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Christianity. What is Christianity?. A diverse, 2000 year old religion Followed by almost 1/3 of the world’s population 2.1 billion Based on the life, teachings, death and resurrection of Jesus Believed to be the Christ (messiah, savior) by his followers (thus called “Christians”).
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What is Christianity? • A diverse, 2000 year old religion • Followed by almost 1/3 of the world’s population • 2.1 billion • Based on the life, teachings, death and resurrection of Jesus • Believed to be the Christ (messiah, savior) by his followers (thus called “Christians”)
Roman Catholic 1.1 billion Eastern Orthodox 217 million Protestant 365 million Anglican 80 million Major Divisions
The Historical Jesus • Born, lived, and died a Jew in the first century in Roman occupied Palestine • Nazareth • Knowledge of Him based on New Testament • Little is known of childhood • Baptized at age 30 by John (“the Baptist”) • Blessed by Holy Spirit as He came out of water • “thou art my beloved Son, with thee I am well pleased.” (Mark 1:11)
Jesus’ History, continued • Then began a mission of preaching, teaching, and healing as an itinerant teacher • Had a following of 12 primary disciples • Countless multitudes attracted by his miracles and words of wisdom
Jesus claimed that he spoke with the authority of God Betrayed by disciple Judas Put on trial for being a revolutionary & a political threat to Roman and Jewish authorities Roman governor of Judea, Pontius Pilate condemned and put to death by means of crucifixion The following Sunday, He appeared to his followers as a triumph over death Later ascended into Heaven Jesus’ Death
Jesus’ Teachings • Focused on the kingdom of God • Standards of human conduct • Merciful God—how people should treat each otherGolden Rule • Personal God --“Our Father” • Used stories and parables to teach • Known as miracle worker and faith healer • Religious and social reformer • Accepted a variety of people • Go above and beyond the letter of the law • Preached forgiveness of sin over punishment for sin • Turn the other cheek
History of Christianity • Jesus’ work was continued after resurrection by St. Paul and St. Peter • Established churches throughout Europe • Church remained small and persecuted • Roman Emperors Nero, Domitian, Diocletian • Constantine promoted Christianity • Became official religion of Rome • Great Schism, 1054 • Split western (Roman Catholic church) and eastern (Orthodox church)
Catholicism • Pope is supreme spiritual leader and Vatican head of state • Vatican City is an independent country surrounded by Rome • St. Peter’s Basilica, St. Peter’s Square • First pope was Leo I (officially), or St. Peter
Orthodoxy • Literally means “right teaching or right worship” • Derived from two Greek words: orthos (right) and doxa (teaching or worship) • Followers believe that there were false teachings and divisions in early Christian times • Threatened the identity and purity of the Church • Followers believe the Orthodox Church carefully guards the truth against all error and schism • Believe in saint worship, Eucharist, confession of sins, baptism
Protestantism • Movement from 16th century “Reformation” • To reform the (Catholic) church • Corruption, leadership, authority, etc. • Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Knox • Brought to America in various forms • Usually recognize only 2 sacraments of baptism and communion • 7 in Catholicism • No saints, no rosary, no pope, etc.
Anglican • Began in 6th century England • Followed Luther’s protest • King Henry VIII spent most of his reign challenging the authority of Rome • Divorce was just one issue • Spread by English colonization and missionaries • Do not follow Pope’s authority • Led by bishops • Now ordain women priests • Book of Common Prayer • Often called Episcopal
Scripture • Old Testament (the Hebrew Bible) • New Testament (written after Jesus’ death, by his followers, during the first century; not canonized until the 4th century) • Four gospels (“good words”) about the birth, life, teaching, acts, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Written by Mark, Matthew, Luke & John • The Book of Acts of the apostles – earliest history of the developing church • Epistles (“letters”) of Paul addressed to the churches they founded and led throughout the Mediterranean • The Book of Revelation – of John - a vision of the end of time, or the Apocalypse.
Beliefs and Customs • Baptism: outward sign of commitment to Jesus • Eucharist (communion): symbolic meal of Jesus’ last meal with disciples; taken in thanks and celebration • Trinity: belief in God as the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; not 3 different gods • Saints: celebrated people who led good lives, often associated with miracles
Other Beliefs • Original sin: all humanity is inherently separated from God • The sacrifice of Jesus – a sinless representative of humanity (a “scapegoat”) - as the ultimate atonement for the sins of humanity • Heaven and Hell: • Eternal life for those who are “saved by the blood of the lamb (Jesus)” • Eternal damnation for those who are not so saved
Problem for Humans • Damnation • New covenant based on Christ needed to atone for Adam’s sins • Efforts and good deeds alone cannot save you; you must have faith in Christ
Christian Holy Days Two major seasons in the Christian calendar: • Christmas – celebrating the birth of Jesus • Easter – commemorating the resurrection of Christ • Christmas: • Advent (four weeks leading up to Christmas day) • Christmas Day (December 25th) • Epiphany (the “twelfth day of Christmas”)
More Christian Holy Days • Easter: (early spring, date varies) • Ash Wednesday and Lent (40 days before Easter, a period of sacrifice and spiritual renewal in preparation for Easter) • Holy Week including: • Palm Sunday (Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem) • Maundy Thursday (communion meal/Last Supper) • Good Friday (Jesus’ Passion and crucifixion) • Easter Sunday (celebrating the resurrection) • Pentecost: the 50th day (seven weeks) after Easter (commemorates the coming of the Holy Spirit upon the apostles)
Early Christian Groups • Eastern Orthodox • Apostolic • Roman Catholicism
Lutheran Church of England, Anglican, Episcopal Presbyterian, Congregational Baptist Methodist Pentecostal Shaker Mennonite Amish Quaker Separatists Brethren (Puritan) Churches of Christ Christian Churches Disciples of Christ Protestant Groups
Jehovah’s Witness Seventh Day Adventist Unification Church Latter-day Saints (Mormons) Restoration Groups