Course Catalog Admissions

Primary Authors & Sources

NPNF-202 draws on Philip Schaff's Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers — the definitive English patristic library for post-nicene histories and theological polemics. These are not secondary surveys but the fathers themselves. Philip Schaff, ed. provides access to the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers — the standard English patristic corpus that shaped Protestant and Anglican scholarship for generations, notably in Cyril of Jerusalem, Gregory Nazianzen and Basil: Letters and Select Works.

Taken together, these readings form a coherent conversation across centuries — students encounter real arguments, not flattened summaries. The required corpus for this course totals 5 assigned works with 27 supplemental volumes available in the library, all integrated with assessments in the BCFK learning platform.

What You Will Study

Students continue in post-Nicene patristic literature, reading historical narratives, theological polemics, and ecclesiastical correspondence from the fourth and fifth centuries. Texts include Eusebius's ecclesiastical history, church historians and controversialists documenting the spread of Christianity, battles over orthodoxy, and the complex relationship between empire and church. The course examines how narrative sources shape our understanding of Constantine, Julian, episcopal politics, and the triumph of Nicene faith in the East and West. Students evaluate historiographical bias in ancient sources while extracting reliable testimony about doctrine, worship, and persecution. Attention falls on how post-Nicene writers understood their own era as fulfillment of prophecy and extension of apostolic mission.

Course Objectives

Objectives include summarizing major events in fourth and fifth century church history from primary narratives, distinguishing theological polemic from sober historiography in patristic sources, explaining how imperial policy affected ecclesiastical conflict, and writing critical reviews of patristic historical works. Students will map key figures, councils, and geographical centers of post-Nicene Christianity. The course cultivates historical discernment when reading ancient authors who wrote with theological and political aims. Students will connect narrative sources to doctrinal developments studied in companion patristic courses. Assessments require essays evaluating Eusebius and successors as witnesses to the post-Constantinian church's opportunities and corruptions.

Ministry & Life Application

Post-Nicene narratives teach ministers how the church navigated political favor, internal division, and external threat while preserving gospel truth. Pastors gain perspective on the dangers of imperial Christianity and the courage of bishops who resisted both heresy and tyranny. House church leaders studying these histories learn caution about alliance with worldly power and commitment to doctrinal fidelity under pressure. This course enriches preaching on providence, persecution, and the visibility of the church across the Florida Keys and beyond. Pastoral ministry benefits when shepherds know the stories of those who maintained orthodoxy when compromise seemed expedient.