Church Father
"The father of Latin theology — whose combative brilliance gave the Western Church its theological vocabulary and whose later Montanism makes his Catholic testimony all the more valuable"
Tertullian was born c. AD 155 in Carthage to a Roman centurion. He received a thorough education in rhetoric and law and converted to Christianity around AD 197. He created the Latin vocabulary the Western Church would use for a millennium: Trinity (trinitas), one substance three persons for the Trinity, satisfaction for atonement. Around AD 207 he was attracted to Montanism — a rigorist movement claiming new prophetic revelations — and his later works became increasingly hostile to Catholic laxity. He died c. AD 220.
"Let them produce the original records of their churches; let them unfold the roll of their bishops, running down in due succession from the beginning in such a manner that the first bishop shall be able to show for his ordainer and predecessor some one of the apostles."
"We offer sacrifices for the dead on their birthday anniversaries."
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