Christianity came to Europe very early.
In Acts, it says that there were Jewish people from Rome in Jerusalem at the very beginnings of the Church. It is likely that some of these were among the first converts to Christianity.
In the New Testament, we learn that Paul spread Christianity in Greece, and there were many other Christians doing the same thing at the same time in other parts of the Roman world.
Christianity came to Rome before Paul took it to Greece. The Jewish Christian couple, Aquila and his wife Priscilla were in Corinth before Paul reached there. They had come from Rome quite recently, when the Jews were (temporarily) expelled from there.
Yes, John the Baptist is recognized as a saint in Christian tradition.
Marriage became a sacrament in Christian tradition during the 12th century.
Because some Europeans did know how outside looks and what to learn more
The unicorn became a symbol in Christian tradition to represent purity, innocence, and Christ's incarnation.
Europeans are predominately Caucasian and Christian.
No. Europe is predominantly Christian.
AnswerMost western Europeans are either not Christians or only nominal Christians. For them, an understanding of Christian rituals is unimportant.
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There is nothing democratic about the Judeo-Christian tradition. The political tradition derived from Judeo-Christianity is tyrrany and authoritarianism. Democratic concepts were derived from Hume, Locke and Hobbes.
Christian Europeans colonised America.
no the europeans did not accomplish what they had hoped
The simple answer is "those who were not Christian".