Sunday, October 7, 2018

The History of Distortion and Deviation in Christianity


The disciples and messengers that Jesus (AS) had prepared to take the Truth to the other places were persecuted and executed one by one. This caused the his followers to suffer in great turmoil. It seemed that Christianity might diminish and be extinguished.

At that time, a Jewish man named Chaul, who was very well educated in philosophy and civilizations and who had participated in the persecution of the followers of Jesus (AS) unexpectedly converted to be a follower of Jesus (AS). He claimed to have seen Jesus (AS) from his way from Damascus appearing to him in the sky. He claimed that Jesus (AS) reprimanded him for persecuting his followers and commanded him to spread his teachings to the people. Some Christians were happy about Chaul's acceptance of Christianity but some did not believe him. Barnabas one of the disciples who defended him and introduced him to the rest of the disciples. Chaul was able to achieve a high rank among the disciples. He named himself Paul or “Boulous”. The disciples started to spread the message of their faith in the neighboring lands. They established churches in Alexandria, Rome, Athens and many places in Europe and the Middle East.

The deviation in Christianity started in between the year 51-55 AD when the first convention was held which brought surviving disciples together in their first meeting. This was the Convention of Orchaleem which was held under the leadership of Jacob the son of Joseph the Carpenter who was killed by stoning in the year 62 AD. This convention was held to discuss the issue of exempting the non-Jews from the responsibility and obligation of following  the teaching of Musa (AS). It mandated the teaching of Musa (AS) on everyone. It agreed on the prohibition of adultery, the consumption of ritually unslaughtered animal meat and the meat of animals that were slaughtered for the idols. Unfortunately, eating pigs meat, dealing in usury and drinking wine were introduced in Christianity,  although they were forbidden by the religion that Jesus practiced.

Paul and Barnabas returned to Antakiya but they differed and separated because of the announcement of Paul to abrogate all the teachings of Torah. He claimed that the Torah was a curse and they needed to get rid of it. He claimed that the Messiah came to change an old era for a new one. As a result of his philosophy and the influence of Greek philosophy of that time, he had borrowed the idea of the connection between God and His creation on earth. He introduced the idea of son of God and the Holy Spirit. He also introduced the concept of salvation through crucifixion. According to this he claimed that Jesus will rise to heavens and will sit on the right hand of God and will judge humanity on the Day of Resurrection based on their accepting him as divine. Paul visited Europe and Asia. Finally he was killed in Rome in 65 AD.

Initially there was a lot of resistance to Paul’s ideas. Nevertheless, the seeds of trinity and idolatry were sown in Christianity. The rest of the disciples and messengers of Jesus were killed by the idolaters. 

The Christians suffered from the hands of the Jews who had religious authority and from the hands of Romans who had political authority and control, The Christians of the Palestine & Egypt were more severely persecuted. They were sawn, burned and crucified alive. Of these remarkable persecutions was the persecution of Nirone in 64 AD, that of Demtianos in 90 AD in which John wrote his Bible in the Greek language, that of Trajon in 106 in which he ordered the execution of Christians and burning of Christian books, that of Decladianos in 284 was most barbaric. He insisted that he will not stop killing Christians until their blood reach the knees of his horse and he achieved this objective. He destroyed Churches and burned Christian books. As a result, the Egyptian Coptic Christians chose 29 August year 284 AD as the beginning of their calendar to commemorate their victims.

Only later on, the Romans started to have a dialogue with Christians and accepted them. They used their alliance with them for political reasons to extend their empire in the East. More churches were built for them by the Romans.

This period in Christian history is characterized by great loss of lives. It was then that the Bible was lost, the Torah was ignored and the concept of the prophet-hood of Jesus (AS) dissipated. Jesus's (AS) disciples and messengers were killed and the religion became known as "Christianity"

Celibacy, monks and nuns appeared in Christianity due to the efforts of St. Paul and St. Antion in Egypt in 241-356 AD. Small monasteries began to be built in the south of Egypt. Schools of religious Christianity began to be influenced by Greek/Egyptian philosophy in Alexandria.

The golden age of Christianity according to Christian sources began with the coming of power of Constantine when he became the Emperor of the Roman Empire in 312 AD. In that era, efforts were made to unite all Christians on one doctrine. Constantine hired Christians, he built churches and took the cross as a symbol to his empire in addition to its idolatry significance. Many people converted to Christianity and this led to the appearance of many versions of the Bible. It is said that more than 50 versions were in circulation.

Emperor Constantine divided the empire among his three children. One controlled the East. The other the West. The third the central part of the empire. Each son followed a strategy to support his position by following the religious dogma which was found in his lands. Two of the sons were killed. The son who ruled the empire of the East - who was named Constantios - combined all the empires under his control. In 361 AD he died. In 382 the first convention of Constantine was held. It was decided to accept the dogma which said that the Holy Spirit is divine, alive and is the Spirit of God. and that Jesus (AS) has both divinity and humanity. A decision was made to persecute people who opposed this dogma. 

The Papal position in Rome was established as a result of the division of the Church in Eastern and Western. In the Western Church in Rome, the government was separated from religion. The beginning of treating images and portraits of Jesus (AS) and Mary as sacred was as a result of the convention of 787 AD. The decision was made to hang the portraits and images of Jesus (AS) and Mary in the churches, homes and roads so that looking at them will make people think of them. 

In 869 AD the Patriarch of Constantine raised the issue of the nature of the Holy Spirit. He stated it came only from God. The Patriarch of Rome claimed that it came from both God and Jesus (AS). The fourth convention of Constantine in 869 AD was held to decide this matter. It was declared and concluded that Holy Spirit comes from both God and Jesus (AS). It was decided that all Christians must be affiliated under the authority of the Pope of Rome and that anyone who wants to know anything about Christian doctrine has to ask him directly. This led to the separation of the Western Church under the Pope in Rome and the Eastern or Orthodox Church under Patriarch of Constantine. The administrative division between the two churches occurred in 1054 AD. This has led to a lot of conflict between them.

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