¶ … Christian Conversion
Many conversions always happen in the world of religion and theology. The existence of different religious teachings and mainframes necessitates that people make choices of one of the many of these groups. Christianity is one of the religious movements with teachings directed at meeting the specific standards of living as written in the Bible. The followers and teachers of this gospel seek to convince and sustain individuals as followers, making for their progression into spirituality. They also promote their development as one experience more teachings and ways of life associated with such a religion. Such activities also happen to people who have given their allegiance to Islam, Hindu, and many other religions. This research has sought to study two attempts of conversion to Christianity, detailing their differences and similarities as they happened.
The two conversions that have been studied and noted of their differences and similarities include one in the book titled "Baedae Opera Historica" and another in the book titled "Soldiers of Christ: Saints and Saints' Lives from Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages." "Baedae Opera Historica" details a process of conversation that proceeds within a context of relaying the need for one to be converted in a simple way of encountering the life and behavior of those who have been converted. The book is a collection of Augustine's questions to Gregory. Augustine is a man of God, probably a Christian, who needs to inspire as a way of converting. In the context, he is referred to as 'Blessed Augustine, Bishop of the Church of men of Kent.' He asks questions concerning the way of life of someone who is deemed a saint, as a reflection of the lives of the saints who lived in the antiquities. Gregory Pope of the city of Rome answers Augustine's questions. Augustine is equipped with questions that are enlightened within the context of making someone become converted in some way through the embrace of the new life under discovery. Gregory is using the scriptures, preferably as contained in the Bible, to annotate every answer that he has to respond to Augustine in his attempt to convert the readers of the same (Thomas & Thomas, 2010).
The other conversion, contained in the book "Soldiers of Christ," details the life of one saint by the name Sulpicius Severus, who narrates the life of the an individual called Martin of Tours. The conversion process involves detailing on the life of Sulpicius right from when he was young to the time that he acquired a complete acceptance and capability to become one of the saints of the time (King, 1566). Through a narration of the circumstances that Martin went through, Sulpicius is attempting to change the mind of the reader towards embracing the life of a Christian. Unlike the other conversion processes on the teachings of the Bible, Sulpicius has expressed how he has lived and how he has interacted with different lives. The explanations include living in the palace as he was born into a well-off family entering into thoughts and mainstreams of religion and Christianity through the current circumstances.
Sulpicius went through a time of confusion in his bid to realize what was at stake concerning religion and Christianity. He lived during a dangerous time of civil wars, a peasant uprising, vigorous imperial reorganization and barbarian incursion. During this time, with a mechanistic growth in secular life among the people, Sulpicius saw a process of development that came to the church, marred by significant importance, controversies in theologies, and aristocratic struggles among other occurrences that needed truth and direction. He had to choose sides and make a decision. Through a narration of his personal life, he is, in some way, trying to convert the listener. Besides, this conversion process dictates the life history and experiences of another person called Martin of Gaul. The lives of the people of Gaul had an impact on what was taking place amidst the intentions to have the gospel of the church spread. The conversion process is likely to happen in such a way that everything that is sensible to the nature of life has been expressed through the feelings and the daily conversations of the people (King, 1566).
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