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The Birth of Christianity
The Birth of Christianity

... Resurrection ...
Pharisees (Jewish Religious Sects)
Pharisees (Jewish Religious Sects)

... The Apostle Paul was a Pharisee and was taught by one of the sect’s most eminent scholars, Gamaliel of Jerusalem. ...
Section 4: The Rise of Christianity I. Jesus of Nazareth All we know
Section 4: The Rise of Christianity I. Jesus of Nazareth All we know

... Question: How does Christianity Spread? I. Work of Paul  After Jesus’ death, his disciples spread his teachings throughout the Roman empire, They started with preaching only among Jews in Judea.  Jews that who accepted the teachings that Jesus was the messiah became the first Christians, or follo ...
Session 1 - Saint Francis of Assisi Catholic Church
Session 1 - Saint Francis of Assisi Catholic Church

... meal was an actual meal where people came to eat, especially the poor (1 Corinthians 11:17-22) at someone’s house. • The community combined this worship into one day and it forms the basis of the Mass. ...
Ancient Rome - Anoka-Hennepin School District
Ancient Rome - Anoka-Hennepin School District

... Reasons for Christianity’s Appeal • Educated Romans were attracted to a religion that had the discipline and moderation of Greek philosophy. • Missionary work was made easy because Christians traveled along Roman roads and across the Mediterranean Sea, which was protected by Roman fleets. • Christi ...
Ancient Rome: The Rise of Christianity
Ancient Rome: The Rise of Christianity

... Peter the Apostle traveled to Rome and was crucified upside down by Nero. Believed to be the first “Bishop” or Pope of the Christian Church.  Today, all Popes are believed to be descendants of St. Peter.  We now call this the “Catholic” church which means “Universal”. ...
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ANCIENT ISRAEL, RABBINIC JUDAISM, AND EARLY

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Ancient Rome: The Rise of Christianity - apwh-bbs-2015
Ancient Rome: The Rise of Christianity - apwh-bbs-2015

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Rise_of_Christianity_in_Rome

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World Religions: Christianity screencast sheet

... According to tradition, Christianity was founded in the ________________ by _____________ Christians are followers of Jesus Christ. The word ‘Christ’ comes from the Greek word christo, which means ‘____________’ By the early first century A.D., the _______________ controlled the land of Judea, which ...
File - Mrs. Miller-FALA
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PowerPoint lecture on Christianity
PowerPoint lecture on Christianity

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The New Testament and the Torah Doctoral Dissertation - OR-ZSE
The New Testament and the Torah Doctoral Dissertation - OR-ZSE

... Christian anti-Judaism––was misunderstood by Gentile Christianity since the second and third century in a number of ways, just as it was by (the than institutionalising) Rabbinical Judaism after the destruction of the Temple; with the difference, though, that the two misunderstandings aimed at the o ...
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ChristJud.test.Spring15
ChristJud.test.Spring15

... 2. Why was the Council of Nicea so important for Christians? 3. After escaping slavery in Egypt, the Jewish people wrote down all their laws in the books of Leviticus and Deuteronomy. Explain the types of laws these books contained, and why they were so strict. 4. What is the connection between the ...
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Jewish Christian

This article deals with the historical concept. For the modern-day religious movement see Messianic Judaism.Jewish Christians, also Hebrew Christians or Judeo-Christians, were the original members of the Jewish movement that later became Christianity. In the earliest stage the community was made up of all those Jews who accepted Jesus as a venerable person or even the Messiah. As Christianity grew and evolved, Jewish Christians became only one strand of the early Christian community, characterised by combining the confession of Jesus as Christ with continued adherence to Jewish traditions such as Sabbath observance, observance of the Jewish calendar, observance of Jewish laws and customs, circumcision, and synagogue attendance, and by a direct genetic relationship to the earliest Jewish Christians.The term ""Jewish Christian"" appears in historical texts contrasting Christians of Jewish origin with Gentile Christians, both in discussion of the New Testament church and the second and following centuries. It is also a term used for Jews who converted to Christianity but kept their Jewish heritage and traditions.Alister McGrath, former Professor of Historical Theology at Oxford University, claims that many 1st century ""Jewish Christians"" were totally faithful religious Jews. They differed from other contemporary Jews only in their acceptance of Jesus as the Messiah. Those that taught that Gentile converts to Christianity ought to adopt more Jewish practices than the Church had already included, however, were called ""Judaizers"". Though the Apostle Peter was initially sympathetic, the Apostle Paul opposed the teaching at the Incident at Antioch (Gal. 2:11-21) and at the Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15:6-35), where Paul's teaching was accepted by the whole Church. Nevertheless, Judaizing continued for several centuries, particularly among Jewish Christians.As Christianity grew throughout the Gentile world, Christians diverged from their Jewish and Jerusalem roots. Jewish Christianity, initially strengthened despite persecution by Jerusalem Temple officials, fell into decline during the Jewish-Roman wars (66-135) and the growing anti-Judaism perhaps best personified by Marcion (c. 150). With persecution by the orthodox Christians from the time of the Roman Emperor Constantine in the 4th century, Jewish Christians sought refuge outside the boundaries of the Empire, in Arabia and further afield. Within the Empire and later elsewhere it was dominated by the Gentile based Christianity which became the State church of the Roman Empire and which took control of sites in the Holy Land such as the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Cenacle and appointed subsequent Bishops of Jerusalem.
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