
The Two Churches (c. 71-96 AD)
The First Century House Churches Saga (Book 13)
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In the twilight of the apostolic age, with Jerusalem in ruins and the last of the eyewitnesses passing from the world, a deep and dangerous schism fractures the heart of the Christian faith. The Two Churches (c. 71-96 AD), the thirteenth volume in the sweeping 1st Century House Churches series, plunges readers into the critical decades where two competing models of the church—one visible and powerful, the other hidden and persecuted—vie for the soul of the fledgling movement.
In Rome, the trauma of Nero’s persecution has forged two divergent paths. The influential Clement, a man who knew the apostles, builds a formidable, organized church on a foundation of human leadership. He offers the weary believers an ark of safety: a unified body under a single bishop, respectable in the eyes of the world and strong enough to negotiate with the Roman authorities.
Meanwhile, in the city’s catacombs, Rufus, son of Simon of Cyrene, shepherds a fugitive remnant. For this scattered flock, the only authority is the written Word of God, their only leader an unseen King in heaven. They cling to the apostolic pattern of plural elders and a decentralized fellowship, a choice that brands them as schismatics and leaves them vulnerable to the full fury of Emperor Domitian’s loyalty tests.
From the scriptorium in Antioch, where the sons of the first-generation martyrs labor to preserve and distribute the completed New Testament canon, to the Gnostic schools of Alexandria where Simon Magus’s philosophical poison is refined into a subtle counterfeit Christianity, a war of ideas rages. As the last apostle, John, confronts the twin threats of heresy and the lust for preeminence from his home in Ephesus, the battle lines are drawn. Is the foundation of the faith the unshakeable Word of God, or the fallible wisdom of men?
The Two Churches is a gripping, historically-grounded narrative of the pivotal choices and foundational conflicts that would define the Christian faith for the next two thousand years, exploring the enduring struggle between the visible institution and the invisible, scripture-based kingdom.