Both Peter and Paul both sought to reach out to Jews and non-Jews with the gospel. Both preached the same gospel.
However, whereas Peter was better attuned to the sensitivities of Jewish Christians, Paul was better attuned to the sensitivities of non-Jewish Christians.
The led to a conflict between them over sharing meals (Gal. 2:11-21), which is often - but wrongly - considered to thought to be about Holy Communion, which was resolved at the Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15).
The resolution of this conflict meant that Paul and others continued to earnestly preach the gospel to non-Jews. Peter also did the same, sending Silvanus to support them (1 Peter).
Christianity, which they spread to the Near East during the Crusades.
Constantine helped spread Christianity throughout the Roman Empire. He issued the Edict of Milan in 313, which granted religious tolerance to Christians and allowed them to practice their faith openly. Constantine's conversion to Christianity and support of the religion played a significant role in its growth and development.
The Roman Empire made Christianity the official religion of the Empire, and 'encouraged' the peoples it conquered to convert.
Monks help spread Christianity across Europe.
Missionaries are the people who help spread a religion.
spread Christianity
Kings and Monasteries helped to spread Christianity.
To spread Christianity. They thought it was what their God wanted them to do as if it would help save the people of the world.
The apostles of Jesus Christ help spread what was later called Christianity. At first people such as the Romans and others considered the apostles and what they taught to be a Jewish sect. By the end of the 1st century it was clear that it was not a sect, but a different religion.
Like its sister religions of Judaism and Christianity, which all shared the same god, it was a missionary religion, converting by persuasion and force as a means of political as well as religious control.
The Romans did not help spread Christianity. It was the other way round. Christianity was spread around the Roman Empire by the apostles, other missionaries and the clergy (when Christianity developed its churches). Christianity started in Judea, which was part of the Roman province of Syria; that is, it was part of the Roman Empire. It became widespread by the third century. It was persecuted several times. There were alternations of periods of toleration and periods of persecution. Then in the early fourth century, the emperor Constantine the Great promoted Christians in the imperial bureaucracy, tried to arbitrate between opposing Christian doctrines and built a number of important Christian Churches. In 380 mainstream Christianity was made state religion the sole legitimate religion and dissident Christian doctrines were branded as heretic and banned. It can be said that Christianity is one of the main legacies of the Romans. It developed from a religion among a small group of Jews into a mass religion in the Roman days. It spread around the Roman Empire. It became the religion of the masses and then state religion. Catholic Christianity and Orthodox Christianity developed during the Late Roman Empire. They were originally called Latin or Western Christianity and Greek or Eastern Christianity respectively. The former was the main religion in the western part of the Roman Empire and the latter was the main religion in the eastern part of the Roman Empire. The further spread of Catholicism in Western Europe was promoted later by Charlemagne the king of the Franks when he developed the Carolingian Empire. The further spread of Orthodox Christianity was spread in eastern Europe by Greek missionaries and particularly by Photios, Patriarch of Constantinople, and the adoption of this religion in Russia by Vladimir the Great, the grand prince of Kiev.
Monks help spread Christianity across Europe.