http://www.tektonics.org/guest/watchtrin.htm by Michael J. Partyka
Now that we’ve explored the testimony of the ante-Nicene Church
Fathers concerning the Trinity, what can we conclude?
First, given the overwhelming evidence, we must conclude that the
doctrine of the Trinity was not “unknown” for several centuries after
biblical times, as the Watchtower would have us believe. We must
additionally conclude that, contrary to the Watchtower’s implications,
the ante-Nicene Church Fathers cited by them – Justin Martyr,
Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, Hippolytus, and Origen –
were all Trinitarians, as all of them believed that Jesus is of the
same substance as God, thereby making him co-equal and co-eternal with
the Father.
Given these conclusions, it is now appropriate to ask a critical
question: Why would the Watchtower attempt to use the writings of
these Church Fathers to support their anti-Trinitarian views? Did
they simply not know that these Fathers were Trinitarians – i.e., can
the Watchtower claim ignorance for an excuse?
Let’s look at some of the quotations selected by the Watchtower and
see if the excuse of ignorance holds up.
Justin Martyr…called the prehuman Jesus a created angel who is “other
than the God who made all things.” He said that Jesus…“never did
anything except what the Creator…willed him to do and say.”
These quotes are taken from Chapter 56 of Justin’s Dialogue with
Trypho, but, as we have shown above, this chapter is the exact same
passage in which Justin Martyr interprets Gen 19:24 to assign the name
“Jehovah” to both God the Father and Jesus! Moreover, just a few
chapters from this one we see Justin say, “God begat before all
creatures a Beginning, [who was] a certain rational power [proceeding]
from Himself…. this Offspring, which was truly brought forth from the
Father, was with the Father before all the creatures, and the Father
communed with Him; even as the Scripture by Solomon has made clear,
that He whom Solomon calls Wisdom, was begotten as a Beginning before
all His creatures and as Offspring by God….He [is] God, Son of the
only, unbegotten, unutterable God.”
Irenaeus…showed that Jesus is not equal to the “One true and only
God.”
This quote is taken from Section 3:8:1 of Irenaeus’ Against Heresies,
and the full quote is, “…it is clearly proved that neither the
prophets nor the apostles did ever name another God, or call [him]
Lord, except the true and only God.” But just a couple chapters back
Irenaeus says, “Therefore neither would the Lord, nor the Holy Spirit,
nor the apostles, have ever named as God, definitely and absolutely,
him who was not God, unless he were truly God; nor would they have
named any one in his own person Lord, except God the Father ruling
over all, and His Son who has received dominion from His Father over
all creation….” And, within the very same chapter as that from which
the quote was taken, leading into the chapter just following, he says,
“He indeed who made all things can alone, together with His Word,
properly be termed God and Lord: but the things which have been made
cannot have this term applied to them, neither should they justly
assume that appellation which belongs to the Creator. This,
therefore, having been clearly demonstrated here (and it shall yet be
so still more clearly), that neither the prophets, nor the apostles,
nor the Lord Christ in His own person, did acknowledge any other Lord
or God, but the God and Lord supreme: the prophets and the apostles
confessing the Father and the Son; but naming no other as God, and
confessing no other as Lord: and the Lord Himself handing down to His
disciples, that He, the Father, is the only God and Lord, who alone is
God and ruler of all;-it is incumbent on us to follow, if we are their
disciples indeed, their testimonies to this effect.” Finally, just a
few chapters forward from this, we have Irenaeus saying, “…they who
were the preachers of the truth and the apostles of liberty termed no
one else God, or named him Lord, except the only true God the Father,
and His Word, who has the pre-eminence in all things….”
Clement of Alexandria…called Jesus in his prehuman existence "a
creature”….
I myself was not able to find any verbatim reference in all of
Clement’s writings in which he referred to Jesus as a creature.
However, I did find that in Book 5, Chapter 14 of his work The
Stromata he says, “Wisdom…was the first of the creation of God.” But,
if the Watchtower were to claim this particular reference as the
source of their quotation, we would be obligated to ask them how they
could have possibly missed Clement’s words in the very same chapter:
“And the address in the Timœus calls the creator, Father, speaking
thus: ‘Ye gods of gods, of whom I am Father; and the Creator of your
works.’ So that when he says, ‘Around the king of all, all things
are, and because of Him are all things; and he [or that] is the cause
of all good things; and around the second are the things second in
order; and around the third, the third,’ I understand nothing else
than the Holy Trinity to be meant; for the third is the Holy Spirit,
and the Son is the second, by whom all things were made according to
the will of the Father.”
