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Click on any of the underlined to take you straight to that part of the document, Introduction, Size & Location, Origins, Holy Texts, What a Christian believes, God, Worship, The After Life, The Organisation

INTRODUCTION

Christianity is the world religion with the greatest number of followers.  The name Christian comes from the title given to Jesus of Nazareth � �the Christ� which is a Greek word which means �Messiah�. Christianity began in Palestine in the 1st century CE as the claimed fulfilment of God�s promises to the Jews. The religion has now approximately 2 billion followers around the world� with 40 million Christians in the UK.
 

There are many different types of Christianity practised, the major division is between Western (itself divided into Roman Catholicism and Protestantism) and Orthodox Christianity. Christianity is a belief system that has had immense cultural and political consequences. Christianity comes from the life and teachings of Jesus (5BCE-30CE approximately], a Palestinian Jew.

SIZE AND LOCATION

It has over 2 billion followers and is practised in all areas of the world.

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ORIGINS

Christianity has its roots in the life and teaching of Jesus of Nazareth (c.5BCE-30CE). Jesus was the son of Mary, who had been impregnated by the Holy Spirit, and is believed to be by Christians the Son of God. It spread from Palestine and increasingly encompassed people of non-Jewish backgrounds.   

It was persecuted under different Roman Emperors until the Emperor Constantine adopted it as the official religion of the Empire. From the 16th & 17th centuries onward Christianity developed missionary movements which established the religion throughout the world.

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HOLY TEXTS

Central to Christian beliefs and practices is the Bible which is made up of the New Testament which details the life of Jesus and the early Church and the Old Testament which is more or less the same as the Jewish Scriptures which Jesus would have referred to as a Jew.

The New Testament is made up of the following:

St.Matthew's Gospel St.Mark's Gospel
St. Luke�s Gospel                St.John's gospel
The Acts of the Apostles Letter to the Romans
1st letter to the Corinthians    2nd letter to the Corinthians
Letter to the Galatians     Letter to the Ephesians
Letter to the Philippians      Letter to the Colossians
1st letter to the Thessalonians  2nd letter to the Thessalonians 
1st letter to Timothy             2nd letter to Timothy      
Letter to  Titus  Letter to Philemon  
Letter to the Hebrews         Letter to James
1st letter to Peter               2nd letter to Peter
1st letter to John      2nd letter to John
3rd letter to John   The letter of Jude  

 The Revelation to John
 (The Apocalypse)

Other important texts are the creeds � the Apostles' creed and the Nicene creed which are summaries of the beliefs formulated in the early years of Christianity.    

The teachings of the early Church Fathers are also seen as an important source of authority.

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WHAT DOES A CHRISTIAN BELIEVE ?

The beliefs of Christians are summed up in the Creeds � which comes from a Latin word meaning �belief�. The two most important creeds are the Apostles Creed and the Nicene Creed.

Christians believe that there is only one God, but the nature of God is one of relationship and love. This is expressed in the belief in the Trinity (for most Christians) being three persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in the one being of God.

Jesus Christ is the Son of God (Incarnate), who came to earth as a man to restore the relationship between mankind and God. He was seen and known to be alive (the resurrection) after he had died on the cross, executed as a criminal by the Romans.

Christians believe that God was constantly present in the life of Jesus, without destroying or overwhelming his human life; in other words, Jesus Christ was both wholly human and wholly God in one person. Christians believe that Jesus� death on the cross was an atonement - a restoration of harmony between God and humankind.

The essential Christian duty is to live life according to the example of Jesus Christ, to love God (through Jesus, Christians see the nature of God as being characterised by �agape� � self-giving love), to love one�s fellow human beings as one does oneself and to share the Christian message.

Responding in faith to the grace of God is seen as the way of overcoming sin and achieving salvation through the Holy Spirit which lives in all believers.

The fruits of the Holy Spirit are:  

Love Joy Patience
Kindness Faithfulness Goodness
Humility Self-control Peace

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OTHER TRADITIONS OF CHRISTIANITY

The western system of dating years (BC/AD or BCE/CE) takes the traditional birth year of Jesus as year zero.

GOD

Christians believe there is one God, who is seen in three ways � God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost. They believe that God the son was a man called Jesus who lived on earth approximately 2,000 years ago. Jesus was crucified and Christians believe that on the third day he rose from the dead. The idea of Jesus� resurrection is very important to Christians as his death showed how much God loves the world and his resurrection is proof that there is life after death. Jesus� death opened up a pathway to God, they believe that he died for their sins and opened up this pathway which had previously been cut off due to the sins which humans had committed.

God, as Creator, is the unproduced Producer of all that is, who sustains all things in being. God exists apart from this or any other universe.

God�s unchanging nature has been revealed as one of care and love.

