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And how do other religions deal with the time before they existed? Christians on this board seem to deny there ever was a time, which defies history.

2007-04-04 08:18:13 · 28 answers · asked by Learningone 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

28 answers

I'm a Christian, and I don't deny there was a time BEFORE Christianity. Any time before Christ came, "Christianity" didn't exist yet, because He hadn't come yet. I believe that there were followers of God, but the Christians did not exist until they had a "Christ" to follow. Christianity has a cool history, I think... God was always there.

2007-04-04 08:22:32 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Okay, I was raised a catholic, and never did we ever deny a time before Jesus Christ was born. The Old Testament was written before Christ, so any christian that acknowledges the Old Testament, must by default acknowledge a time before Christ.
Not only that, look at how history records time we have BC (which stands for Before Christ) and AD (which is latin and loosely translated means After Death - refering to the death of Christ).
And another thing, Catholicism was a religion before Christ was born. In fact, catholics were persecuted, during the Roman Empire, for practicing their beliefs along with the jews. That's where the fish symbol, that you see plastered on the minivans, came from. The fish was a way to tell if you were in the company of another catholic and if you were free to speak of where the next mass would be held - probably in some one's home.
So if there are christians out there that deny a time before Christ, then they need to be hit up side the head with the bible and forced to reread the book.

2007-04-04 08:57:49 · answer #2 · answered by AthenaGenesis 4 · 0 1

I've run across a few who have claimed Christianity was the 1st religion. Which is ridiculous... that's like saying there was the United States of America before the pilgrims settled here.

I'm a Pagan and as far as written history goes, there have always been Pagan beliefs. Even if there was a time where there was no Pagan beliefs, it wouldn't do anything at all to my beliefs now. =) But, in my lowly opinion, one shouldn't deny history. It's rather childish to do so, simply because you want your religion to be Absolute, Above all others... etc. etc....

2007-04-04 08:46:49 · answer #3 · answered by Kithy 6 · 0 1

No. But it does say somewhere that Jesus was "the lamb slain from the foundation of the Earth", i.e. that God foreknew what was going to happen.
Judaism started with Abraham, circa 2000 BC. Judah (one of Abe's 12 great grandsons by Jacob) was the surviving Hebrew kingdom, when the political unit with the 10 northern Hebrew tribes was defeated by the (northern Iraq-located) superpower Assyria, and mostly carried off into exile. There are various prophecies about the Messiah.

2007-04-04 09:01:10 · answer #4 · answered by Cader and Glyder scrambler 7 · 0 1

No. Christianity and the Chruch were established in Acts 2, shortly after Jesus death. Before that, the way was Judaism essentially. From Adam to Moses they had patriarchal law, then Israelites had the law of Moses and that lasted til the church was established in Acts 2.

This kind of explains teh change from teh Law of Moses to Christianity.

Gal 3:23 But before faith came, we were kept under guard by the law, kept for the faith which would afterward be revealed. 24 Therefore the law was our tutor to bring us to Christ, that we might be justified by faith. 25 But after faith has come, we are no longer under a tutor.

2007-04-04 08:23:45 · answer #5 · answered by tcdrtw 4 · 0 0

I'm sorry that you feel that way, since most Christians are not literalists, in other words the Bible text has a meaning of salvation and that is the Truth we speak of, when the world was made, is meaningless. Yes there was a world before Christianity. Christ lived in it, so did Abraham, Moses, Noah, etc... but the story of the love of God is never changing.
God bless and thanks for the opportunity to spread the Gospel of life.

2007-04-04 08:23:13 · answer #6 · answered by Perhaps I love you more 4 · 0 1

i did not became this way. in the starting up, the Holy Spirit became female, certainly the unique Greek be conscious became Aghion Pneuma meaning 'Holy/Divine Breath'. The be conscious Pneuma is/became female. It became incredibly far on in the style of Christianity at the same time as all hint of the female became excised from the Trinity... further, a key ascertain in early Christianity, both Gnostic and non-Gnostic, became the Sophia, in the different case properly-known because the Divine Sophia or the Virgin Sophia, Sophia meaning "knowledge of God". To on the present time she is honored in jap Christianity, certainly the St Sophia mosque which became once a Byzantine Church became completely dedicated to her. The capital of Bulgaria, Sofia, remains named after her. For the Gnostics, the Divine Sophia became the szyzgy or female Counterpart to Christ. For the non-Gnostics she is the female element of God and co-substantial with the Trinity (cf Father Sergei Bulgakov's SOPHIA: THE knowledge OF GOD). In both circumstances the Sophia is the Divine incarnate in 'All Created issues' and, alongside with Christ, watches over and enables humanity. For the Gnostics she also represented an element of the human soul trapped in the fabric international, Christ being despatched to deliver her decrease back... She looks in the former testomony in the e book of Proverbs, genuinely speaking in her own voice in Chapters 8 & 9. As an photo of the Sacred female in Christianity she inspired Hildegard von Bingen, Jakob Boehme, Jane Leade and a bunch of alternative visionary mystics. ultimately the Cults of the Virgin Mary and Mary Magdelene proceed to be effective images of the Sacred female, even nonetheless because the Medieval era both were decreased and disempowered. yet in case you seem at Gothic Cathedrals and the writings of St Bernard of Clairvaux you'll see how the Virgin is higher to a Cosmic status. in the jap Orthodox Church the doctrine of the Theotokos - the mummy of God - confers on Mary semi-divine status. And for the Beguines of the Medieval era, the ascertain of Mary Magdelene because the female who loved Christ the most became as effective an photo of human spirituality as the different... nonetheless there is not any strong reason those expressions ought to were suppressed except elementary male concern and hatred of femininity. it extremely is between the the reason why Christianity has misplaced a lot of its attraction and spirituality over the centuries. no longer some thing can live to inform the tale if it suppresses and denies expression of the better facet of 50% of the human race, be it of whichever gender.

2016-12-03 06:56:59 · answer #7 · answered by naranjo 4 · 0 0

Christians understand that Christianity as a named faith came to be through the following of the way of God through Christ as Lord. Pentecost is considered the birth of Christianity. The other question and answer spoken of in an earlier answer about God and time with the link is perhaps a more fruitful question as well as the answer presented there...to read more see link to question 6
http://www.forministry.com/USSCPCUSATPCTP/FCAStumpthePreacherQA1.dsp

2007-04-04 14:23:17 · answer #8 · answered by Achim 3 · 0 1

No, Christianity means Christ like, so we
follow him. He was Jewish and accepted
all to follow him and his teachings about God.
Before that Jews didn't have anything to do with
non Jewish people ( Gentiles ), and we believed
in the same God, the God of Abraham, Issac,
and Jacob. Amen
Jesus Christ accepted all to follow him.
His history is our history from the beginning of time. We follow and read about much of the Jewish history written in the Old Testament
of the King James Bible.

2007-04-04 09:04:39 · answer #9 · answered by elliebear 7 · 0 1

There was never a time before God existed. Your question presumes that only the oldest religion is the valid one, which doesn't bear close scrutiny. If that's true, then we should all be worshiping the moon.

2007-04-04 08:25:28 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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