Tertullian…observed: “The Father is different from the Son (another),
as he is greater; as he who begets is different from him who is
begotten; he who sends, different from him who is sent.” He also
said: “There was a time when the Son was not….Before all things, God
was alone.”
The first quote is taken from Chapter 9 of Tertullian’s Against
Praxeus: “Thus the Father is distinct from the Son, being greater
than the Son, inasmuch as He who begets is one, and He who is begotten
is another; He, too, who sends is one, and He who is sent is another;
and He, again, who makes is one, and He through whom the thing is made
is another.” Ironically, Tertullian’s Against Praxeus is one of the
first comprehensive apologetic defenses of the Trinity in Christian
literature, so it astounds me that the Watchtower would choose to
quote from such a source, especially seeing as how in the very second
chapter of the work we find Tertullian expounding, “We…believe that
there is one only God, but under the following dispensation…that this
one only God has also a Son, His Word, who proceeded from Himself, by
whom all things were made, and without whom nothing was made…. who
sent also from heaven from the Father, according to His own promise,
the Holy Ghost, the Paraclete, the sanctifier of the faith of those
who believe in the Father, and in the Son, and in the Holy Ghost…. All
are of One, by unity (that is) of substance; while the mystery of the
dispensation is still guarded, which distributes the Unity into a
Trinity, placing in their order the three Persons-the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost: three, however, not in condition, but in degree;
not in substance, but in form; not in power, but in aspect; yet of one
substance, and of one condition, and of one power, inasmuch as He is
one God, from whom these degrees and forms and aspects are reckoned,
under the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.”
The second quote is taken from Chapter 3 of Tertullian’s Against
Hermogenes, in which he says, “I maintain that the substance existed
always with its own name, which is God….but He has not always been
Father and Judge, merely on the ground of His having always been God.
For He could not have been the Father previous to the Son, nor a Judge
previous to sin. There was, however, a time when neither sin existed
with Him, nor the Son; the former of which was to constitute the Lord
a Judge, and the latter a Father.” A cursory reading of this quote,
devoid of context, would appear to provide us with a clear-cut
profession on Tertullian’s part that there was a time that the second
person of the Trinity did not exist. However, if we take this quote
within the context of Tertullian’s whole body of work, we find that
the topic at hand in this particular quote is the names of God, not
the existence of the Son. According to Tertullian, it was not until
Jesus proceeded forth from God to create the world that Jesus properly
took for himself the name “Son,” and therefore it was not until the
creation of the world that God could be properly termed “Father.” In
other words, the second person of the Trinity, according to
Tertullian, has always existed, only under names other than
“Son” (e.g., “Reason,” “Word,” “Wisdom.”) That Tertullian believed in
the eternal, uncreated existence of Christ is apparent from the
opening chapter of Against Hermogenes, in which he criticizes the
heretic Hermogenes: “[Hermogenes] does not appear to acknowledge any
other Christ as Lord, though he holds Him in a different way; but by
this difference in his faith he really makes Him another being – nay,
he takes from Him everything which is God, since he will not have it
that He made all things of nothing. For, turning away from Christians
to the philosophers, from the Church to the Academy and the Porch, he
learned there from the Stoics how to place Matter (on the same level)
with the Lord, just as if it too had existed ever both unborn and
unmade, having no beginning at all nor end, out of which, according to
him, the Lord afterwards created all things.” Here Tertullian holds
that Jesus is “ever both unborn and unmade, having no beginning at all
nor end.”
The last quote from Tertullian selected by the Watchtower is perhaps
the most damning against any excuse they might offer that their errors
concerning the position of the Church Fathers on the Trinity are based
in ignorance. For the source of this quote we return to Tertullian’s
Against Praxeus, Chapter 5 this time: “For before all things God was
alone – being in Himself and for Himself universe, and space, and all
things. Moreover, He was alone, because there was nothing external to
Him but Himself. Yet even not then was He alone; for He had with Him
that which He possessed in Himself, that is to say, His own Reason.
