Saint Andrew Russian Greek Catholic Church

Father Quotes

Home
Sunday of the Fathers of the First Six Ecumenical Councils
Saint For Sunday
This Week at Saint Andrew
Educational Resources
Father Quotes
Father Alexei's Homilies
Contact Us
Meet Our Clergy
Directions
Religious Links
Russian Greek-Catholic Church



Editor's Note:  The article below is being released in three parts.  Part Two follows Part One below.  Part Three (Conclusion) will be added next week.



The Life of Jesus Written in Stone – Part One


an article by Jordan J. Ryan in the Winter 2024 issue of Biblical Archaeology


The fourth century saw the transformation of the architectural landscape of Roman Palestine, as major churches dedicated to different events in the life of Jesus arose throughout the region during the reigns of Emperor Constantine and his successors.   The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, commemorating the crucifixion, burial, and resurrection of Jesus, was the first to be built.   It was soon joined by two more monumental churches, the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem and the Eleona Church on the Mount of Olives.  Several commemorative churches were founded also in Galilee, such that by the end of the century, a Christian pilgrim could experience the story of the life of Jesus from the annunciation to the ascension by visiting monumentalized holy sites across the region.  It was a kind of experiential Gospel, written in stone rather than ink.


These early commemorative churches were, in many ways, architectural representations of key events in the Gospels. So, what sort of image of Jesus did these churches represent and what sort of early Christian identity did they construct? These monuments commemorated the significant events of the life of Jesus, a Jewish Galilean man who was strongly remembered by his followers as the Jewish Messiah crucified by the Roman State. They were also built using the resources of the Roman Imperial State and some were even constructed by direct order of the imperial family.


Moreover, they were built under Constantine, when Christianity went from being a persecuted minority to not only a licit religion (with the Edict of Milan in 313) but also one that was patronized and even preferred by Constantine and most of his successors.   All of this makes the life-of-Jesus churches particularly interesting as architectural artifacts of a significant historical period.  


Beginning in 325, a series of three churches in the Jerusalem area were constructed by the order of Constantine and his mother, Helena.  These were the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Church of the Nativity, which commemorated the birth of Jesus, and the Eleona, which commemorated Jesus’ teaching and ascension on the Mount of Olives.    All three were constructed at locations that were probably already associated in local tradition with the narratives that they remember.   This is by no means a guarantee of their historical authenticity as places where Gospel events really took place, but it does imply continuity with and, more importantly, a massive visual transformation of places that were traditionally associated with Jesus prior to the age of Constantine.


Golgotha was apparently associated with a site in Aelia Capitolina (the Roman name of the colony founded during the reign of Hadrian on the site of Jerusalem) before the construction of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.  For example, Golgotha is mentioned by Eusebius in his Onomasticon [74.19-21], a text dated to the late third or early fourth century.  Similarly, the traditional cave associated the Jesus’ birthplace is clearly mentioned in Christian sources dating to the second and third centuries (Justin Martyr, Dialogue 78.5-6; Protoevangelium of James 18.1, 19.16; Origen, Against Celsus 1.51], while the Mount of Olives – a well-known topographic feature – is directly named in the Gospels [Mark 13.3-37; Matthew 24.3-25.46] as the site of one of Jesus’ major discourses.


The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was the first and grandest of the Constantinian commemorative churches.  It was a large compound that was a great deal larger than the church standing in Jerusalem today, which is mostly a Crusader-period construction.  The ancient church compound encompasses the traditional sites associated with both Jesus’ crucifixion (Golgotha) and his tomb.


