Research Paper Doctorate 325 words

Christians Were Persecuted for Their

Last reviewed: October 5, 2004 ~2 min read

¶ … Christians were persecuted for their failure to practice the Roman civil religion which required public loyalty to the Roman state and the Roman gods and goddesses (Christianity as a cultural revolution). Constantine's victory at the Battle of Milvian Bridge in 312 over Maxentius would mark the first major milestone to reshape the role of Christianity in the Roman Empire. Constantine had attributed his win to a vision of a cross of light at midday bearing the inscription meaning "in this sign you will be victorious." He had then converted to Christiantity and used the symbol of his Savior to represent his army during the battle.

Constantine's conversion to Christainity and power greatly helped to promote Christiantiy (Constantine converts to Christianity). Followers were now safe from persecution and received generous gifts from the Emperor. In an effort to strengthen the religion, he made Sunday an official Roman holiday so that more people could attend church, and made churches tax-exempt. The growth of the Church and its new-found public aspect prompted the building of specialized places of worship where leaders were architecturally separated from the common attendees. Previously, house churches were small and informal.

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PaperDue. (2004). Christians Were Persecuted for Their. PaperDue. https://paperdue.com/essay/christians-were-persecuted-for-their-58170

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