What do you do when you want to overthrow your church leaders without due cause? Well what you DON'T do is read 1 Clement. He will not sympathize with your ambitions.
Who is Clement? He was probably a Gentile and lived between A.D. 30-100. Most believe that this is the Clement referred to in Philippians 4:3 (evidently written from Rome); and a co-worker with the Apostle Paul. This belief is founded on the writings of Eusebius (see below). The internal evidence also tends to support this opinion.
Others thought that he may have been an ex-slave of the family of Titus Flavius Clemens, cousin of the Emperor Domitian. One tradition claims that he was the second bishop of Rome, immediately after the apostle Peter; another tradition indicates that two bishops served between Peter and Clement.
It seems likely that Clement was a pastor in the church at Rome. His letter to Corinth entitled 1 Clement assumes a similar responsbility to answering an important question for the Corinthian Church regarding unity and sedition. This letter probably was written about A.D. 95. Because this is probably the earliest extrabiblical writings it stands in a place of great prominence. His letter also is an important testimony to the canon of the New Testament, alluding to 1 Corinthians, Matthew, Mark, Luke, Acts, Romans, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, 1 Timothy, Titus, Hebrews, and 1 Peter. [1] These New Testament allusions are employed as authoritative
sources which strengthen Clement’s arguments to the Corinthian church. The letter
was lengthy and includes several references to the Old Testament. Clement repeatedly refers to the Old Testament
as Scripture.
Clement’s admonition to “Take up the
epistle of the blessed Paul the Apostle” (xlvii. 1) implies his intimate knowledge of Paul's letter and implies that these documents were available to the Corinthian church.
"This Epistle was held in very great esteem by the early Church. The account given of it by Eusebius (Hist. Eccl., iii. 16) is as follows: “There is one acknowledged Epistle of this Clement (whom he has just identified with the friend of St. Paul), great and admirable, which he wrote in the name of the Church of Rome to the Church at Corinth, sedition having then arisen in the latter Church. We are aware that this Epistle has been publicly read in very many churches both in old times, and also in our own day.” The Epistle before us thus appears to have been read in numerous churches, as being almost on a level with the canonical writings. And its place in the Alexandrian ms., immediately after the inspired books, is in harmony with the position thus assigned it in the primitive Church." [2]
The purpose of the letter seems to be some dispute (sedition) in Corinth, which had led to the removal from office of several elders. Certain younger leaders had not given
proper respect to the bishops and deacons and have set up new leaders in
their place. Since there was no moral offense, Clement deemed their removal as unjustifiable.
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1. Vos, H. F., & Thomas Nelson Publishers. (1996). Exploring church
history. Nelson's Christian Cornerstone Series. Nashville: Thomas Nelson
Publishers.
2. Dr. A. Cleveland Coxe, in Schaff, Philip (2009-06-08). Ante-Nicene Fathers Volume 1 - Enhanced Version (Early Church Fathers) (Kindle Locations 157-162). Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Kindle Edition.
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