The Rise of Christianity
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Transcript The Rise of Christianity
The Rise of Christianity
Roman Religion
Polytheistic: belief or worship of several gods
Romans were polytheistic
Jupiter
Juno
Minerva
Mars
Apollo
Diana
Venus
Roman Emperors became Gods, starting with
Augustus
Romans also worshiped Isis (Egyptian God) and
Mithras (Persian God)
Myths gave explanations to questions Roman’s
couldn’t answer
Jupiter
Mars
Minerva
State priests performed rituals that brought
Romans into the right relationship with the
gods
Guaranteed peace and prosperity
•Tolerant of other
religions
•Allowed “local”
religions
•Even adopted
some “local”
gods
Rise of Christianity
Origins
Began during Pax Romana
Emerged from Judaism
Led by Jesus of Nazareth
Beliefs clashed with polytheistic beliefs of
Roman Empire
Judaism
Judaism was one of the
religions that Rome had
tolerated
Given considerable
independence
Conquered by Rome in 63
B.C.
Judea had been a Roman
province since 6 A.D.
Placed under control of a
Roman official called a
procurator
Jewish Tension
Sadducees were priests who favored
cooperation with Rome
Pharisees were scholars who wanted to
protect Judaism from Roman influence
Essenes lived apart from society, waited
for God to save Jews from oppression
Zealots, called for overthrow of Roman
rule
Jewish Revolt
Zealots led a revolt
against Rome in 66
A.D.
Thousands of Jews
killed
Jewish temple in
Jerusalem
destroyed
Many Jews driven
from Judea called
the Diaspora
Spread throughout
Mediterranean
Jesus
Born 4 B.C. in
Bethlehem
Descendant of King
David
Grew up in Nazareth
May have worked as a
carpenter
At age 30, Jesus began
preaching to villagers
near Sea of Galilee
Jewish prophet named
Jesus was traveling
countryside preaching
Believed his mission was
to complete the salvation
that God had promised to
Israel
Importance was
transformation of inner
person
Love God and one another
Voiced ethical concepts:
humility, charity, and love
towards others
Jesus
Preaching
caused
controversy
Some saw him
as revolutionary
who would lead a
revolt against
Rome
Jesus was
turned over to
Rome’s
procurator
Pontius Pilate
and was
crucified.
Jesus
Jesus
After his death, disciples proclaimed he
had risen from the dead and appeared to
him
Believed he was the messiah
How was Christianity Spread?
Jesus’ apostles (mainly Paul) throughout
the Roman Empire
Roman persecution of Christians intially
limited the spread
Was eventually adopted and legalized by
Emperor Constantine
Spread of Christianity
Apostles, or leaders, in early Christianity
were:
Simon Peter
Jewish
fisherman
Friend of Jesus
Leader of Apostles
Paul
Educated
Roman citizen
Took message to gentiles (non-Jews)
Founded Christian communities throughout Asia
Minor and along shores of Aegean Sea
Message: Jesus was Savior, Son of God
Jesus’s death made up for sins of all humans
Accept Christ and you could be saved from Sin
Paul
Never met Jesus
Enemy of Christianity
at first
Had a vision of Jesus
Pax Romana allowed for
easy travel and exchange of
ideas which allowed apostles
like Paul to quickly spread
Christianity
Spread of Christianity
Teachings passed orally
Paul and other followers wrote letters, or
epistles, outlining Christian beliefs
Between 40 A.D. and 100 A.D., these
became basis for the written Gospels “good news”
Writings give a record of Jesus’ life and
teachings
Core of New Testament, 2nd part of Bible
Spread of Christianity
By 100 A.D. Christian churches were in
major cities of the eastern empire
Roman Persecution
Rome only tolerated religions if they didn’t
threaten public order or public morals
Many Romans saw Christianity as a threat
Christians refused to worship Roman gods
Romans thought that was act of Treason
Romans began persecuting Christians
Fire that destroyed Rome blamed on Christians by
Emperor Nero
Christians were put to death
Called Martyrs, people who suffer or die for their
beliefs
Both Peter and Paul were martyrs
Triumph of Christianity
Roman persecution didn’t stop movement
Christianity forced to organize
Christian church created new structure
called the clergy (church leaders)
Bishops took control of communities
Laity (regular church members)
By 3rd century A.D. spread throughout
Mediterranean
Triumph of Christianity
Spread easily because
Message had a lot to offer
Personal and offered salvation and eternal life
Gave meaning and purpose to life
Familiar to older religions
Fulfilled human need to belong
Formed communities that helped one another
Attractive to all classes of people
Triumph of Christianity
Last great Christian persecution was by Emperor
Diocletian in 4th century
By 4th century Christianity prospered when
Emperor Constantine became the 1st Christian
emperor
Converted after seeing a vision of a cross before
a battle for leadership of Rome
Ordered the cross be put on his soldier’s shield
313 A.D. Constantine issued the Edict of Milan
which proclaimed Christianity a religion
accepted by Rome
Under Theodosius the Great, Romans adopted
Christianity as the official religion in 380 A.D.
Early Christian Church
Renounced evil in the rite of baptism
Sins are forgiven by the Grace of God
Members were equals, addressing each
other as sister and brother
Gathered to celebrate God on Sundays
Ate bread and drank wine in sacred meal
called the Eucharist
Women served as teachers and
administrators
Structure of Church
Men allowed to
become members of
clergy
Priests under
authority of bishop
Church official
responsible for all
Christians in an area
called a diocese
Peter became first
bishop of Jerusalem
Peter was “rock”
church would be built
on
Structure of the Church
Bishops of important cities gained more authority
Bishops of Rome, Antioch, Alexandria,
Jerusalem and Constantinople called patriarchs
Latin-speaking west, bishops of Rome, called
Popes, claimed greater authority over all
bishops
They had power over Bishops in their area
Called a hierarchy
Rome center of Christianity
Claimed Peter was first Pope
Greek-speaking east, patriarchs shared power
Division in the Church
Emergence of heresies causes a council of
church leaders to be called to determine official
church teachings
Beliefs compiled into New Testament
Contained four gospels
Epistles of Paul
Other documents
325 A.D. Constantine called the council of
Nicaea in Anatolia to define basic beliefs of
church
Church sent missionaries throughout Roman
Empire and beyond to spread Christianity
Theology
Theology- talk of discourse about God
Leading Christian scholars:
Clement and Origen
Origen
wrote On Prayer and On First Principles
Both lived in Alexandria
Augustine, Bishop of Hippo in North Africa
Combined
Greco-Roman learning and Christian
doctrine
Wrote The City of God
Christianity’s Influence on the
Roman Empire
Christian church became example of
moral authority
Loyalty to the Church became more
important than loyalty to the Emperor
Church would be main unifying force of
Western Europe