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Christianity started with Judaism. There are many arguments on when did Christianity start. Some theories are Christianity started when Jesus crucified, some are were when Adam and Eve were set into the world. An other argument is that Christianity slowly started and became popular from a belief based off of Judaism.

Another view:

According to Matthew 16:18, Jesus said to Peter, "You, Peter, are the rock upon which I will build my church." However, scholars widely question the authenticity of this alleged quotation; and many scholars (even some who don't question its authenticity) question the meaning of this statement, since the Greek term, "ekklesia," which was used there for "church," signified, in that time, any sort of an assembly, even a political one; and a Jewish assembly (or - as it was then called - "sunagoge") was also a type of "ekklesia." Did Jesus start a Jewish sect? Christianity isn't that. So, this statement, even if it was authentic, doesn't answer the question: Who started Christianity - and when, and where, and why?

The only other Scriptural candidate for Jesus having authorized Christianity is Matthew 28:18-20, in which the resurrected Jesus is quoted as ordering his followers, "Go throughout the world to make all peoples my disciples by baptizing them in the name of [the Trinity] the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost." However, this statement contradicts Matthew 5:17-20, which quotes Jesus as saying "Do not think I have come to do away with the Law of Moses, ... for it will be eternally binding," and the first three of the Ten Commandments permanently ban any such thing as the Trinity, and clearly demand worshiping only the Father, never to include any second object. Even more emphatically, the Third of the Ten Commandments says "Do not take the name of God in vain," and so this alleged baptismal order was clearly in violation. Furthermore, the early Christian church didn't consider this alleged statement from Christ to be binding, and as late as the 16th Century this order was widely understood as having been directed only at Jesus' disciples in his own time, not at future generations, and the obligation was thought to have been fulfilled by them. In any case, the statement doesn't assert that a person who fails to comply with it will be viewed less favorably by God, or denied salvation. Moreover, only relatively recently did the statement come to be called "The Great Commission," and considered as the start of Christianity. This change of belief occurred at the time critical scholarship on the Bible first emerged, The Enlightenment. It's not how Christianity had seen itself during the religion's first 1,600 years.

And if Jesus didn't create Christianity, if a different person created it, then would Jesus have approved of what that individual was doing? Might Christianity even have been created by an enemy of Jesus? Not only might this have happened; it did happen. And the most thorough documentation of it occurs in the New Testament itself, as we shall see.

Before it is possible to know whether Jesus (or anyone else) started Christianity, or when Christianity started, or where it started, or why it started, or how it started, we must first have a satisfactory definition of "Christianity." Paul essentially defined "Christianity" (without even using the term) when he said in Galatians 2:16 "God approves only people who possess Christ-faith, never people who obey God's commandments." That doctrine is Christianity (salvation via Christ-faith), and it's replacing Judaism (salvation via obeying God's laws). And yet Matthew 5:17-18 quotes Jesus himself as having said, "Do not think that I have come to do away with the Law of Moses. ... As long as heaven and earth shall last, not the least point nor the smallest detail of the Law will be done away with." Jesus was teaching Judaism, but Paul - who admitted that he had never even met the living Jesus - said in Galatians 2:16-21 that the death and resurrection of Jesus meant that obeying God's commandments was no longer the way to please God.

After having applied modern courtroom analytical methods to investigate the evidence concerning the start of Christianity, I have identified the exact occasion at which Christianity (this doctrine: salvation via Christ-faith) actually started. Paul knew he was violating Jesus' will when alleging, in Galatians 2:16, Romans 3:28, and elsewhere, that God now demanded faith in Christ, instead of obedience to God's laws.

I have found that in the year 49 or 50, Paul culminated a 14-year conflict he had had with Jesus' brother James, by perpetrating a coup d'etat against him and overthrowing him as the leader of the Jewish sect that Jesus had established 20 years earlier. I find that, according to Paul's own reluctantly made admission in Galatians (especially Galatians2:12), Jesus had appointed James, not Peter, as Jesus' successor to lead Jesus' followers, and that the central conflict between Paul and James concerned Judaism's signature commandment, Genesis17:14, at which God was alleged to have said to Abraham "No uncircumcised man will be one of my people." In the broader passage there, Genesis 17:9-19, God had offered to Abraham the Jewish covenant or agreement to sign, and said that it would be everlasting or eternal, and that the way it was to be signed was by circumcision. Every one of God's men must be circumcised, and would have any male child circumcised on his 8th day. Abraham complied, and thus Judaism - obedience to God's commandments or laws - started, according to the account in Jewish Scripture (which Jesus' followers accepted as reporting history, not merely as a myth).

Paul, however, had been bringing Gentile men into Jesus' sect for 17 years without requiring them to be circumcised. According to Paul's account in Galatians, he first met James in the third year of his ministry, and his practice of accepting into the sect uncircumcised men was accepted both by James, and by Peter, Peter being at that time the chief person evangelizing to Gentiles. However, by the time of the 17th year of Paul's ministry, Paul had brought in such a large number of uncircumcised men, so that James called Paul back to Jerusalem to defend his practice. According to Galatians 2:10, the decision reached there was for Paul to continue what he was doing, so long as Paul continued raising funds to support the poor in Jerusalem - Jesus' disciples and their followers.

