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Tertullian - Moral Principles: |  | Tertullian - Moral Principles:: Encyclopedia II - Tertullian - Moral Principles: |  | Tertullian was a determined advocate of strict discipline and an austere code of practise, and like many of the African fathers, one of the leading representatives of the rigorist element in the early Church. These views may have led him to adopt Montanism with its ascetic rigor and its belief in chiliasm and the continuance of the prophetic gifts. In his writings on public amusements, the veiling of virgins, the conduct of women, a ...
See also:Tertullian, Tertullian - Life, Tertullian - Writings, Tertullian - General Character, Tertullian - Chronology and Contents, Tertullian - Theology, Tertullian - General character, Tertullian - Specific teachings, Tertullian - Moral Principles:, Tertullian - Footnotes |  | | Tertullian, Tertullian - Chronology and Contents, Tertullian - Footnotes, Tertullian - General Character, Tertullian - General character, Tertullian - Life, Tertullian - Moral Principles:, Tertullian - Specific teachings, Tertullian - Theology, Tertullian - Writings, English translation of Tertullian's writings can be found in volume III of the Ante-Nicene Fathers. |  | |
|  |  | Tertullian: Encyclopedia II - Tertullian - Moral Principles:
Tertullian - Moral Principles:
Tertullian was a determined advocate of strict discipline and an austere code of practise, and like many of the African fathers, one of the leading representatives of the rigorist element in the early Church. These views may have led him to adopt Montanism with its ascetic rigor and its belief in chiliasm and the continuance of the prophetic gifts. In his writings on public amusements, the veiling of virgins, the conduct of women, and the like, he gives expression to these views.
On the principle that we should not look at or listen to what we have no right to practise, and that polluted things, seen and touched, pollute (De spectaculis, viii., xvii.), he declared a Christian should abstain from the theater and the amphitheater. There pagan religious rites were applied and the names of pagan divinities invoked; there the precepts of modesty, purity, and humanity were ignored or set aside, and there no place was offered to the onlookers for the cultivation of the Christian graces. Women should put aside their gold and precious stones as ornaments (De cultu, v.-vi.), and virgins should conform to the law of St. Paul for women and keep themselves strictly veiled (De virginibus velandis). He praised the unmarried state as the highest (De monogamia, xvii.; Ad uxorem, i. 3), called upon Christians not to allow themselves to be excelled in the virtue of celibacy by Vestal Virgins and Egyptian priests, and he pronounced second marriage a species of adultery (De exhortations castitatis, ix.).
If Tertullian went to an unhealthy extreme in his counsels of asceticism, he is easily forgiven when one recalls his own moral vigor and his great services as an ingenuous and intrepid defender of the Christian religion, which with him, as later with Martin Luther, was first and chiefly an experience of his own heart. Because of his schism with the Church, he, like the great Alexandrian Father, Origen, has failed to receive the honor of canonization.
Other related archives155, 197, 198, 207, 230, 814, 9th century, Adolf Harnack, Aesculapius, Ante-Nicene Fathers, Apologeticus, Aristotle, Athens, Augustine, B. B. Warfield, Bonwetsch, Carthage, Christianity, Church of Rome, Cyprian, Eusebius of Caesarea, Gnosticism, Holy Spirit, Homoousios, Hypostases, Jerome, Jerusalem, Koine Greek, Latin, Marcion, Martin Luther, Montanism, Montanistic, Montanists, Origen, Paul Tillich, Personae, Plato, Pliny, Pythagoreans, Roman army, Satan, Septimius Severus, Socrates, Stoicism, Trinity, Tunisia, anglicized, baptism, burden of proof, ca., canonization, chiliasm, heretical, heterodox, ichthys, metempsychosis, novum testamentum/new testament, patripassianism, penance, realism, reincarnation, religious liberty, rigor, sainthood, soteriology, traducianism, una Substantia, vetus testamentum/old testament
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Moral Principles:", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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