The Church Fathers are the ancient Christian teachers and bishops who received the faith from the apostles and handed it down to us. They’re not just historical figures we study. They’re our guides to understanding what the Church has always believed.
When you walk into St. Michael’s and hear us talk about “what the Fathers teach,” we’re talking about men like St. Athanasius, St. Basil the Great, St. John Chrysostom, and St. Gregory the Theologian. These aren’t names we throw around to sound impressive. They’re the bishops and theologians who fought heresies, clarified doctrine, and showed us how to read Scripture the way the apostles intended.
They Lived When the Church Was Young
Most of the Fathers lived between the second and eighth centuries. That’s the period when Christians were hammering out what we believe about the Trinity, about who Christ is, about how we’re saved. The fourth and fifth centuries were especially important, that’s when the great Ecumenical Councils met and when figures like the Three Holy Hierarchs (Basil, Gregory of Nazianzus, and John Chrysostom) were writing and preaching.
St. Irenaeus wrote in the late second century, defending the faith against Gnostics who wanted to turn Christianity into something unrecognizable. St. Athanasius spent most of his life in the fourth century fighting the Arian heresy, which denied that Christ is fully God. These weren’t ivory tower academics. They were pastors dealing with real threats to the gospel.
Why We Still Read Them
Here’s what trips up a lot of folks coming from Protestant backgrounds. You’re used to going straight to the Bible, and that makes sense, Scripture is God’s Word. But here’s the thing: the same Church that gave us the Bible also gave us the Fathers. They’re the ones who decided which books belong in the New Testament. They’re the ones who can tell us what the apostles actually meant.
The Fathers don’t have authority because they were smart or holy (though many were both). They have authority because when they agree with each other across time and geography, that consensus shows us what the apostles taught. It’s called the “rule of faith.” When St. Irenaeus in Gaul and St. Athanasius in Egypt and St. Basil in Cappadocia all teach the same thing about the Trinity, that’s not coincidence. That’s the apostolic deposit being faithfully transmitted.
We don’t follow the Fathers instead of Scripture. We follow them to understand Scripture rightly. Left to ourselves, we can make the Bible say almost anything. The Fathers keep us honest. They show us how the Church has always read these texts.
They Weren’t Perfect
The Fathers weren’t infallible individually. St. Jerome had a nasty temper. Some of them got things wrong on smaller matters. But their consensus on the core doctrines, who God is, who Christ is, how we’re saved, how we worship, that consensus is trustworthy because it reflects what the apostles taught.
This is different from how Catholics view the Pope or how some Protestants view their favorite preacher. We’re not saying any one Father can’t be wrong. We’re saying that when the Fathers agree, they’re showing us the faith once delivered to the saints.
Reading the Fathers Today
If you’re new to Orthodoxy, you don’t need to read all the Fathers right away. Start with something accessible. Fr. Thomas Hopko’s “The Orthodox Faith” series quotes the Fathers throughout and explains their teaching in plain English. When you’re ready for the Fathers themselves, try St. Athanasius’s “On the Incarnation”, it’s short, it’s clear, and it’ll change how you think about why God became man.
You’ll hear the Fathers quoted in sermons at St. Michael’s. You’ll see their icons on our walls. St. John Chrysostom wrote the Liturgy we celebrate most Sundays. These men aren’t dead voices from the past. They’re part of the Church, and the Church includes both the living and the departed. When we read the Fathers, we’re listening to our family, the ones who’ve gone before us and can show us the way home.
