Church Canons

Early 4th–Early 6th Centuries

In the fourth century, the Roman Empire witnessed the rise of church councils. These convened periodically for the purpose of negotiating the standards of sound Christian doctrine and the church’s proper relationship to non-Christian religious groups, among other matters. They also reflected the attitudes of church leadership toward the Jewish people in the first centuries after Christianity had become the official faith of the empire.

Questions abound. Was Judaism really influential enough within the Roman Empire to have inspired official church prohibitions regarding Jewish practices? Was Judaism attracting Christians and competing for potential converts? Or were the prohibitions simply further expressions of Christian literary representation of Judaism, a conjured threat that was more imagined than real? Did Christianity’s status as a state religion mark a major turning point in Christian attitudes toward Judaism, as compared to those under a predominantly pagan Rome? Some scholars have argued that earlier Roman anti-Judaism reflected a general contempt for most things foreign, whereas later Christian anti-Judaism legislated a much stronger degree of separation, the result of competing religious identities.

The church council texts here span the fourth through sixth centuries CE and focus mainly on forbidding Christians from mixing with Jews. The Council of Laodicea, for example, which assembled sometime between 345 and 381 CE, devotes four of its sixty canons to interactions between Christians and Jews.

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Laws against Mixing with Jews

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Heretics, if they are unwilling to change over to the catholic Church, are not to have catholic girls [in marriage]; nor shall they…

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Laws against Judaizing

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Christians should not judaize and refrain from work on the Sabbath, but they should work on that day. As Christians, they should honor…

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Prohibition against Marrying a Jew

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Since in some provinces lectors and cantors are allowed to marry, the holy council has decreed that none of them may take a heretic to wife. Those who have already had children by such marriages, if…

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Prohibitions against Praying or Feasting with a Jew

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If any clergyman or layman shall enter into a synagogue of the Jews or heretics to pray, let the former be deposed and the latter be…

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All May Enter to Hear the Word

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A bishop shall not prohibit anyone from entering a church and listening to God’s word, whether he is a pagan, heretic or Jew, until…