He traveled all over to the different cities preaching the good news, helped set up churches and put people in charge (generally men), and wrote letters to different cities.
he preaches
They thought that God wanted them to preverve and spread Christianity.
They thought that God wanted them to preverve and spread Christianity.
What Paul wrote in the bible is important because he was a sinner himself, and when he was changed by the Lord he spread this faith to many churches and believers
They thought that God wanted them to preverve and spread Christianity.
no, its a scam .
It was Jesus Christ via the missionary work of the apostles. Christianity was the monotheistic religion which spread in the Roman Empire.
David Livingstone was a Scottish missionary, and he set sail to Africa for mission work. He did a great deal to spread Christianity there ,in the dark continent.
Christian missions are meant to spread the the faith of Christianity to others. Groups or individuals of these missions are called missionaries. They also do humanitarian work.
Corinth played a major role in the apostle Pauls missionary work.
She began her work in the slums of Calcutta, India, but has spread her mission to all corners of the world.
Christianity was spread around the Roman Empire by the teachings of the apostles who travelled in the eastern part of the empire, North Africa and Rome to spread the gospels. The work of Tertullian laid the foundations of Latin or Western Christianity from Carthage in Tunisia. It became the mainstream Christianity of the western part of the Roman Empire. Latin Christianity later came to be called Catholicism. The foundation of Greek or Eastern Christianity were laid by the theologians of the Catechetical School of Alexandria in Egypt (which according to Jerome, who was a priest, theological and historian of Christianity, was founded by Mark the Apostle) and the School of Antioch in Syria. It became the mainstream Christianity of the eastern part of the Roman Empire. Later it came to be called Orthodox Christianity. Arius, an ascetic Christian priest in Alexandria of Libyan origin, spread a dissident Christian doctrine which was popular around the empire. It was called Arian Christianity or Arianism and it was the main dissident Christian doctrine. It was suppressed from 380 on when the co-emperors Gratian and Theodosius I decreed that Latin and Greek Christianity were the sole legitimate religion of the Roman Empire in the Edict of Thessalonica of 380. Dissident Christian doctrines were branded as heretic and banned. The persecution of the Arian Christians begun soon after the issuing of this edict.