiōn indicates that Rome already enjoys a reputation for some kind of eminence or leadership. Ignatius here goes well beyond the conventional praise that one finds in most early Christian correspondence.

 

First we may call attention to the often noted fact that in the course of the second century confrontation between orthodoxy and heresy a remarkable number of heresiarchs and heretics made their way to Rome. That Marcion spent a considerable period of time in Rome is widely attested and seems beyond doubt. Valentinus also spent much of his life there, as did Cerdo and Mercellina. None of these was native to Rome, but each seems to have come there to learn or to teach. Similarly, orthodox and anti-gnostic writers also came to Rome as so some kind of center, Justin and Hegessippus from Palestine, Irenaeus and Polycarp from Asia Minor.

 

But this could not be interpreted as indicating an implicit view of the primacy of Rome and its bishop on the part of either the heretics or the orthodox. Similar clustering of heretics can also be noted at Alexandria. And just as the orthodox Justin comes to Rome, so the more or less orthodox Clement finds his way to Alexandria. Rome and Alexandria were in fact the two principal centers from religious-intellectual teaching in the Mediterranean world; and it is not altogether superfluous to note that the career of the greatest non-Christian philosopher of late antiquity, Plotinus, was spent almost entirely in just these two cities.

 

Throughout the course of the third century we continue to see leaders of heretical movements coming to Rome (cf. Hippolytus, Ref. 9.8), yet it remains a question whether this should be interpreted as a recognition of Roman primacy. The eminence of Rome as capital and largest city of the world, its position as an intellectual center, the influence exerted by the church at Rome as far away as Asia Minor, North Africa, and Gaul, the identification of Rome as the church of Peter and Paul, the apostles par excellence, are presumably all factors in this Rome-ward tendency. (James F. McCue, “The Beginnings Through Nicaea,” in Papal Primacy and the Universal Church, ed. Paul C. Empie and T. Austin Murphy [Lutherans and Catholics in Dialogue V; Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1974], 65-66)

 

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