Early Christianity, also known as the Early Church or Ancient Christianity, refers to the historical period of the Christian religion up until the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. During this time, Christianity spread from the Levant throughout the Roman Empire and beyond.
Initially, this expansion was closely linked to established Jewish centers in the Holy Land and the Jewish diaspora in the Eastern Mediterranean. The first Christians were Jewish converts, known as Jewish Christians, as well as Phoenician converts, referred to as Lebanese Christians.
This era includes the Apostolic Age and overlaps with the Patristic Age. Early Christian symbols involved the use of various symbols, archetypes, actions, artworks, or events that conveyed Christian ideas by investing objects or actions with deeper, internal meanings.
To sum up, during the Apostolic Age and the rise of the early Christian church symbols, these icons served crucial roles to:
-
Convey Messages: Represent key tenets of faith without the need for words.
-
Identify Believers: Offer a secret code for identifying fellow Christians in hostile environments.
-
Express Hope: Reinforce the promise of salvation and divine protection.
As Christianity became legalized in the Roman Empire during the 4th century, symbols grew more elaborate and widely recognized, transitioning from hidden markings to public emblems of faith.