CHRISTIANITY
CHRISTIANITY
CHRISTIANITY
OVERVIEW
Beginnings
The disciples
began baptizing people, and their community of baptized
Jews grew quickly. They continued to think of themselves as
Jews and continued attending the temple, reading the Jewish
scriptures, keeping the Sabbath, and adhering to Jewish
dietary and religious practices. But other Jews, viewing them
as a sect that worshipped a false messiah, persecuted them.
Persecution forced the spread of Jewish Christians from
Jerusalem to the country districts of Judea and Samaria.
The Book of Acts reports that the first Christian martyr was a
deacon named Stephen, who was stoned to death for
witnessing to Jesus as the Messiah.
A Jew named Saul, a Roman citizen from Tarsus in Asia
Minor, joined in the persecution of the Jewish Christians.
However, Acts 9 reports that Saul had a vision of Jesus on the
road to Damascus.
Influences
Study Questions:
1. How was Christianity linked to a Jewish identity?
2. Why was Jesus revered amongst early Christian
followers?
3. How did the Roman Empire influence Christian
communities?
Sacred Texts
The canonical Christian Bible
(bracketed books are not accepted by all denominations)
Old Testament
Pentateuch Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy
Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1 Samuel, 2 Samuel, 1 Kings, 2 Kings, 1
Historical
Chronicles, 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, [Tobit], [Judith], Esther,
Books
[1 Maccabees], [2 Maccabees]
Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon, (Song of
Wisdom Books
Songs), [Wisdom], [Sirach]
Major Prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, [Baruch], Ezekiel, Daniel
Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk,
Minor Prophets
Zephaniah, Haggai, Zachariah, Malachi
New Testament
Gospels Matthew, Mark, Luke, John
Apostolic
Acts
History
Romans, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians,
Letters of Paul Philippians, Colossians, 1 Thessalonians, 2 Thessalonians, 1
Timothy, 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon
Other Letters Hebrews, James, 1 Peter, 2 Peter, 1 John, 2 John, 3 John, Jude
Apocalypse Revelation
Christian scriptures are gathered in the Bible. The
word bible comes from the medieval Latin biblia, which means
books. Not all the literature produced in Judaism and
Christianity is in the Bible. The list of books collected in the
Bible is called the canon, a Greek word that means rule or
norm. The canon contains only those books considered
authoritative, and therefore read regularly, studied, and used
in religious services.
Christianity collects the Jewish scriptures in the Old
Testament. Twenty-seven manuscripts from the 1st century of
the Common Era are collected in the New Testament. The
first Christians defined testament in the sense of "will and
testament," or "covenant," so the Old Testament is the record
of the sacred covenant between God and the people through
Abraham and Moses, and the New Testament is the record of
the new Christian covenant through Jesus.
Because Judaism and Christianity canonized, or
authoritatively affirmed, the scriptures separately, the first
Christians included seven books in the Old Testament that
were not in the Jewish canon. The Christian Old Testament
and the Jewish scriptures were different until the Protestant
Reformation, when reformers revised the Old Testament
canon to agree with the Jewish canon. The Catholic Bible now
refers to these seven books as deuterocanonical (meaning
"belonging to the second canon"), while the Protestant Bible
refers to them as apocryphal (meaning "outside the canon"),
and some Protestants do not recognize them as having any
kind of canonical status.
The early followers of Jesus were Jews, and so their scriptures
were the Jewish scriptures. They read them and studied them,
praying their prayers and singing their songs. When
eyewitnesses to the life of Jesus began dying, their memories
became precious. People began writing them down. Soon there
was a proliferation of gospels and letters, and churches began
the process of vetting them for authenticity.
Study Questions:
1. What is the biblical canon? What does it contain and how
is it organized?
2. How did Christianity's canon differ from Judaism's?
3. Describe the four gospels of Christianity.
4. What is an apocalypse? What book of the Bible could be
classified as this, and why?
BELIEFS
Sacred Narratives
He has shown strength with his arm and has scattered the proud in their conceit,
Study Questions:
1. In what ways do followers of Jesus connect with Jewish
narratives?
2. What does the New Testament reveal about Jesus' life?
3. How are the gospels similar? Where do they differ?
4. How does the Christian narrative continue, even after
Jesus' death and resurrection?
Study Questions:
1. Why is God often referred to as “Father”?
2. What is the relationship between God and Jesus? How
does each reveal the other?
3. What do Christians believe happened to Jesus after he
was crucified?
4. What is the Trinity?
5. What do Christians believe about a divine plan for
creation?
Human Nature and the Purpose of
Existence
Study Questions:
1. Why might Christians argue that humanity is inherently
good?
2. What is meant by reason? Why must it be coupled with
grace?
3. Where do Christians believe sin originated?
4. Why is sin part of everyday life? How is it overcome?
Afterlife and Salvation
Study Questions:
1. What is the Christian understanding of atonement?
2. Describe the relationship between sin and death.
3. Why was Jesus believed to have provided the way to
salvation?
4. What does it take for one to receive eternal salvation?