21. Why Christianity Was Accepted by Romans but Not by RomeLuther Martinb. "Why Christianity Was Accepted by Romans but Not by Rome." In Religionskritik in der Antike edited by U. Berner and I. Tanaseanu, 93 - 107. Munster, LIT-Verlag. [Chapter 21, this volume.]...
did Christ Die on the Cross — if “any religion” whatsoever will bring you salvation? This question — and any conceivable answer to it — is the most compelling argument against any speculative proposition that could logically lend itself to the project of what we have come to understa...
I’m a tepid non-believer myself. But being secular doesn’t give you a hall pass to ignore your Christian influences. We should study religion not to dogmatically accept faith, but to understand the foundations of our worldview. As we do, we should ask ourselves: “Is Christianity true?
Why did God wait so long to send Jesus? I have answered similar questions before regarding the apparent “delays” in God’s timetable. For example, we have previously considered the question, “Why did Jesus wait three days to rise from the dead?” and “Why is Jesus waiting so long b...
If the crucifixion hadn’t happened the way that it did happened do you think that Christianity would have endured and still be around? Mizvickey April 16, 2014 @ 8:27 am Dear Brother Nathanael, I read your article and I had no idea that the Jewish people are the ones who fought ...
in short, the language of the “Red-yellow” second or middle geological stock [we maintain the term “geological”].A strong percentage of theMongoloidor 4th Root-race was, of course, to be found in the Aryans of the 5th. But this did not prevent in the least the presence at the ...
Isn't it about time that we abandon this failed approach and reach out to them the way the early church did? While witnessing in a hostile world, they came straight out, with no apologies that Jesus was the Way, the Truth, the Life and that no man could come to the Father but by ...
The Middle Ages were an era of religion. When one branch of Christianity dominated the market for religious services in Rome, it became the spiritual and political mortar for the whole empire. Later, in surviving Rome’s collapse, it became the Christendom of the medieval period. ...
What did the Early Fathers of the Church say about married clergy? The Church Fathers of the first four centuries consistently spoke against the married priesthood (Eusibius, Augustine, Tertullian, Origen, St. Cyril of Jerusalem, St. Jerome etc.). St. Epiphanius speaks of the accepted eccles...
Church is never prescribed in Christianity. It was assumed, because people who have something wonderful in common like to gather and share it. There was a time when building a great edifice of a temple was part of the plan, but Jesus made it clear that time would pass, and it did. He...