This week
Apostolic age
AD 5 – 100 · Jesus, the Twelve, Paul. The New Testament being written.

Why this week matters
This is the only generation that touched Jesus. Everyone after them is downstream. Within seventy years of the crucifixion, twelve Galileans and a Pharisee from Tarsus had pushed a Jewish messianic movement out of Jerusalem and into every major city of the empire — Antioch, Ephesus, Corinth, Rome, Alexandria. Most of them were dead by the end of it. Tradition counts eleven of the Twelve as martyrs.
The dominant fact of the period is the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. Before it, Christianity is a sect inside Judaism arguing about the messiah; after it, the temple is gone, the Jewish-Christian church in Jerusalem scatters, and the centre of gravity moves north and west into the Greek-speaking diaspora. Paul has already done most of the work of making that transition theologically possible — circumcision is not required, gentiles are in, the law is fulfilled in Christ. The Council of Jerusalem (c. AD 50) settled it before the temple even fell.
What this era gives the church
- Gentiles join the church without becoming Jews first.
- The four canonical gospels and Pauline corpus take written form.
- A threefold ministry — bishop, presbyter, deacon — begins to crystallise.
- The Eucharist on the Lord's Day (Sunday) is the universal weekly act.
Four people to know




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