For God is rational, and Reason was first in Him; and so all things
were from Himself. This Reason is His own Thought (or Consciousness)
which the Greeks call ‘logos’, by which term we also designate Word….I
may therefore without rashness first lay this down (as a fixed
principle) that even then before the creation of the universe God was
not alone, since He had within Himself…His Word, which He made second
to Himself by agitating it within Himself.” Now, given that the
Watchtower use quotes from both Chapters 5 and 8 of Against Praxeus to
attempt to support their anti-Trinitarian views, I would think it
reasonable to presume that their researchers must have read Chapters
5, 6, 7, and 8 in their entirety. How in the world, then, did these
researchers miss these very Trinitarian propositions put forward by
Tertullian a mere two sentences away from the words they judiciously
selected to support their anti-Trinitarian views?
Hippolytus…said that God is “the one God, the first and the only One,
the Maker and Lord of all,” who “had nothing co-eval [of equal age]
with him….But he was One, alone by himself; who, willing it, called
into being what had no being before,” such as the created prehuman
Jesus.
Both quotes come from Chapter 28 of Hippolytus’ Refutation of All
Heresies: “The first and only (one God), both Creator and Lord of
all, had nothing coeval with Himself; not infinite chaos, nor
measureless water, nor solid earth, nor dense air, not warm fire, nor
refined spirit, nor the azure canopy of the stupendous firmament. But
He was One, alone in Himself. By an exercise of His will He created
things that are, which antecedently had no existence, except that He
willed to make them.” Just one chapter following, however, we find
Hippolytus adding, “Therefore this solitary and supreme Deity, by an
exercise of reflection, brought forth the Logos first; not the word in
the sense of being articulated by voice, but as a ratiocination of the
universe, conceived and residing in the divine mind. Him alone He
produced from existing things; for the Father Himself constituted
existence, and the being born from Him was the cause of all things
that are produced….The Logos alone of this God is from God himself;
wherefore also the Logos is God, being the substance of God. Now the
world was made from nothing; wherefore it is not God; as also because
this world admits of dissolution whenever the Creator so wishes it.”
Origen…said that…“compared with the Father, [the Son] is a very small
light.”
Again I could find no verbatim quotation for this particular
reference. This may owe to the fact that Origen was an incredibly
prolific writer, so I was only able to get access to a selection of
his works. However, I did find a sort of parallel to the above quote
in Book 1, Chapter 2, Section 7 of Origen’s De Principiis, which
reads, “According to John, ‘God is light.’ The only-begotten Son,
therefore, is the glory of this light, proceeding inseparably from
(God) Himself, as brightness does from light, and illuminating the
whole of creation. For, agreeably to what we have already explained
as to the manner in which He is the Way, and conducts to the Father;
and in which He is the Word, interpreting the secrets of wisdom, and
the mysteries of knowledge, making them known to the rational
creation; and is also the Truth, and the Life, and the Resurrection –
in the same way ought we to understand also the meaning of His being
the brightness: for it is by its splendour that we understand and
feel what light itself is. And this splendour, presenting itself
gently and softly to the frail and weak eyes of mortals, and gradually
training, as it were, and accustoming them to bear the brightness of
the light, when it has put away from them every hindrance and
obstruction to vision, according to the Lord's own precept, ‘Cast
forth the beam out of thine eye,’ renders them capable of enduring the
splendour of the light, being made in this respect also a sort of
mediator between men and the light.” I suppose that one might look at
this analogy and interpret it to mean that “compared with the Father,
the Son is a very small light.” However, if one were to look a mere
four sections ahead, one would also find Origen having some rather
Trinitarian things to say about this “smaller light,” such as, “…
wisdom is called the splendour of eternal light….That is properly
termed everlasting or eternal which neither had a beginning of
existence, nor can ever cease to be what it is. And this is the idea
conveyed by John when he says that ‘God is light.’ Now His wisdom is
the splendour of that light, not only in respect of its being light,
but also of being everlasting light, so that His wisdom is eternal and
everlasting splendour. If this be fully understood, it clearly shows
that the existence of the Son is derived from the Father but not in
time, nor from any other beginning, except, as we have said, from God
Himself.”
So, what must we conclude from all this? We see that for almost every
quotation judiciously selected by the Watchtower from the ante-Nicene
Church Fathers, there is a wealth of material often within the same
book, sometimes within the same chapter, and in some cases even within
the same paragraph, which contradicts the Watchtower’s assertion that
the doctrine of the Trinity was “unknown” to these Church Fathers.
