Bible Knowledge Graph

Tertullian

Entity ID:
tertullian
Long Name:
Tertullien, 0155?-0222?
Short Name:
Tertullian
Disambiguation String:
Prolific early Christian author from Carthage
Entity Type:
person
Entity Subtype:
author
crossroadsinitiative.com
Summary:

Tertullian, son of a Roman centurion from North Africa, was born around 160A.D. He received a good education in literature and thetoric and probably practiced law for a while before being converted to Christianity around the year 197A.D. It is the Church Father St. Jerome who tells us that Tertullian became a priest, but there are some indications that he may have remained a layman. What is clear is that eloquent as he was in both Greek and Latin, Tertullian quickly after his conversion set himself to defending the Catholic faith against the pagans as well as heretical Christians.

In so doing coined some of the key theological terms and phrases of the Christian theological tradition. It is in Tertullian's writings that we first find the Latin word "trinity" to describe the relationship between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, whom he taught were "one God in three persons." This remains a classic trinitarian formula to this day. He also made a great contribution to Christology, the branch of theology which seeks to understand the person of Jesus Christ and how divinity and humanity are related in him. It is Tertullian who gives us the formula later canonized by the Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon, teaching that Christ is "one person in two natures."

Tertullian is the author of many apologetic and theological works and is one of the most quotable of the Early Church Fathers. His is the famous phrase "the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church." And criticizing the reliance on pagan philosophy that he detects in many heretics, he coined yet another famous phrase: "what has Athens to do with Jerusalem?"

Though Tertullian made great and lasting contributions to a wide scope of Catholic doctrines (Trinity, Christology, ecclesiology, sacratmental theology, etc), he always had a tendency towards severity and rigorism. This tendency sadly drew him into a rigorist heretical sect called the Monanists around 210 AD. Tragically, Tertullian died around 225 A.D. separated from full communion with the bishops of the Catholic Church whose authority he earlier upheld. Nevertheless, his early writings give powerful witness to the faith that comes to us from the apostles. The writings listed below are far from complete--they are mostly intended to provide a few of the more inspirational passages from his works that can be used to enrich our prayer and give us a taste of the teaching of this influential Early Christian writer.

--http://crossroadsinitiative.com/library_author/14/Tertullian.html
Viaf ID:
100226395
DB Pedia ID:
Tertullian
Biblical Status:
Not Biblical
Is An Individual:
Yes
Is Published:
Yes
Birth Date:
AD 160
Death Date:
AD 230
Occupation:
Prolific early Christian author from Carthage
Works:

Apology

On Idolatry

Shows, or De Spectaculis

Chaplet, or De Corona

To Scapula

Ad Nationes

Answer to the Jews

Soul's Testimony

Treatise on the Soul

Prescription Against Heretics

Five Books Against Marcion

Against Hermogenes

Against the Valentinians

On the Flesh of Christ

On the Resurrection of the Flesh

Against Praxeas

Scorpiace. Antidote for the Scorpion's Sting

Appendix: Against All Heresies

On Repentance

On Baptism

On Prayer

Ad Martyras

Passion of the Holy Martyrs Perpetua and Felicitas

Of Patience

On the Pallium

On the Apparel of Women

On the Veiling of Virgins

To His Wife

On Exhortation to Chastity

On Monogamy

On Modesty

On Fasting

De Fuga in Persecutione