Christianity
5 Pages 1335 Words
On the threshold of the third Christian millennium, over 1 billion people worldwide consider themselves catholic. The word catholic is generally taken to mean “universal” although the Greek roots of the word mean “according to (kata) the whole (holos). In the ancient church, it was used to refer to a single, visible communion, separate from others, bonded together through the faith in the lord Jesus Christ. According to the accepted chronology of the bible, on the day of the Pentecost A.D. 29 is the supposed birthday of the Catholic Church. Jesus taught this faith in the country of Palestine during the reign of the roman emperor Tiberius. After Jesus died his followers helped the world accept the faith. One of the main reasons that this faith was accepted was the fact that everyone was received as equal. Jesus’ followers had a monotheistic view that one almighty God that transcended in three forms, the father, the son, and the Holy Spirit. After the Son of God was persecuted for his beliefs, he was crucified on a cross until he died. It is stated that after three days on the cross he rose from the dead and formed the Holy Spirit. While in this form he would visit people in mind and soul. Jesus was believed to be in every living thing.
Along with these beliefs, are ten rules that were inscribed into stone tablets by the prophet Moses. In the bible it states that Moses went to the top Mount Sinai, where God spoke down upon him telling him that the Ten Commandments should be the backbone of the catholic faith. These commandments read: 1. I am the Lord your God, who has taken you out of the land of Egypt, from the house of slavery. 2. You shall have no other gods but me. 3. You shall not the name of your lord in vain. 4. You shall remember and keep the Sabbath day holy. 5. Honor your father and mother. 6. You shall not kill. 7. You shall not commit adultery. 8. You shall not steal. 9. You shall not bear false witness against yo...