It's important to place these events in the broader context of the war that then was raging between Rome and the Jews, which was described in Josephus' works. Jews were at that time a conquered people, who had lost their independent Israel, and who were being ruled by kings appointed by Rome: the Herodian family were being imposed as their rulers. Jesus claimed to be the authentic king of the Jews, and this claim was sedition against Rome. It also threatened Roman Law, because Jesus was teaching that the Law came from God, not merely from Rome's Emperor or Caesar. This is why Rome had Jesus crucified, as a warning to any other Jew who might be so bold as to challenge Rome's authority to make all the laws and to appoint the kings. According to Josephus (Antiquities18:2:2), Rome also appointed the chief priest, in Jerusalem, Caiaphas. This is the actual reason why Caiaphas seized Jesus and handed him over to Rome's appointed Governor, Pontius Pilate, for trial on the charge of sedition against Rome. Caiphas thus was hired by Pilate, and did his bidding. Moreover, Jesus' followers were considered suspect, because they were followers of this man who had been convicted and executed for sedition by Rome. This historical background is essential to understand, in order to understand why Jesus' remaining followers, in Jerusalem, were politically vulnerable, and were very poor.

With this as background then: immediately after the council in Jerusalem, in the 17th year of Paul's ministry, James in Jerusalem sent Peter to Paul in Antioch (current-day Antakya Turkey) to tell Paul the bad news that James had changed his mind and would require, after all, that Paul's men be circumcised, in accord with this "eternal" and "everlasting" commandment (see Genesis17:13&19). Paul in Antioch refused to comply, and announced Christianity, the doctrine he stated in Galatians2:16-21.

Here is why he refused: During the First Century, when there was no such thing as anesthesia, and also when neither antibiotics nor antiseptics existed, any operation, even a circumcision, was both a frightful terror and a threat of death (from infections). To impose this medical operation upon a male baby on its 8th day, as Jews routinely did in accord with Genesis 17:11, was very different from demanding that full-grown Gentile men subject themselves to this terror and possible death. That's the reason why James had, for 17 years, not demanded that Gentile members be circumcised. But now, according to both Acts and Galatians, there were so many uncircumcised men who were calling themselves followers of Jesus, so that, in Acts 21:21, and elsewhere, Jews were rioting against Paul demanding him to have his men circumcised. According to Acts 15:1, the council in Jerusalem had been called by James precisely to consider this highly contentious circumcision-issue: Genesis 17:14.

Galatians 2:12 indicates that James changed his mind soon after the council and sent Peter to tell Paul to have his men circumcised, after all; and sent a follow-up team to arrive that evening to check up on whether Peter did his job. Peter was reluctant to do it. James had selected Peter for this mission because Peter had been Paul's teacher 14 years earlier, and did as Paul did now: accepted uncircumcised men into the sect. (See, for example, Acts 11:2.) James chose Peter to deliver to Paul the bad news because James knew that Paul knew that, if even Peter now accepted the necessity of imposing Genesis 17:14, Paul would have no continuing support at all from Jerusalem unless Paul imposed circumcision upon his men.

Galatians 2:11-21 presents Paul publicly having stood against his own teacher, Peter, and against the other representatives sent by James, and having announced (Galatians 2:16) that God no longer required obedience to God's laws, and that from now on, mere Christ-faith is all that God requires in order to send a person to heaven instead of to hell after death. The event recounted in Galatians 2:11-21 occurred in the year 49 or 50, in Antioch. This was the first time that Christianity (the doctrine announced by Paul in 2:16-21) had been announced by anyone, and so it shocked and dismayed both Peter and the other representatives from James.

When Paul called James' bluff on this occasion, and refused to comply, James was actually trapped: James' small and vulnerable group in Jerusalem needed the contributions and the other support to continue coming from Paul's far larger number of far-better-off followers throughout the Roman Empire. Thus, James mutely folded his cards; and, from that moment onward, Paul tacitly took over effective control of what originally had been the Jewish sect that Jesus had started and that James had inherited.

This event in the year 49 or 50, the first-ever occasion on which Christianity (the doctrine that Paul announced in Galatians 2:16-21) was announced, constituted Paul's coup d'etat against James, and the break with Judaism, the start of Christianity. Paul did it in order to save his career from collapse, to avoid having almost all of the men whom he had converted to Judaism leave him, as they would have done in order to avoid a medical operation in an era which knew no anesthesia, antibiotics, or antiseptics. After that occasion, Paul wrote the letters by which he is known, and he wrote these letters in such a way that he intentionally glossed over the question as to whether they still were Jews.

