When we look at the early centuries of the spread of Christianity, the question arises: how could an event in Judea, within the framework of Jewish expectations of the Messiah and the Kingdom of Heaven, become so widespread in less than three centuri ...
When we look at the early centuries of the spread of Christianity, the question arises: how could an event in Judea, within the framework of Jewish expectations of the Messiah and the Kingdom of Heaven, become so widespread in less than three centuries that it even had a "Christian king"? If the good news of the Christians had an appeal to the Jews, how did non-Jews, especially Greek-speaking people, become attracted to that new religion? How did the followers of the Greco-Roman religion, that is, a religion based on a plurality of gods with specific Ionian (Maab) characteristics, accept Christianity on a large scale? How did the Christian religion, which remained unable to definitively influence the dualistic religion of Mazdea during at least four centuries of contact with the Sasanian Empire through the churches along the Euphrates River, bring the non-monotheistic Greek religion to its knees? This book is a concise answer to these questions by explaining the history and consequences of the bodily resurrection among the Greeks and the Messianic processing of it.
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