Chapter, Paragraph
1 1 | the main centers of the Roman world and beyond. Their
2 1,1 | the extreme claimed by the Roman Catholic Church. His activities
3 1,1 | 18:1-3) and had inherited Roman citizenship from his father (
4 1,3 | ultimately became the first Roman Emperor to embrace Christianity.
5 1,5 | between the Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Churches. Officially
6 1,5 | Charlemagne as the Holy Roman Emperor — there were now
7 1,5 | by the basic concepts of Roman law, while the Greeks were
8 1,9 | was so, since, unlike the Roman Catholic Church, which continued
9 1,0 | accepted union with the Roman Catholic Church and Russia
10 1,1 | in 1950 (many returned to Roman Catholicism in 1968). The
11 4,2 | by the pagans. When the Roman Emperor Titus, in 70 A.D.
12 4,2 | being the first of the Roman Emperors to recognize Christianity) ,
13 4,1 | and rescue them from the Roman yoke.~At the gates of Jerusalem
14 4,4 | throughout the Greek and Roman world and into other lands,
15 10 | common use throughout the Roman Empire at the beginning
16 10,2| However, both the Orthodox and Roman Catholics accept them as
17 10,2| their civic status by the Roman Administration of Egypt.~ ~
18 10,3| accused by the Jews before the Roman Governor, Gallic, but the
19 11,1| of execution used in the Roman Empire, however, normally
20 11,1| the typical Cross used for Roman crucifixions.~St. Andrews:
21 11,1| originally popularized by the Roman Catholic (Latin) Church.~
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