The authors of each of the four canonical Gospel accounts of "Jesus" (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) were actually followers of Paul, and not at all followers of Jesus/James. They wrote the actions and the words of "Jesus" to support Paul's agenda, including the Trinity, and the minimization of James. (Paul introduced the Trinity because he needed the Holy Ghost, Jesus's ghost, since Paul's sole authorization to preach for "Jesus" came from that ghost.) In turn, the later followers of Paul, during subsequent generations, assembled the New Testament, and wrote James out of the "historical" picture altogether. Peter was retroactively identified, by Paul's followers, to have been the leader whom Jesus had appointed; and the reason for this is that Peter had been Paul's teacher, and that the emerging Roman Catholic Church needed someone to serve as the "historical" link back to Jesus, since Paul himself had never met Jesus.

So, the short answer to the question is that Christianity was started by Paul, in the year 49 or 50, in order to salvage his career as a missionary for the Jewish sect that Jesus had started. Paul, in the 17th year of his career, was faced with choosing between retaining his members or else repelling them by demanding them to go under the knife in an era which lacked anesthesia, antibiotics and antiseptics. He chose to retain his members, even though he knew that by his abandonment of the Jewish covenant he was teaching the opposite of what Jesus had taught, which was Judaism. The authors of the four Gospels were Paul's followers, who manufactured a "Jesus" that embodied Paul's agenda, notthe agenda of Jesus.

Another answer:

It started when Jesus was dead and several hundred years later. Jesus was a Jew and he was not Christian, rather believed in Judaism.

Here is a story of the founder of Christianity.

Jesus was not the founder of Christianity as we know it today. Most of the New Testament doesn't even concern the historical Jesus while the main influence is the Apostle Paul and through the church he founded at Ephesus a Greek convert named John. Paul never met Jesus in the flesh, he only claimed some spiritual visions and proceeded to Hellenize the teachings of Jesus (who preached a generic form of Judaism), until he created Pauline Christianity. Because there are no known writings from Jesus or His actual Apostles, most of what He really taught is remains controversial. Also see the disputed Gnostic Gospels.

But according to Paul, Jesus' teachings are not relevant to salvation. While Jesus is regarded by Christians as the founder of the faith, Paul's role in defining Christianity can't be ignored and trumps Jesus on theology. "Paul is regarded as the great interpreter of Jesus' mission, who explained, in a way that Jesus himself never did, how Jesus' life and death fitted into a cosmic scheme of salvation, stretching from the creation of Adam to the end of time." The doctrines of Christianity come mostly from the teaching or influence of Paul, a Pharisee(?) who rejected his Pharisaic Judaism.

His worship was that of a "Christ" totally unrelated to the Jewish Messiah, a nationalist (and human) figure that was supposed to free the nation from foreign (Roman) rule. Paul would later be placed over his Jewish-Christian rivals by a Gnostic heretic named Marcion. See Marcion. The Church in its struggles with both Marcion and the Gnostics was forced to define itself and launch an internal war to silence opponents.

Another answer:

The Bible clearly states that Jesus came to establish His Father's Church - called the Church of God a dozen times in Scripture - on Pentecost, June 17, 31 A.D..

God's specially called Apostle to the Gentiles, Paul tells us the only way to salvation if through Jesus Christ:

Romans 6:23 (NKJV):

23 For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Ephesians 2:4-10 (NKJV):

4 But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, 5 even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), 6 and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, 7 that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. 8 For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, 9 not of works, lest anyone should boast. 10 For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.

1 Corinthians 1:18 (NKJV):

Christ the Power and Wisdom of God

18 For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.

2 Corinthians 2:15 (NKJV):

15 For we are to God the fragrance of Christ among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing.

And there are many other Scriptures from Paul and the other writers.

Another Answer:

Christanity started about 2000 years ago when jecus christ was borni th year 0AD. :)

Christianity began almost 2,000 years ago. Jesus Christ of Nazareth began his teachings and the idea spread from there into what is known as Christianity today.


In 30 A.D. About 2000 years ago.
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βˆ™ 7y ago
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βˆ™ 12y ago

around 30 AD when Jesus Christ started his teachings, he was the first christian

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βˆ™ 12y ago

it started at the mid 1st century..........

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Related questions

How did Judaism and Christianity start?

Judaism & Christianity started with God's Covenant with Abraham.


How and when did Christianity start in Virginia?

Jamestown


Where did the ideas of Christianity start?

The ideas of Christianity started in Judea with the teaching of Jesus Christ.


What country did the religion Christianity start in?

Israel.


Did Christianity start in Spain?

No it did not. It started in Judea.


What two religions did Judaism start?

Christianity and Islam.


Why did Islam start in Saudi Arabia?

That's like asking why did Christianity start in Jerusalem?


Where did Christianity originally start?

Christianity can be said to have started with Peter's preaching on the Day of Pentecost, in AD 30, in Jerusalem.


WHERE DID THE ORIGINS OF CHRISTIANITY BEGIN?

Christianity means followers of Jesus Christ. After the passing on of Jesus, the Apostle came together to continue the work. This was the start of Christianity in Jerusalem.


What was Christianity date formed?

Some have dated the start of Christianity to the 1st Pentecost in Jerusalem on Sunday, June 17th, 31 A.D..


Where did Judaism start according to Christianity?

Christianity acknowledges that Judaism began with Abraham as the first person after Noah to have a personal relationship with God.


How did Christmas start in France?

Christmas was brought to France when the population converted to Christianity