What
did early Christians believe about...?
(Before
400 AD)
Uninspired
records of how early Christians worshipped and what doctrine they believed!
What Christians believed
about deviant sex!
- 151 AD Justin Martyr "[W]e have been
taught that to expose newly-born children is the part of wicked men; and
this we have been taught lest we should do anyone harm and lest we should
sin against God, first, because we see that almost all so exposed (not
only the girls, but also the males) are brought up to prostitution. And
for this pollution a multitude of females and hermaphrodites, and those
who commit unmentionable iniquities, are found in every nation. And you
receive the hire of these, and duty and taxes from them, whom you ought to
exterminate from your realm. And any one who uses such persons, besides
the godless and infamous and impure intercourse, may possibly be having
intercourse with his own child, or relative, or brother. And there are
some who prostitute even their own children and wives, and some are openly
mutilated for the purpose of sodomy; and they refer these mysteries to the
mother of the gods" (First Apology 27).
- 181 AD Theophilus of Antioch "Give
studious attention to the prophetic writings [the Bible] and they will
lead you on a clearer path to escape the eternal punishments and to obtain
the eternal good things of God.. [God] will examine everything and will
judge justly, granting recompense to each according to merit. To those who
seek immortality by the patient exercise of good works, he will give
everlasting life, joy, peace, rest, and all good things.. For the
unbelievers and for the contemptuous, and for those who do not submit to
the truth but assent to iniquity, when they have been involved in adulteries,
and fornications, and homosexualities, and avarice, and in lawless
idolatries, there will be wrath and indignation, tribulation and anguish;
and in the end, such men as these will be detained in everlasting
fire" (To Autolycus 1:14).
- 190 AD Clement of Alexandria "All
honor to that king of the Scythians, whoever Anacharsis was, who shot with
an arrow one of his subjects who imitated among the Scythians the mystery
of the mother of the gods . . . condemning him as having become effeminate
among the Greeks, and a teacher of the disease of effeminacy to the rest
of the Scythians" ... [According to Greek myth] Baubo [a female
native of Elusis] having received [the goddess] Demeter hospitably,
reached to her a refreshing draught; and on her refusing it, not having
any inclination to drink (for she was very sad), and Baubo having become
annoyed, thinking herself slighted, uncovered her shame, and exhibited her
nudity to the goddess. Demeter is delighted with the sight--pleased, I
repeat, at the spectacle. These are the secret mysteries of the Athenians;
these Orpheus records" ... "It is not, then, without reason that
the poets call him [Hercules] a cruel wretch and a nefarious scoundrel. It
were tedious to recount his adulteries of all sorts, and debauching of
boys. For your gods did not even abstain from boys, one having loved
Hylas, another Hyacinthus, another Pelops, another Chrysippus, another
Ganymede. Let such gods as these be worshipped by your wives, and let them
pray that their husbands be such as these--so temperate; that, emulating
them in the same practices, they may be like the gods. Such gods let your
boys be trained to worship, that they may grow up to be men with the
accursed likeness of fornication on them received from the gods"
(Exhortation to the Greeks 2).
- 220AD Tertullian "[A]ll other
frenzies of the lusts which exceed the laws of nature, and are impious
toward both [human] bodies and the sexes, we banish, not only from the
threshold but also from all shelter of the Church, for they are not sins
so much as monstrosities" (Modesty 4).
- 250 AD Novatian "[God forbid the
Jews to eat certain foods for symbolic reasons:] For that in fishes the
roughness of scales is regarded as constituting their cleanness; rough,
and rugged, and unpolished, and substantial, and grave manners are
approved in men; while those that are without scales are unclean, because
trifling, and fickle, and faithless, and effeminate manners are
disapproved. Moreover, what does the Law mean when it . . . forbids the
swine to be taken for food? It assuredly reproves a life filthy and dirty,
and delighting in the garbage of vice . . . Or when it forbids the hare?
It rebukes men deformed into women" (The Jewish Foods 3).
- 253 AD Cyprian of Carthage "[T]urn
your looks to the abominations, not less to be deplored, of another kind
of spectacle . . . Men are emasculated, and all the pride and vigor of
their sex is effeminated in the disgrace of their enervated body; and he
is more pleasing there who has most completely broken down the man into
the woman. He grows into praise by virtue of his crime; and the more he is
degraded, the more skillful he is considered to be. Such a one is looked
upon--oh shame!--and looked upon with pleasure. . . . nor is there wanting
authority for the enticing abomination . . . that Jupiter of theirs [is]
not more supreme in dominion than in vice, inflamed with earthly love in
the midst of his own thunders . . . now breaking forth by the help of
birds to violate the purity of boys. And now put the question: Can he who
looks upon such things be healthy-minded or modest? Men imitate the gods
whom they adore, and to such miserable beings their crimes become their
religion" (Letters 1:8).