What are we supposed to think? That the Watchtower’s researchers took
Justin Martyr’s Dialogue with Trypho and read Chapter 56 but not
Chapter 61? That they perused Chapter 28 of Hippolytus’ Refutation of
All Heresies but skipped Chapter 29? That they read a mere five
sentences into Chapter 5 of Tertullian’s Against Praxeus and stopped
reading there, a mere two sentences before their anti-Trinitarian
views could be refuted by Tertullian’s further teaching, miraculously
choosing instead to skip to Chapter 8 and pull another quote out of
context?
It is, unfortunately, impossible to ascribe either ignorance or
carelessness to the Watchtower’s research – unfortunate, I say,
because the only option left for us to believe is that the Watchtower
has selected these quotes from the ante-Nicene Church Fathers and
placed them on their web site in support of their anti-Trinitarian
stance for the sole purpose of deliberately misleading visitors to
their web site into thinking that the early Christians had no
knowledge of the doctrine of the Trinity, when in fact the ante-Nicene
Church Fathers were Trinitarian through and through.
You’ve seen the evidence. Now judge for yourself. Is the Watchtower
being honest concerning the views of the ante-Nicene Church Fathers?
And, if not, what else are they being dishonest about?
Remember, Jesus taught, “The person unrighteous in what is least is
unrighteous also in much.” If we can’t trust the Watchtower to be
honest in their presentation of the views of the ante-Nicene Church
Fathers, can we trust them with matters of larger importance – for
example, the translation of the Scriptures? We’ve already seen how,
in the case of John 1:1, the Watchtower’s translating abilities have
been called into question by none other than the very same ante-Nicene
Church Fathers whose teachings the Watchtower deceptively attempted to
claim for their own anti-Trinitarian cause! Now, if the Watchtower
can be trusted with neither the writings of the early Church Fathers
nor the translation of the Scriptures, is there any reason to trust
them with the interpretation of the Scriptures, or with determining
the rules for Christian living, or, most importantly, with the
salvation of our very souls?
If you are a Jehovah’s Witness, I beg you to take this paper to your
elders and ask them to explain the basis of the Watchtower’s
misleading statements concerning the views of the ante-Nicene Church
Fathers. Take it all the way to the governing body themselves if you
have to. But please, please do not dismiss the evidence you have just
seen. The Watchtower’s web site contains deliberate misinformation,
and, if you are a person of good conscience, then you cannot allow
this deliberate misinformation on the Watchtower’s part to continue.
The ante-Nicene Church Fathers were not anti-Trinitarians, and the
Watchtower web site should not attempt to mislead people into
believing that they were.
APPENDIX 1: EVIDENCES OF THE CROSS
Part A: Textual Evidence
As I mentioned at the beginning of this paper, I stumbled across the
Watchtower’s misleading claims concerning the ante-Nicene Church
Fathers because I was “hopping around the Watchtower’s official web
site looking for articles supporting their rejection of the cross as a
Christian symbol – Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that Jesus was put to
death on an upright torture stake, not a t-shaped cross.” The reason
I was looking for such articles was that, during my ongoing study of
the writings of the Church Fathers, I had discovered several
references to the cross that appeared to me to be far too early to
support the Watchtower’s claim that the cross is a pagan symbol which
entered into Christianity only after much time had passed since the
death of the apostles.
Actually, the matter of whether Jesus died on a t-shaped cross or an
upright torture stake is utterly irrelevant to fundamental Christian
doctrine. However, the Watchtower uses the argument of the torture
stake over the cross to create feelings of uncertainty in people about
mainstream Christianity. After all, if mainstream Christianity is
wrong about the origin of their most cherished symbol, what else could
they be wrong about? Although the “stake vs. cross” argument is
shabby at best, it remains one of the Watchtower’s primary points of
attack on the Christian faith, and for this reason I have decided to
include as an appedix the earliest evidences for the Christian cross
which I have found in the Bible and in the literature of the ante-
Nicene Church Fathers.
The Gospel According to John (New Testament):
John 20:25 (NWT) – “Consequently the other disciples would say to
him: ‘We have seen the Lord!’ But he said to them: ‘Unless I see in
his hands the print of the nails and stick my finger into the print of
the nails and stick my hand into his side, I will certainly not
believe.’” [Emphasis added]
Episite of Barnabas (100 C.E.):
“…the cross was to express the grace [of our redemption] by the letter
Τ….”
“Here again you have an intimation concerning the cross, and Him who
should be crucified….in Moses, when Israel was attacked by
strangers….the Spirit speaks to the heart of Moses, that he should
make a figure of the cross, and of Him about to suffer thereon….Moses
therefore placed one weapon above another in the midst of the hill,
and standing upon it, so as to be higher than all the people, he
stretched forth his hands….”
