Early Christianity was a house-centered phenomenon. This was not just because the Empire was at war with Christianity and drove the Christians underground (although this was true). Christians followed Christ in rejecting political power. True power is nurtured in Christian Patriarchy.
Theses 68-86 show how Christian home-churches battled an Empire in the Apostolic Age.
- View | Thesis 68: Extremism vs. Neutrality
- View | Thesis 69: Sons of God and Pedagogues
- View | Thesis 70: Judgment and the Church-Courts of Christ
- View | Thesis 71: The Apostolic Church and the Spread of Power
- View | Thesis 72: Patriarchy and the House-Church
- View | Thesis 73: Patriarchy and the “Sacraments”: Baptism
- View | Thesis 74: Patriarchy and the “Sacraments”: “The Lord’s Supper”
- View | Thesis 75: Self-Ordination
- View | Thesis 76: Salt and Statism
- View | Thesis 77: Political Authority and Kingdom Citizenship
- View | Thesis 78: Patriarchy and Resistance to Tyranny in the Last Days of the Old Covenant
- View | Thesis 79: Taxation, Kingdom Citizenship, and Overcoming Through Suffering
- View | Thesis 80: Violence
- View | Thesis 81: Vengeance
- View | Thesis 82: Creationist Anarcho-Socialism and Darwinian Archo-Socialism
- View | Thesis 83: Pedagogy and The Powers
- View | Thesis 84: The End of Archists: The Pedagogues Judged by the Church
- View | Thesis 85: The Last Days of the Old Covenant
- Salt and Statism
- Ghostbusters on Mars Hill
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