- 253 AD Cyprian of Carthage "Oh, if
placed on that lofty watch-tower, you could gaze into the secret
places--if you could open the closed doors of sleeping chambers and recall
their dark recesses to the perception of sight--you would behold things
done by immodest persons which no chaste eye could look upon; you would
see what even to see is a crime; you would see what people embruted with
the madness of vice deny that they have done, and yet hasten to do--men
with frenzied lusts rushing upon men, doing things which afford no
gratification even to those who do them" (Letters 1:9).
- 305 AD Arnobius "[T]he mother of the
gods loved [the boy Attis] exceedingly, because he was of most surpassing
beauty; and Acdestis [the son of Jupiter] who was his companion, as he
grew up fondling him, and bound to him by wicked compliance with his lust
. . . Afterwards, under the influence of wine, he [Attis] admits that he
is . . . loved by Acdestis . . . Then Midas, king of Pessinus, wishing to
withdraw the youth from so disgraceful an intimacy, resolves to give him
his own daughter in marriage . . . Acdestis, bursting with rage because of
the boy's being torn from himself and brought to seek a wife, fills all
the guests with frenzied madness; the Phrygians shriek, panic-stricken at
the appearance of the gods . . . [Attis] too, now filled with furious
passion, raving frantically and tossed about, throws himself down at last,
and under a pine tree mutilates himself, saying, `Take these, Acdestis,
for which you have stirred up so great and terribly perilous
commotions'" (Against the Pagans 5:6-7).
- 319 AD Eusebius of Caesarea
"[H]aving forbidden all unlawful marriage, and all unseemly practice,
and the union of women with women and men with men, he [God] adds: `Do not
defile yourselves with any of these things; for in all these things the
nations were defiled, which I will drive out before you. And the land was
polluted, and I have recompensed [their] iniquity upon it, and the land is
grieved with them that dwell upon it' [Lev. 18:24-25]" (Proof of the
Gospel 4:10).
- 367 AD Basil the Great "He who is
guilty of unseemliness with males will be under discipline for the same
time as adulterers" (Letters 217:62).
- 373 AD Basil the Great "If you [O,
monk] are young in either body or mind, shun the companionship of other
young men and avoid them as you would a flame. For through them the enemy
has kindled the desires of many and then handed them over to eternal fire,
hurling them into the vile pit of the five cities under the pretense of
spiritual love.. At meals take a seat far from other young men. In lying
down to sleep let not their clothes be near yours, but rather have an old
man between you. When a young man converses with you, or sings psalms
facing you, answer him with eyes cast down, lest perhaps by gazing at his
face you receive a seed of desire sown by the enemy and reap sheaves of
corruption and ruin. Whether in the house or in a place where there is no
one to see your actions, be not found in his company under the pretense
either of studying the divine oracles or of any other business whatsoever,
however necessary" (The Renunciation of the World).
- 390 AD John Chrysostom "[The pagans]
were addicted to the love of boys, and one of their wise men made a law
that pederasty . . . should not be allowed to slaves, as if it was an
honorable thing; and they had houses for this purpose, in which it was
openly practiced. And if all that was done among them was related, it
would be seen that they openly outraged nature, and there was none to
restrain them. . . . As for their passion for boys, whom they called their
'paedica,' it is not fit to be named" (Homilies on Titus 5).
- 391 AD John Chrysostom "[Certain men
in church] come in gazing about at the beauty of women; others curious
about the blooming youth of boys. After this, do you not marvel that
[lightning] bolts are not launched [from heaven], and all these things are
not plucked up from their foundations? For worthy both of thunderbolts and
hell are the things that are done; but God, who is long-suffering, and of
great mercy, forbears awhile his wrath, calling you to repentance and
amendment" (Homilies on Matthew 3:3).
- 391 AD John Chrysostom "All of these
affections [in Rom. 1:26-27] . . . were vile, but chiefly the mad lust
after males; for the soul is more the sufferer in sins, and more
dishonored than the body in diseases" ... "[The men] have done
an insult to nature itself. And a yet more disgraceful thing than these is
it, when even the women seek after these intercourses, who ought to have
more shame than men" ... "And sundry other books of the
philosophers one may see full of this disease. But we do not therefore say
that the thing was made lawful, but that they who received this law were
pitiable, and objects for many tears. For these are treated in the same
way as women that play the whore. Or rather their plight is more
miserable. For in the case of the one the intercourse, even if lawless, is
yet according to nature; but this is contrary both to law and nature. For
even if there were no hell, and no punishment had been threatened, this
would be worse than any punishment" (Homilies on Romans 4).
- 400AD Augustine "[T]hose shameful
acts against nature, such as were committed in Sodom, ought everywhere and
always to be detested and punished. If all nations were to do such things,
they would be held guilty of the same crime by the law of God, which has
not made men so that they should use one another in this way"
(Confessions 3:8:15).
- 400 AD The Apostolic Constitutions
"[Christians] abhor all unlawful mixtures, and that which is
practiced by some contrary to nature, as wicked and impious"
(Apostolic Constitutions 6:11).
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