Literary sources (e.g., Egeria’s Travels 30.1-3; Eucherius, Letter to Faustus 5-6] mention two separate structures that comprise the Church of the Holy Sepulchre:  the Martyrium (Greek for “witness”) and the Anastasis (Greek for “resurrection”).   The late fourth-century pilgrim Egeria, for example, describes a Sunday service during Great Week moving from the Martyrium to the Anastasis.   The Martyrium was a massive, ornate basilica.  Its form and rich decoration, featuring gold coffers, marble of various colors, and other polished stones, are described in detail by Eusebius (Life of Constantine 3.34-39].  The Martyrium was oriented from east to west by its semi-circular apse, which has been uncovered in archaeological excavations in the modern church.   Eusebius describes the apse as “the very summit of the church,” with twelve impressive columns (one for each of the apostles) embellished with silver.


Just beyond the Martyrium to the west was an inner courtyard, where a rock spire was affixed with a decorative cross, representing Golgotha.  The focus of this area, however, was the traditional tomb of Jesus, which was housed in a small aedicule.  


Recent excavations have shown that the commemorative structure of the tomb featured a circular marble base that was about 20 feet in diameter, a forecourt, and deambulatory defined by 12 columns surrounding the base.  The excavator, Francesca Romana Stasolla, suggests it was originally open to the air, as a water channel was discovered along the base.   By the end of the fourth century, the tomb was enclosed with a monumental rotunda called the Anastasis.


Both the basilica and the rotunda come from the world of Roman imperial architecture.  Christian basilicas are derived from earlier Roman basilicas, which were civic meeting halls and commercial spaces.   The monumental basilica of Maxentius and Constantine in Rome (completed in 312) is a good example of such a large public, imperial building and reminds us that the Roman basilical form was current in the age of Constantine and his successors.   The use of the form for the Martyrium would have conveyed its nature as a public gathering place and an “official “ building    with the sort of imperial splendor that the form’s name and the building’s rich decoration signified.   The apse was a signature architectural feature of basilicas, and the apse of the Martyrium was directed toward the courtyard of Golgotha and more specifically toward the tomb.  The 12 columns in the apse, representing the apostles, thus pointed toward the place of the passion in general to the empty tomb in particular, symbolically representing the apostolic witness to the death and resurrection of Jesus.


Stasolla has called the original monument of Jesus’ tomb a sacellum, which is a Roman-style shrine, usually open to the air, dedicated to a deity.  It is also parallel, at least in concept if not form, to a heroum, a Greco-Roman shrine-monument built at the tombs of heroes.   The original construction was soon renovated and replaced by the Anastasis rotunda.  The form of the rotunda, particularly of a tomb-shrine, strongly reflects the architecture of Roman imperial mausolea, which were round monumental tombs that were both commemorative and key religious sites for the imperial cult.   The use of this form for the Holy Sepulchre conveyed the idea of the kingship of Jesus.  The fact that, unlike the imperial mausolea, Jesus' remains were not actually in the Anastasis was an effective physical representation of the empty tomb of the Gospel narrative and thus of the resurrection.


There were, however, other things that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre represented.  The layout of the church called to mind the biblical Jerusalem temples.  The complex included both outer and inner courts.   It progressed in sanctity and significance from the outer courtyard to the Martyrium to the inner courtyard and Golgotha (the symbolic place of sacrifice) and then finally the empty tomb, the inner sanctum into which only the presiding bishops, mimicking the biblical high priest, would enter during services (according to Egeria’s Travels 24.2).   Moreover, the church itself was oriented facing the Temple Mount of Aelia Capitolina, presenting itself as a rival bearing judgment on the ruins of the “old” Jerusalem Temple.  The significance of this was not lost on Eusebius, who proclaimed this church to be the “second and new Jerusalem spoken of in the predictions of the prophets” [Life of Constantine 3.33].