Justin Martyr (died 165 C.E.):
“[The cross], as the prophet foretold, is the greatest symbol of His
power and role; as is also proved by the things which fall under our
observation. For consider all the things in the world, whether
without this form they could be administered or have any community.
For the sea is not traversed except that trophy which is called a sail
abide safe in the ship; and the earth is not ploughed without it:
diggers and mechanics do not their work, except with tools which have
this shape. And the human form differs from that of the irrational
animals in nothing else than in its being erect and having the hands
extended, and having on the face extending from the forehead what is
called the nose, through which there is respiration for the living
creature; and this shows no other form than that of the cross. And so
it was said by the prophet, ‘The breath before our face is the Lord
Christ.’ And the power of this form is shown by your own symbols on
what are called ‘vexilla’ [banners] and trophies, with which all your
state possessions are made, using these as the insignia of your power
and government, even though you do so unwittingly. And with this form
you consecrate the images of your emperors when they die, and you name
them gods by inscriptions.”
“…that lamb which was commanded to be wholly roasted was a symbol of
the suffering of the cross which Christ would undergo. For the lamb,
which is roasted, is roasted and dressed up in the form of the cross.
For one spit is transfixed right through from the lower parts up to
the head, and one across the back, to which are attached the legs of
the lamb.”
“Moses himself prayed to God, stretching out both hands…. if he gave
up any part of this sign, which was an imitation of the cross, the
people were beaten, as is recorded in the writings of Moses; but if he
remained in this form, Amalek was proportionally defeated, and he who
prevailed prevailed by the cross. For it was not because Moses so
prayed that the people were stronger, but because, while one who bore
the name of Jesus (Joshua) was in the forefront of the battle, he
himself made the sign of the cross.”
“And God by Moses shows in another way the force of the mystery of the
cross, when He said in the blessing wherewith Joseph was blessed, ‘…
Let him be glorified among his brethren; his beauty is [like] the
firstling of a bullock; his horns the horns of an unicorn: with these
shall he push the nations from one end of the earth to another.’ Now,
no one could say or prove that the horns of an unicorn represent any
other fact or figure than the type which portrays the cross. For the
one beam is placed upright, from which the highest extremity is raised
up into a horn, when the other beam is fitted on to it, and the ends
appear on both sides as horns joined on to the one horn. And the part
which is fixed in the centre, on which are suspended those who are
crucified, also stands out like a horn; and it also looks like a horn
conjoined and fixed with the other horns.”
Irenaeus of Lyons (died 200 C.E.):
“The very form of the cross, too, has five extremities, two in length,
two in breadth, and one in the middle, on which [last] the person
rests who is fixed by the nails.”
“And since He is the Word of God Almighty, who invisibly pervades the
whole creation, and encompasses its length, breadth, height, and depth
– for by the Word of God everything is administered – so too was the
Son of God crucified in these fourfold dimensions…that He might
demonstrate, by His visible form on the cross, His activity which is
on the invisible level, for it is He who illumines the ‘heights’, that
is, the things in heaven, and holds the ‘deeps’, which is beneath the
earth, and stretches the ‘length’ from the East to the West, and who
navigates the ‘breadth’ of the northern and southern regions, inviting
the dispersed from all sides to the knowledge of the Father.”
“And again, concerning His cross, Isaiah says, ‘I stretched out my
hands all the day to a disbelieving and contrary people,’ for this is
a sign of the cross.”
