Christians might oppose a homogeneous society, which are groups of people that have common ties with race, ethnic or religious backgrounds, because of the way they were raised and their beliefs.
yes
no
250000
Yes.
Yes, until you add creamer. While it has lighter and darker swirls it is heterogeneous. Once you stir the creamer in and it is all the same color it becomes homogeneous again.
The crusades began when the Muslims stole the holy land of the Christians, Jerusalem. 3 main crusades were held to gain back the land. The christians had advance technologies and won the first crusade, but the Muslims quickly advanced their technologies to match those of the Christians and ended up loosing nothing. Slowly, however, the Muslim's declining society caused the Christians to slowly chip away at their land, until they once again were able to regain Jerusalem and a few other cities.
Richard
Because the Easter celebration is about when he died for your sins and rose again. He asked Christians to observe this.
Destroy your society and build it again,so that your society is better.
The Imitation of Christ is a Catholic book. I'm not sure of the relationship between born-again Christians, fundamentalists, and Catholics. I think they are separate.
Catholics are Christians and as such, believe in Jesus Christ, His Crucifixion, Death, Resurrection and Ascension, promising to come again.
A:Unless born-again Christians believe they are the only saved people, one should wonder why they set themselves apart from other Christians. On the other hand, all other Christians believe they are 'saved', or will be saved, so for them the answer must surely be 'no'. Who knows, maybe the atheists are right after all, and salvation has no real meaning.