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Reasons Of Christianity And Christianity In The Roman Empire

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In the first three centuries of Roman Empire the Christianity was persecuted by the authority of the empire. Behaviour towards Christianity in the Roman Empire fluctuated throughout the time period because of some events in the empire and actions of individual emperors. The conflict between Christianity and Empire was inevitable, but it was not at the level that the government should persecute the Christians. The reasons that there were conflicts and persecution were mostly related to the political climate, the dispostion of each emperor and differences of Christianity from local religions. In the Roman Empire the religion was headmost and first important social activity that promoted loyalty to the state and the unity of the empire. The Roman’s government policy toward other religions in the period of the first three century was quite tolerant. There was some kind of religious exchange between Rome and outside colonies of it. The outside colonies were free to choose their religion, and deities. To prove it, we can look at the fact that Britain were continuing to pray at their non-Roman gods at that period. Even some other colonies’ deities were accepted by the Romans. An example of accepting Sulis, which was Celtic water-goddess, also the Egyptian …show more content…

Some of them served in the army as Romans. Tertullian shows in his writings that Christians care about the empire, pray for the emperor. However, it was not about the relationships between the empire and Christians. It was about the relationships of Christians with their religion. According to their beliefs, they should try to keep peace. As we can see from the “The Passion of St. Maximilian of Tebessa (BHL 5813)” that how the beliefs of Maximilianus keep him away from serving in the army although he was going to execute. These factors as not serving in the army had effected the persecution of Christianity also in the

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