Octavius of Minucius Felix (210 C.E.):
“Crosses, moreover, we neither worship nor wish for. You, indeed, who
consecrate gods of wood, adore wooden crosses perhaps as parts of your
gods. For your very standards, as well as your banners; and flags of
your camp, what else are they but crosses glided and adorned? Your
victorious trophies not only imitate the appearance of a simple cross,
but also that of a man affixed to it. We assuredly see the sign of a
cross, naturally, in the ship when it is carried along with swelling
sails, when it glides forward with expanded oars; and when the
military yoke is lifted up, it is the sign of a cross; and when a man
adores God with a pure mind, with hands outstretched. Thus the sign
of the cross either is sustained by a natural reason, or your own
religion is formed with respect to it.” (Octavius, Chapter 29)
Tertullian (died 230 C.E.):
…it might be no slight solace to us in all our punishments, suffering
as we do because of these same gods, that in their making they suffer
as we do themselves. You put Christians on crosses and stakes: what
image is not formed from the clay in the first instance, set on cross
and stake? The body of your god is first consecrated on the
gibbet.” (Apology, Chapter 12)
“Every stake fixed in an upright position is a portion of the cross;
we render our adoration, if you will have it so, to a god entire and
complete. We have shown before that your deities are derived from
shapes modelled from the cross. But you also worship victories, for
in your trophies the cross is the heart of the trophy. The camp
religion of the Romans is all through a worship of the standards, a
setting the standards above all gods. Well, as those images decking
out the standards are ornaments of crosses. All those hangings of
your standards and banners are robes of crosses. I praise your zeal:
you would not consecrate crosses unclothed and unadorned.” (Apology,
Chapter 16)
“Every piece of timber which is fixed in the ground in an erect
position is a part of a cross, and indeed the greater portion of its
mass. But an entire cross is attributed to us, with its transverse
beam, of course, and its projecting seat. Now you have the less to
excuse you, for you dedicate to religion only a mutilated imperfect
piece of wood, while others consecrate to the sacred purpose a
complete structure. The truth, however, after all is, that your
religion is all cross, as I shall show. You are indeed unaware that
your gods in their origin have proceeded from this hated cross. Now,
every image, whether carved out of wood or stone, or molten in metal,
or produced out of any other richer material, must needs have had
plastic hands engaged in its formation. Well, then, this modeller,
before he did anything else, hit upon the form of a wooden cross,
because even our own body assumes as its natural position the latent
and concealed outline of a cross. Since the head rises upwards, and
the back takes a straight direction, and the shoulders project
laterally, if you simply place a man with his arms and hands
outstretched, you will make the general outline of a cross. Starting,
then, from this rudimental form and prop, as it were, he applies a
covering of clay, and so gradually completes the limbs, and forms the
body, and covers the cross within with the shape which he meant to
impress upon the clay; then from this design, with the help of
compasses and leaden moulds, he has got all ready for his image which
is to be brought out into marble, or clay, or whatever the material be
of which he has determined to make his god. (This, then, is the
process: ) after the cross-shaped frame, the clay; after the clay, the
god. In a well-understood routine, the cross passes into a god
through the clayey medium. The cross then you consecrate, and from it
the consecrated (deity) begins to derive his origin….Since, then, in
the production of your gods, you worship the cross which originates
them, here will be the original kernel and grain, from which are
propagated the wooden materials of your idolatrous images. Examples
are not far to seek. Your victories you celebrate with religious
ceremony as deities; and they are the more august in proportion to the
joy they bring you. The frames on which you hang up your trophies
must be crosses: these are, as it were, the very core of your
pageants. Thus, in your victories, the religion of your camp makes
even crosses objects of worship; your standards it adores, your
standards are the sanction of its oaths; your standards it prefers
before Jupiter himself, but all that parade of images, and that
display of pure gold, are (as so many) necklaces of the crosses. in
like manner also, in the banners and ensigns, which your soldiers
guard with no less sacred care, you have the streamers (and) vestments
of your crosses. You are ashamed, I suppose, to worship unadorned and
simple crosses.” (Ad Nationes, Book 1, Chapter 12)
“Joseph, again, himself was made a figure of Christ….For Joseph is
withal blest by his father after this form: ‘His glory (is that) of a
bull; his horns, the horns of an unicorn; on them shall he toss
nations alike unto the very extremity of the earth.’ Of course no one-
horned rhinoceros was there pointed to, nor any two-horned minotaur.
But Christ was therein signified: ‘bull,’ by reason of each of His
two characters – to some fierce, as Judge; to others gentle, as
Saviour; whose ‘horns’ were to be the extremities of the cross. For
even in a ship's yard – which is part of a cross – this is the name by
which the extremities are called; while the central pole of the mast
is a ‘unicorn.’” (An Answer to the Jews, Chapter 10; repeated in
Against Marcion, Book 3, Chapter 18)
“But, to come now to Moses, why, I wonder, did he merely at the time
when Joshua was battling against Amalek, pray sitting with hands
expanded, when, in circumstances so critical, he ought rather, surely,
to have commended his prayer by knees bended, and hands beating his
breast, and a face prostrate on the ground; except it was that there,
where the name of the Lord Jesus was the theme of speech – destined as
He was to enter the lists one day singly against the devil – the
figure of the cross was also necessary, (that figure) through which
Jesus was to win the victory?” (An Answer to the Jews, Chapter 10;
repeated in Against Marcion, Book 3, Chapter 18)
“Premising, therefore, and likewise subjoining the fact that Christ
suffered, He foretold that His just ones should suffer equally with
Him – both the apostles and all the faithful in succession; and He
signed them with that very seal of which Ezekiel spake: ‘The Lord
said unto me, Go through the gate, through the midst of Jerusalem, and
set the mark tau upon the foreheads of the men.’ Now the Greek letter
tau and our own letter T is the very form of the cross, which He
predicted would be the sign on our foreheads in the true Catholic
Jerusalem, in which, according to the twenty-first Psalm, the brethren
of Christ or children of God would ascribe glory to God the
Father….” (Against Marcion, Book 3, Chapter 22)
Part B: Archaeological Evidence
The archaeological evidence in favor of the early Christians’ usage of
the cross is even stronger than the textual evidence.
