Strictly speaking, there is not really a Jesus of history, only a Jesus of the gospels. There is no historical evidence outside the Bible for the existence of Jesus. However, the Jesus of the gospels is certainly the Christ of modern faith. Scholars are less certain as to whether there were two or more Jesus or Christ movements in the middle of the first century.
Burton L. Mack sees the earliest forms of Christianity as consisting of two quite different schools, which he calls the "Jesus Movement" and the "Christ Cult". He says that the Jesus Movement arose around a holy preacher who lived in Palestine in the early part of the first century and taught moral truths, but was not divine and was not necessarily crucified. The Christ Cult arose in northern Syria and spread quickly into Asia minor, based on a spiritual, rather than human understanding of Jesus. On this hypothesis, Paul must have been a follower of the Christ cult, while the gospels were written from within the Jesus movement after it began to assimilate much of the teachings of the Christ Cult.
Others say that the Christ Cult is older than the Jesus Movement and that Jesus of Nazareth, if he existed, was assimilated into the Christ Cult, thereby developing the concept of Jesus as the Christ.
There is no difference. The Jesus of history is the Jesus of faith, and faith in him is not blind but based upon history.
There is no difference if you already believe that the Son of God is Jesus Christ.
"Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see." Hebrews 11:1 (NIV) We can't see God, so we need faith to believe. Jesus said, "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed." John 20:29
There is no sacrifice of the mass in Protestant faith, for Jesus was sacrificed once for us on Calvary, so no other sacrifice is needed. You shall have to ask our Roman Catholic brethren on this question.
Faith: always in the presant, accepting. Hope: always in the future, expecting.
Judeo-Christian faith is one god; Greco-Roman faith had many gods.
The Jewish people lived by the laws of the Torah. They didn't accept that faith in Jesus constituted fulfillment of the Law. Jesus said that through him, people can receive salvation but the Jews believe it is through works.
faith you believe things always believe science is truth and experiments chose faith over science!
Mainly the major difference between the two is that the Serbians are of the Eastern Orthodox Faith, and the Croatians are Catholics.
Knowledge is information or understanding gained through experience, study, or observation. It is based on evidence and can be verified. Faith, on the other hand, is a belief in something without requiring evidence or proof. It is based on trust and confidence rather than empirical data.
Anglicans do not follow the Pope, nor do they believe in the Holy Eucharist.
Knowledge is based on facts, Faith is based on "nothing" (a dream, a hope, a wish).
One possible contrast to faith would be doubt. An example of which is illustrated in the discourse between Thomas and Jesus after the resurrection.