Humans are created at a sufficient distance from God, to be responsible for their own lives: God is judge of all that they do, but also seeks to rescue and help them when they go wrong. This rescue was achieved once, and for all, in the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus: during his life he showed how people can be reconciled to God and to each other; that same healing and reconciliation is now made possible for all.  

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WORSHIP

Worship is undertaken in buildings called churches, but "The Church" refers to several things:

 h  The total group of Christians

 h   Individual religious denominations�"The Anglican Church",  or "The Methodist Church"

 h   The building in which a particular group worships�"Holy    
 Trinity Church, Manchester"

Entry in to the Christian Church is via Baptism and is usually undertaken when the person is a baby though denominations such as Baptists wait until the person is old enough to confirm personally their own Christian faith.

In denominations where Baptism is the norm for babies, Confirmation is undertaken where the person personally affirms the vows undertaken for them when they were baptised as a baby.

Christians believe worshipping in a group is important and this is usually called a service which takes place in a church on a Sunday (Christians believe that Jesus rose from the dead on a Sunday).

Each denomination worships in a different way, some may be only slight whilst others are more noticeable. The most important differences are in the celebration of the Sacraments.

Roman Catholics celebrate 7 sacraments whilst Protestants accept only two (Baptism and Holy Communion).

The Most important is the Eucharist  (Holy Communion, Mass or The Lord�s Supper). The name Eucharist comes from the Greek word meaning �thanksgiving�. It is a service during which Christians remember the last meal that Jesus ate with his disciples the night before he was crucified. At the meal he gave the disciples bread and wine which were symbols of his death. The bread his body, the wine his blood. By partaking in the Eucharist Christians believe they are following what Jesus told his followers to do.

Important events in the Christian year are (see Powerpoint poster):  

h Advent � The church year begins in December with the season of �Advent�. It is four weeks before Christmas and it is a time when Christians look forward to celebrating Jesus� birth. They also think about the belief of Jesus coming again to form a new kingdom on earth.

h Christmas � The word comes from �Christ�s mass�, the church service held on  the 25th December to celebrate Jesus� birth.

h  Boxing day � The day after Christmas day, hundreds of years ago there were special boxes in Churches in which money was collected throughout the year. On boxing day they were opened and the money was given to the poor. 

h   Epiphany � In the Western Church this is the 6th January and is the end of the 12 days of Christmas. Epiphany means �showing� and it celebrates the story of St. Matthew�s Gospel when Jesus is shown to the Wise men. 

h   Lent � Takes place during the six weeks leading up to Easter. It is the time when Christians remember the time Jesus spent alone in the desert preparing himself for his ministry. Many Christians give something up for Lent in order to remember, in the Orthodox Church Lent is a time of strict fasting. 

h   Easter � This is the most important of Christian festivals where Christians remember Jesus� death and celebrate his resurrection:

The week before Easter is Holy Week were Christians remember special events in Jesus� life in the week before his crucifixion:
    

It begins with Palm Sunday when Jesus rode into Jerusalem on a donkey. Maundy Thursday is the day when Jesus ate his last supper with the disciples (his followers). Maundy comes from the Latin word �mandatum� � command. Good Friday is the day on which Jesus was crucified. Easter Sunday is the day Churches celebrate the belief that Jesus rose from the dead.
 

h Ascension Day � Is 40 days after Easter. It is the day that the disciples last saw Jesus on the earth.  

h Pentecost � Jesus promised to send to the disciples the Holy spirit to guide them. Pentecost is the time when the Holy spirit descended upon the disciples and people believe that it is the time when Christianity began. It is also sometimes known as Whit Sunday. 

h Trinity Sunday � Christians think about what God is like (God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit) and about their own lives as Christians.   

h Harvest Festival � Usually in late September. Harvest is a time of thanksgiving to God for providing food & necessary things in life.

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               THE AFTER LIFE

Christians believe in life after death as Jesus was raised from the dead (resurrected). They believe that they have only one life and that they will be judged according to that life - have they during their life accepted Jesus as the son of God and followed his teachings?  As Jesus says in the Gospel of John, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me."
John 14:6. 

After life, the soul ascends to heaven for God�s judgement, either then or at the Day of Judgement.
Jesus taught that there would be a separation, those who had behaved in a loving way ('I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me...')and those who had not (Mat 25: 31-46). Those who had would go to heaven and those who had not would go to hell. There is though always an opportunity for those who have sinned to truly repent their sins and be with God for always. Many Christians today do not see hell as a place of torture and punishment but a place where the individual is separated from God's love forever after rejecting the opportunity of repenting their sins.       

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ORGANISATION

As Christianity spread throughout the world different groups began to disagree over different aspects and the Church began to split up into different branches a formal division opened up in 1054 between Western Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy. In the middle ages the Protestant Reformation further divided the groups within Western Christianity, the main denominations (groups) today are:

hRoman Catholics
hOrthodox
hProtestant
hAnglican
hThe Free Churches
hPentecostal

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