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Christianity Essay

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Was the Christian Savior the Messiah or is there an Alternate History?
Jesus Christ! God damn it! Both are common phrases whispered to ones self or shouted aloud to the masses by both believers and unbelievers. Day after day people turn to religion and God to find answers and to seek help with there problems or for other various reasons. People turn to religion to try and make sense of a world that can often seem too stressful and meaningless, to rise above however with faith; it gives the impression of meaning. It is said He can inspire souls and compel one to engage in acts of justice and mercy in addition to promising eternal life with Him (Bahr vi). One can doubt the chances most believers know of the origin and history of there own …show more content…

Over the span of the first three centuries Christianity grew rapidly and the new Roman Emperor, Constantine, was certainly aware of this. In 313 AD the empire was only ten percent Christian but by just over a hundred years later nearly all of the empire was converted. When Constantine finally had a united religion he himself proposed the new wordings to include phrases over the relationship of Jesus and His Father in the same way as: “being of the same substance” (Bercot 132). The term Constantine used to represent this phrase was homoousios; a significant factor leading to many early Christian writers using the term to describe the deity of the Son. However, the term doesn’t appear anywhere in scripture (132). Constantine furthermore erased all books by Arius. Anyone found with a book written by Arius would pay the penalty of death. The emperors had hoped by uniting the church there would be less division and fighting; opposite, Christians took up swords and began slaughtering one another over principle differences. The history we have over early Christianity was compiled at the beginning of the fourth century by a Roman historian, named Eusebius. He accumulated legends, fabrications, and his own imagination to create the early history. All of the following history was forced to base themselves on his questioning claims. The man who converted Paganism and Gnosticism did not himself lead a moral

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