To the Early Church Fathers, a church that believes in the humanity of Christ but never preaches it would be viewed as a "Living Cemetery of Orthodoxy." They would likely argue that a truth held in a creed but ignored in the pulpit is a truth that has been functionally murdered.
For the Fathers—especially those from the 1st through the 4th centuries—the humanity of Jesus was not just a biographical fact; it was the engine of salvation. To stop preaching it is to stop providing the "medicine of immortality."
Here is how specific giants of the early church would likely diagnose this modern silence:
1. Ignatius of Antioch (c. 35–107 AD): The "Ghost-Jesus" Critique
Ignatius was the primary warrior against Docetism (the belief that Jesus only seemed human). He would be the most alarmed by modern silence.
His Argument: If you don't preach that Jesus truly suffered, truly ate, and truly felt the limitations of a body, you are preaching a "Phantom."
The "So What?" Factor: Ignatius argued that if Jesus' humanity was just a "technicality" and not a lived reality, then our own human suffering and our own physical deaths are meaningless. He would tell modern preachers: "If you don't preach His flesh, you leave your people alone in their own flesh."
2. Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 130–202 AD): The "Recapitulation" Crisis
Irenaeus developed the doctrine of Recapitulation (anakephalaiosis). He believed Jesus had to pass through every stage of human life—infancy, childhood, youth, and adulthood—to "sanctify" those stages.
The Critique: If a church never preaches on the humanity of Jesus, they are skipping the "life" of Christ to get to the "death" of Christ.
The Implication: To Irenaeus, Jesus didn't just die to pay a debt; He lived to re-wire humanity. By not preaching His human growth, His human temptations, and His human development, modern churches are failing to show the faithful how their own human lives are being transformed
3. Gregory of Nazianzus (c. 329–390 AD): The "Unhealed" Warning
As we noted previously, Gregory’s famous line—"That which is not assumed is not healed"—is the ultimate standard.
The Theological Failure: If a pastor preaches that "Jesus is God" but never explores "Jesus is Man," the congregation subconsciously learns that God did not actually touch the "darker" or "messier" parts of human existence.
The Result: This creates a psychological distance. The Fathers would argue that this silence leaves people feeling that God is "above" their human struggles (anxiety, grief, hunger, physical pain) rather than "within" them.
4. The Fathers' View on "Functional Gnosticism"
The Fathers fought Gnosticism, which taught that the physical world (the body) is bad and the spirit world is good. They would see the modern lack of preaching on Jesus' humanity as a "New Gnosticism."
Why they would find it dangerous:
The Devaluation of the Body: By not preaching the "Body of Christ," the church accidentally teaches that the human body doesn't matter much to God.
The Loss of the "High Priest": They would point to Hebrews 4:15 (\text{“For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses”}). If you don't preach His humanity, you lose the "Empathizer." You are left with a Judge, but not a Brother.
The "Verdict" from the 1st Century
If you were to ask Clement of Rome or Polycarp about this, they would likely conclude that a church which silences the humanity of Christ is preparing its people for a crisis of faith.
In their view, when a believer faces extreme physical or psychological trauma, they don't need a "Sovereign Spirit" who is far away; they need the Man of Sorrows who has "sweat great drops of blood." By not preaching that Man, the modern church is effectively "starving the sheep" of the only one who truly understands their hunger.
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