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Christianity : The Early Church And The Dawn Of The Reformation

Decent Essays

Since its inception, various leaders have contributed to the overall development of the Christian Church, thereby effecting change and defining the trajectory of the Church as it stands today. In The Story of Christianity: The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation, Justo González points to two apostles—Peter and Paul, or Saul—as exemplars of such leadership, and the evidence suggests that both of these men had a considerable influence on the evolution of the Church. Concerning credentials, both apostles were more than qualified to drive the advancement of the Church. Paul, for instance, writes in Galatians 2:9 that Peter—whom the Roman Catholic Church considers the first pope—was an “acknowledged pillar” in the early Church (González, 28). Likewise, Christian scripture demonstrates the importance of Paul, mainly evidenced by the Epistles that he wrote such as First Thessalonians, Philippians, Philemon, First Corinthians, Galatians, Second Corinthians, and Romans. González, therefore, argues that the Pauline epistles merit the Apostle’s “greatest and most unique contribution to the shaping of early Christianity,” even contending that these letters “have had a decisive and continuing impact on the life and thought of the Christian church” (33). While one could clearly assert that either apostle has had a great impact on the development of the Church, Paul has played an extensive role concerning the beginning of Christian philosophy and the study and practice thereof,

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