The Rise of Christianity Chapter 6 Section 3
Key Terms Jesus Apostle Paul Diaspora Constantine Bishop Peter Pope
The Life and Teachings of Jesus Roman power came to Judea in 63 BC Judea at first was independent AD 6 made of province of Rome God promised to send a messiah to restore the kingdom
Jesus of Nazareth Between 4 and 6 BC Jesus was born Born in Bethlehem Raised in Nazareth Baptized by John the Baptist Was a carpenter Age 30 began public ministry
Jesus of Nazareth Taught for three years Performed miracles Taught 10 Commandments Gods personal relationship with man God would end wickedness Establish kingdom after death for people who repent for their sins
A Growing Movement Teaching are from the Gospel First 4 books of New Testament Little historical reference Written by his disciples Apostles-12 men were pupils of Jesus
A Growing Movement His fame grew Attracted large crowds Ignore wealth message for the poor. “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the world”
Jesus’ Death Roman and Jewish leaders concerned AD 29 Jesus visited Jerusalem Greeted as king and messiah Chief priests denied he was the messiah Teachings were blasphemy
Jesus’ Death Pontius Pilate accused Jesus of defying Rome Pilate sentenced him to be crucified Body disappears from the tomb Jesus started to appear Ascended into heaven Became Jesus Christ (Greek for savior)
Christianity Spreads Through an Empire Followers spread message of triumph over death New religion based on Jesus’ messages Spread throughout the empire
APOSTLE PAUL Influence on development of Christianity Had a vision of Jesus Spread message for the rest of his life Pax Romana provided ideal conditions Travel Exchange of ideas
Apostle Paul Latin and Greek easily understood Paul wrote Epistles Jesus was the son of God who died for people’s sins Christianity welcomed all converts Enabled it to become more than local religion
Jewish Rebellion AD 66 Jews rebelled AD 70 Romans stormed Jerusalem Destroyed the Temple Western wall all that is left Jews in Masada held out till AD 71
Jewish Rebellion AD 132 Half a million Jews die Jewish political state ceased to exists for 1800 years Diaspora- Jews driven from their home
Persecution of Christians Christians refused to worship Roman gods Rulers used Christians as scapegoats Roman imprisoned or executed Christians Thousands crucified, burned, killed by wild animal Martry-person willing to die for an idea
A World Religion Despite persecution become a powerful force Why Christianity grew Embraced all people Gave hope to the powerless Appealed to those who repelled extravagances Promised eternal life
Constantine accepts Christianity AD 312 fighting three rivals Milvian Bridge battle he prays and sees a cross Orders artisans to put the cross on their shield Constantine victorious Edict of Milan-approves Christianity
Early Christian Church AD 380 Theodosius made it the emperor’s official religion Priest led each small group Bishop-supervised several local churches Peter traveled to Rome and became the first bishop
Early Christian Church Jesus referred to Peter as the rock All priests and bishops trace authority to him Every major city has a bishop Peter was the first Pope Bishop of Rome was leader of the whole church
A Single Voice Disagreements developed Hersey- anyone who did not believe Compiled New Testament Contained the 4 Gospels, the Epistles of Paul
A Single Voice New Testament added to Hebrew Bible AD 325 Constantine solidifies teachings Calls leaders to Nicaea in Anatolia Nicene Creed- defined the beliefs of the church
The Fathers of the Church Augustine Bishop of Hippo AD 346 Augustine taught people they needed grace of God to be saved Had to receive the sacraments
The Fathers of the Church After Rome was sacked The city of God could not be destroyed As Christianity rose Rome declined Increasing foreign and domestic problems