From
www.geocities.com/faithinevidence/evidence.html:
“Many ossuaries were discovered that date to the 1st century in a cave
near Bethany. Inscribed in Greek and Hebrew with names of many
Christians listed in the New testament (NT). Some had inscribed
crosses, some not. Listed names in Hebrew include: Salome, wife of
Judah (with a cross); Judah (with a cross); Simeon the Priest; Martha,
daughter of Pasach; Eleazar, son of Nathalu; and Salamston, daughter
of Simeon the Priest. In Greek: Jesus (twice repeated with a cross);
Nathaniel (with a cross)….Another found several years ago: Inscribed
with ‘Alexander, son of Simon of Cyrene,’ as well as a cross….In 1945,
many more found with crosses, 2 inscribed with name of Jesus, and one
had a coin minted in A.D. 41 for King Herod Agrippa I, indicating it
was sealed by A.D. 42.”
From
http://www.leaderu.com/theology/burialcave.html:
“The first century catacomb uncovered by archaeologist P. Bagatti on
the Mount of Olives contains inscriptions clearly indicating its use,
‘by the very first Christians in Jerusalem.’ A ‘head stone’, found
near the entrance to the first century catacomb, is inscribed with the
sign of the cross.”
From
http://www.bible.ca/D-crucifyJesus.htm:
““Historical findings have substantiated the traditional cross. One
finding is a graffito1 dating to shortly after 200 A.D., taken from
the walls of the Roman Palatine. It is a drawing of a crucified ass;
a mockery of a Christian prisoner who worships Christ. The Romans
were no doubt amused that Christians worshiped this Jesus whom they
had crucified on a cross.” In 1873 a famous French scholar, Charles
Clermant-Ganneau, reported the discovery of a burial chamber or cave
on the Mount of Olives. Inside were some 30 ossuaries (rectangular
chests made of stone) in which skeletal remains were preserved after
their bodies had disintegrated….One (ossuary) had the name ‘Judah’
associated with a cross with arms of equal length. Further, the name
‘Jesus’ occurred three times, twice in association with a cross….In
1939 excavations at Herculaneum, the sister city of Pompeii (destroyed
in 78 A.D. by volcano) produced a house where a wooden cross had been
nailed to the wall of a room. According to Buried History, (Vol. 10,
No. 1, March 1974 p. 15): ‘Below this (cross) was a cupboard with a
step in front. This has considered to be in the shape of an ara or
shrine, but could well have been used as a place of prayer….If this
interpretation is correct, and the excavators are strongly in favor of
the Christian significance of symbol and furnishings, then here we
have the example of an early house church.’”
Part C: What does the Watchtower say?
From
http://www.watchtower.org/library/rq/article_11.htm:
“Jesus did not die on a cross. He died on a pole, or a stake. The
Greek word translated ‘cross’ in many Bibles meant just one piece of
timber. The symbol of the cross comes from ancient false religions.
The cross was not used or worshiped by the early Christians.”
The Watchtower is correct in a couple of things.
First, the word stauros does generally mean “stake” rather than
“cross”, but, according to every source I’ve come across, there was no
Greek work for “cross”. Hence, the word for “stake” was used by Greek
speakers as the closest approximation to “cross”, and it was
understood by the first-century audience of the NT that “cross” was
what was meant by stauros. (And, of course, anybody in the first
century with access to either a living apostle or a witness to Jesus’
execution could have received clarification if they needed it.)
Second, it is true that the cross was not “worshipped” by the early
Christians, but that’s because the cross has never been worshipped by
any Christians at any time, even today. God alone is an appropriate
object of Christian worship.