Part Two

 

The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was not only a monument to Jesus; it was also very much a monument to Constantine.  The construction of the church began in 325 on the occasion of Constantine’s bicennalia, the celebration of the first 20 years of his reign, and it was dedicated in connection to the occasion of Constantine’s tricennalia, the celebration of 30 years of his reign, in 335 (Life of Constantine, 4.40).   No other emperor since Augustus had reigned for 30 years, and Eusebius tells us that Constantine considered his tricennalia to be “a fit occasion” for the dedication of the Holy Sepulchre (Life of Constatine, 4.40).   In a letter ordering the construction of the church, Constantine writes that it was his own victory over his rival Licinius that allowed the tomb to be recovered (Life of Constantine 3.30).   Thus, in Constantine’s view, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre was a monument signifying both the power of the Resurrected Jesus as well as his own greatness.  For this reason, Constantine instructs the bishop of Jerusalem to make such arrangements that the church may not only surpass all other churches in beauty, but also that “the fairest structures in any city of the empire may be excelled” by it (Life of Constantine 3.31).  The Holy Sepulchre thus represented a particular moment in the imperial Romanization of Christianity, a story told through its architecture and through the intertwining of the memories of Jesus, a man crucified by Roman authority, and Constantine, a Roman emperor.


The Holy Sepulchre was soon joined by the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem and the Eleona on the Mount of Olives, both of which have been archaeologically identified.   Taking their cue from the Holy Sepulchre, these two sister churches also featured a basilica oriented toward an inner, centrally-planned sacred area marking the spot of a traditional event in the life of Jesus.   Both of these churches were constructed by Constantine together with Helena.   According to Eusebius, Helena visited Syria Palestina (the Roman province of Palestine) in order to walk in the footsteps of Jesus, and “consecrated to the God she adored two shrines, one by the cave of his birth, the other on the mountain of the Ascension.,” to which Constantine added further “imperial decorations” (Life of Constantine 3.42-43).


Early Christian sources prior to the age of Constantine speak of a cave near Bethlehem that was regarded as the place where Jesus was born (Justin Martyr, Dialogue 78.5-6; Origen, Against Celsus 1.51; Eusebius, Proof of the Gospel 3.2.97).  The Church of the Nativity was constructed above that cave.  The iteration of the church that stands in Bethlehem today mostly dates to the reign of Justinian I, who substantially rebuilt the church in the sixth century.  Although Justinian’s Church of the Nativity was built on top of the original basilica and followed its general plan, the fourth-century church looked very different from what we see today.


The original church featured a massive triple entrance leading into a basilica that had a nave flanked by two aisles on each side, much like the Martyrium of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Portions of the basilica’s intricate mosaic pavement are still visible below the floor of the modern church.   At the far end of the basilica, opposite the entrance, was something quite unusual:  a round octagonal structure built over the cave that was remembered as the place where Jesus was born.  In Roman architecture, such structures were often used to mark the final resting place of emperors and other important figures, such as the mausolea of Maximian, Galerian, and Diocletian, all of which date to the early fourth century.  However, this polygonal building curiously marked a birth rather than a burial place.


Fourth-century sources that discuss the Elona Church point to two particularly important events in the life of Jesus on the Mount of Olives:  the Ascension of Jesus [Luke 24.50-54; cf Acts 1.6-12] and Jesus’ teaching on the mountain [Mark 13.3-37; Mathew 24.3-25.46].   Eusebius tells us that Helena built a church “in memory of Jesus’ ascent to heaven” (Life of Constantine 3.43)   Whatever the church was that Helena and Constantine built on the Mount of Olives, it was meant to commemorate the Ascension.  However, the Bordeaux pilgrim, writing around 333, says that Constantine ordered the construction of a basilica “where the Lord taught before his passion” (Travels 595).


 

The Eleona Church is a fairly standard basilica in comparison to its two siblings.   It had a monumental triple entrance and a nave flanked by an aisle on either side.   The basilica ended with a rounded apse constructed over a grotto, a cave that was likely regarded as the site where Jesus taught.  Just a few hundred feet away, on the summit of the Mount of Olives, a round church was built at some point in the fourth century commemorating the site of Jesus’ Ascension.   The church’s precise date is debated, but it reasonable to think that the Eleona and the Church of the Ascension together formed a single complex that primarily remembered the Ascension but also included commemoration of Jesus ‘teaching on the same mountain.

Conclusion next week