Martyr Acts, invented in the second century, were a new genre of Christian literature that helped create a tradition of persecution and suffering under the tyrany of pagan leaders. They were brief and purposive accounts of martyrs' heroism, suffering and death, read out in church meetings and on the anniversaries of martyrs' deaths. The events they described were most unlike the corresponding Roman court transcripts. There seems to be a common structure, which is too formulaic to be believable for modern readers:
There has been a rejection of godly things in all the centuries of the church. The 21st century is really no different.
The relationship between a vassal and the church was the same as the relationship between any other secular person and the church. The vassal was part of the feudal hierarchy, and the church had a separate hierarchy.
.Catholic AnswerNobody started the Catholic Church in the sixteenth century, it had been doing fine for sixteen centuries since Our Blessed Lord started it in the first century.
Answer: The Roman Christian Church and its doctrines were created for political reasons (to support a failing Roman Empire) around 300 A.D.. Its descendants, the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Protestant Church were all created for political reasons. These political creations upheld the "divine right of kings" and stripped people of what we now call "civil liberties" for centuries. Answer: there is always a relationship between government and religion.
Assuming that you are referring to the Catholic Church, it's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. . As for the people who "refused to obey", that would be heretics and schismatics, but over the past 2,000 years, there have been a good number of them, for instance, some of the larger, more famous movements have been: . The Catholic Church is nearly two thousand years old, there have been untold heresies which were religious movement against the Church in that time. A short list of the "Great Heresies": The Circumcisers (1st century) Gnosticism (1st and 2nd centuries) Montanism (late 2nd century) Savellianism (early 3rd century) Arianism (4th century) Pelagianism (5th century) Semi-Pelagianism (5th century) Nestorianism (5th century) Monophysitism (5th century) Iconoclasm (7th and 8th centuries) Catharism (11th century) Protestantism (16th century) Jansenism (17th century
Most movements against the Catholic Church have been called heresies, the general title, there have been many: The Catholic Church is nearly two thousand years old, there have been untold heresies which were religious movement against the Church in that time. A short list of the "Great Heresies": The Circumcisers (1st century) Gnosticism (1st and 2nd centuries) Montanism (late 2nd century) Savellianism (early 3rd century) Arianism (4th century) Pelagianism (5th century) Semi-Pelagianism (5th century) Nestorianism (5th century) Monophysitism (5th century) Iconoclasm (7th and 8th centuries) Catharism (11th century) Protestantism (16th century) Jansenism (17th century)
It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. The Catholic Church is nearly two thousand years old, there have been untold heresies which were religious movement against the Church in that time. A short list of the "Great Heresies": The Circumcisers (1st century) Gnosticism (1st and 2nd centuries) Montanism (late 2nd century) Savellianism (early 3rd century) Arianism (4th century) Pelagianism (5th century) Semi-Pelagianism (5th century) Nestorianism (5th century) Monophysitism (5th century) Iconoclasm (7th and 8th centuries) Catharism (11th century) Protestantism (16th century) Jansenism (17th century)
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The relationship between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Princess of Kiev, specifically Princess Olga, is historically significant. Olga, who ruled in the 10th century, is credited with introducing Christianity to Kievan Rus', laying the groundwork for the eventual Christianization of the region. Her grandson, Vladimir the Great, later adopted Christianity as the state religion, further solidifying the connection between the Russian Orthodox Church and Kievan leadership. Olga is venerated as a saint in the Orthodox Church, symbolizing the deep ties between the church and the early rulers of Kievan Rus'.
They had both disagreed with the Church of England. It was said that the wanted to "purify" the church.
It's usually civil and respectful.
The first protestants were mostly Catholics in the sixteenth century who decided that the Church that Jesus Christ founded for their salvation was the Church that Jesus Christ founded for their salvation and so that dreamed up their own. To do that, they came up with a novel idea of basing it on the Bible Alone. As Jesus Christ founded His Church on Peter the Apostle, and his successors, and the other Bishops, they realized they had to come up with something different. As the New Testament of the Bible was written entirely by the Catholic Church and preserved entirely by the Catholic Church they had to reinterpret it and put a different spin on it. As it wasn't put together until the late fourth century, they had to ignore four centuries of Christian history. In short protestants are the latest in the long list of heresies that the Catholic Church has dealt with since the beginning: . The Catholic Church is nearly two thousand years old, there have been untold heresies which were religious movement against the Church in that time. A short list of the "Great Heresies": The Circumcisers (1st century) Gnosticism (1st and 2nd centuries) Montanism (late 2nd century) Savellianism (early 3rd century) Arianism (4th century) Pelagianism (5th century) Semi-Pelagianism (5th century) Nestorianism (5th century) Monophysitism (5th century) Iconoclasm (7th and 8th centuries) Catharism (11th century) Protestantism (16th century) Jansenism (17th century)