Greek and Latin were the major languages of scholarship for hundreds of years (thousands in the case of Latin). Virtually everything recorded in history for a long time was written in either and often both. however, the Greek culture seems not to have had a major impact, unless considered through the filter of the Roman Empire (which was an essentially tidied up and 'better' version of ancient Greece).
Greek thought did not benefit Christianity. By definition, Christianity is the teachings of Christ (Jesus). Any other teachings that conflicted with Christ's teachings negatively affected Christianity, including Greek thought and philosophy.
Paul, who spoke both Hebrew and Greek and was highly educated, stated at Colossians 2:8 "Look out that no one takes you captive by means of the philosophy and empty deception according to human tradition, according to the elementary things of the world and not according to Christ;"
One of the distinguishing features of the western Christianity, going back even as far as the second century AD, was that it was not as influenced by Greek philosophical thought as Christianity in the eastern half of the Roman Empire. It helped to give western Christianity different emphases than those found in the eastern Christianity. I cannot think of any substantial change that happened in Christianity in Europe as a result of "Greek philosophical thought being cast out of Christianity in Europe." The biggest change in Christianity in Europe arose from the Reformation. Even on the Catholic side, this resulted in the decisions of the Council of Trent, which eliminated many of the abuses identified by Martin Luther, but without making the changes in doctrine that he called for. The changes in Christianity at the time of the Reformation resulted from closer attention to the teachings of Christ, not from casting out Greek philosophical thought.
When Christianity was introduced, the English language changed. English got new words from Latin, Greek, and Hebrew Church spoke Latin. The New Testaments of The Bible were written in Greek and the Old Testaments were written in Hebrew.
The native language in Naftemporiki is Greek. The funny thing is, if you had asked me about this word before, I would've thought you made it up! Greek is the answer though!
Christianity does not have one universal sacred language. Depending on denomination and time in history, the following languages have had special use in churches:LatinGreekCopticSyriac/Neo-Aramaic
No. We still live with Alexander The Great's Influence. His armies spread The Greek Language and Greek Culture. It affected western religion. The Greek Bible greatly influenced our language and thought processes. Greek philosophy likewise also gave us thinking techniques. Many Greek terms were added to our language. Half of the terms in the metric system come from the Greek Language.
The Greek Orthodox regard themselves as the Original Christianity.
The New Testament was written entirely in Greek Koine, a dialect of Attic Greek.KOINE Greek was the form of the language spread throughout the Near East by the conquests of Alexander the Great. This was the language of the marketplace at the time of the early church. Since Greek was spoken as a trade language throughout much of the Roman Empire, Christianity was able to spread from region to region without a language barrier.
A:The Old Testament, originally written in Hebrew with a small amount in Aramaic, was translated into Greek in the second century BCE. Although there is an uninformed view that one or two of the New Testament gospels were written in Aramaic or Hebrew and translated into Greek, this is not really true - the entire New Testament was originally written in Greek. The translation of the Old Testament took place too long before the advent of Christianity to have any influence on the spread of Christianity.
Greece is the country. Greek is the language.
The language spoken in Sparta was Doric Greek. It was a dialect of the Greek language that differed from the Attic Greek spoken in Athens.
greek
Paul Fletcher McCullagh has written: '... The meaning of nomos in Greek literature and thought from Homer to Aristotle ..' -- subject(s): Greek language, Semantics