As for whether the early Christians used the cross, we have seen both
archaeological and textual evidence that they did indeed.
Interestingly, the archaeological evidence had been known both before
the Watchtower’s ban on the cross in 1931 (with the 1873 discovery of
cross-inscribed ossuaries in Bethany) and after the ban (with the 1939
discovery of a first-century Christian home church in Pompeii with a
wooden cross hanging on the wall, and with the 1945 discovery of more
cross-inscribed ossuaries definitively dated to 42 C.E. – a mere
twelve years after Jesus’ crucifixion).
As for the textual evidence, the Apostle Thomas’ words in John 20:25
provide an indication of the cross, as he says in that verse, “Unless
I see in his hands the print of the nails and stick my finger into the
print of the nails and stick my hand into his side, I will certainly
not believe.” (In the depictions of Jesus’ death I’ve seen on the
Watchtower web site, only one nail is used to fasten both of Jesus’
wrists to the stake, but Thomas indicates the use of more than one
nail, which would be more reasonably expected if Jesus were nailed to
a cross rather than a stake.) The Epistle of Barnabas, dated 100
C.E., demonstrates belief that the cross was the instrument of Jesus’
execution only a few years after the death of the Apostle John. And
moving forward into the second and third centuries of Christianity,
still more textual evidence supporting the cross can be found in the
works of Justin Martyr – “For the lamb…is roasted and dressed up in
the form of the cross. For one spit is transfixed right through from
the lower parts up to the head, and one across the back, to which are
attached the legs of the lamb” – Irenaeus of Lyons – “The very form of
the cross…has five extremities, two in length, two in breadth, and one
in the middle, on which [last] the person rests who is fixed by the
nails” – and Tertullian – “Now the Greek letter tau and our own letter
T is the very form of the cross.” (Ironically, all three of these
ante-Nicene Church Fathers belong to that same group improperly cited
by the Watchtower to support their anti-Trinitarian views!)
So, the notion that the symbol of the cross was not a part of
Christianity until the fourth century (which is what the average
Jehovah’s Witness believes) is easily disproved by textual and
archaeological evidence that is not only readily available to us today
but has also been available to Watchtower scholars and officials for
over 100 years.
Given this, what rational basis does the Watchtower give its adherents
for their rejection of the cross as a Christian symbol? It would be
understandable if the Watchtower were to say, “Yes, Jesus died on a
cross – the textual and archaelogical evidence affirm this – but
because Christendom has become so corrupt that the cross has lost its
meaning, we’re going to discontinue the use of the cross in our
worship and imagery.” That would be a plausible explanation.
However, that’s not what the Watchtower professes to believe on its
web site (and according to the home page
http://www.watchtower.org/,
“This is the authoritative web site about the beliefs, teachings, and
activities of Jehovah's Witnesses”). It professes instead:
1) Jesus did not die on a cross. He died on a pole, or a stake.
2) The cross was not used by the early Christians.
As we have seen, neither of these statements is true according to all
the textual and archaeological evidence.
For the Watchtower to, in spite of all the readily-available textual
and archaeological evidence, deny – and, moreover, force their
adherents to deny – that (1) Jesus died on a cross and that (2) the
early Christians used the cross as a symbol of Christianity is,
frankly, both dishonest and wrong.
APPENDIX 2: SUGGESTED READING
www.ccel.org – Christian Classics Ethereal Library: contains a wealth
of online resources, including an online copy of all 38 volumes of the
Early Church Fathers, including works from the Ante-Nicene, Nicene,
and Post-Nicene eras. All quotes from the Fathers which I pulled into
this document came from CCEL.
The Forgotten Trinity by Dr. James White – An excellent, concise book
which both explains and defends the doctrine of the Trinity.
A Brief Description of the Trinity – A short excerpt from The
Forgotten Trinity which gives the basics of Trinitarian doctrine.
Historical Dishonesty and the Watchtower Society – One thing that
caught my eye about the Watchtower’s article is that it didn’t attempt
to reference any Church Fathers prior to Justin Martyr, although the
writings of several – e.g., Clement of Rome, Ignatius, Polycarp,
Mathetes, “Barnabas,” Hermas, and Papias – are still extant.
Apparently, the reason for this is that the Watchtower had tried
appropriating the earlier Fathers for themselves once before and had
been soundly trounced for it. This article tells the particular story
of the Watchtower’s mishandling of the works of Ignatius, a first
century bishop of Antioch.