| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] christian-the 1 christianae 1 christiani 1 christianity 91 christianity-renan 1 christianity-that 1 christianized 1 | Frequency [« »] 93 great 93 much 93 testament 91 christianity 90 alexandria 89 christians 89 literature | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances christianity |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pref | in a few generations gave Christianity a literature that in sheer 2 Pref | This is an aspect of early Christianity too often forgotten.~Much 3 Pref | in that heroic age when Christianity moved through persecution 4 1,1 | Primitive Christianity Not Literary.~Christianity 5 1,1 | Christianity Not Literary.~Christianity began as a proclamation 6 1,1 | clearly pointed toward Christianity and did not need to be supplemented. 7 1,3 | this literary phase of Christianity gradually gathered strength, 8 1,4 | self-consciously orthodox Christianity of the Catholic Church is 9 1,6 | that began to pervade Greek Christianity in the earlier years of 10 1,6 | understanding of historical Christianity, the development of Christian 11 1,6 | defense and advocacy of Christianity men like Irenaeus, Tertullian, 12 2,5 | uncertain.~Second-century Christianity was clouded over by a wide 13 2,11| that was soon to divide Christianity. Polycarp and Anicetus could 14 2,13| to Jesus himself. Syriac Christianity documented this great claim 15 2,13| you and yours.~ ~Syrian Christianity did not begin until about 16 3 | not congenial with Greek Christianity, which instinctively found 17 3 | contribution to first-century Christianity, the Gospel of Mark, I Peter, 18 4,1 | others.”~ The gospel is Christianity's first contribution to 19 4,6 | would throw on the Egyptian Christianity in its earliest period.~ 20 4,10| assumed the continuity of Christianity with Judaism.~ But from 21 4,11| heterodox Judaism and heterodox Christianity; perhaps it was actually 22 5,3 | which are at once won to Christianity.~ 7. Here belongs the story 23 5,5 | organization of Catholic Christianity against the sects-Marcionite, 24 5,5 | apostle, upon whom Roman Christianity was more and more looking 25 5,6 | is some reason to believe Christianity had reached southern India 26 7 | The First Apologies.~As Christianity gradually separated from 27 7,1 | not accepted by standard Christianity and not appealed to by church 28 7,2 | unlicensed religion; in fact, Christianity did not obtain the necessary 29 7,3 | writing of apologies for Christianity emerges into clearer light 30 7,3 | later called upon to defend Christianity before the king and his 31 7,4 | A.D. 178, directed against Christianity. This work has long since 32 7,4 | out the rival claims of Christianity and Judaism was acted upon 33 8,1 | second century, in defense of Christianity. Justin was a native of 34 8,1 | and to accept the truth of Christianity. It shows the use of the 35 8,3 | combines his acceptance of Christianity with a kind of cultural 36 8,3 | been the founder of Syriac Christianity. Eusebius and Epiphanius 37 8,4 | and scripture, standard Christianity learned much from Marcion, 38 8,4 | later effort to organize Christianity into one great body and 39 8,4 | sought to show how different Christianity was from what the Jewish 40 8,4 | influence upon orthodox Christianity, however, has often been 41 9,1 | temporary sketch or model for Christianity, which is the true and enduring 42 9,2 | Athenagoras.~ The defense of Christianity against misrepresentation 43 9,3 | survived is the defense of Christianity, in three books, addressed 44 9,3 | shows the superiority of Christianity to paganism, exposes the 45 10,1 | the Eastern and Western Christianity of his day; he was born 46 10,1 | 177. Irenaeus thus knew Christianity East and West-Asian, Gallic, 47 10,2 | of the standard type of Christianity (Haer. iii. 3. 2). He gores 48 10,4 | in championing apostolic Christianity as he understood it against 49 11,3 | for the presentation of Christianity by showing the folly of 50 11,3 | controlled by the conviction that Christianity can satisfy man's highest 51 11,3 | Tatian, too, he speaks of Christianity as a barbarian philosophy. 52 11,3 | disappeared.~ Clement saw in Christianity the true philosophy and 53 12,5 | searching attack against Christianity, some two generations earlier, 54 12,5 | attack of the kind made upon Christianity in ancient times. It is 55 12,7 | kind of reporting in early Christianity.[74]~ Other works by or 56 13,1 | foremost figure of Greek Christianity in the West. He was born 57 13,2 | be the language of Roman Christianity; in fact, Hippolytus is 58 13,8 | curtain falls upon Greek Christianity in Rome. He was a Puritan 59 13,10| problems of Eastern and Western Christianity found him alert and energetic 60 13,14| those who had abandoned Christianity before the year 306.~ ~ 61 14,1 | not in Rome, that Latin Christianity had its beginning and that 62 14,2 | first great figure in Latin Christianity was Tertullian, or Quintus 63 14,3 | persecution simply advances Christianity: “We multiply every time 64 14,6 | the historic centers of Christianity, so it must betrue, and 65 14,6 | and itself a witness to Christianity. In the course of the next 66 14,6 | that was coming over Roman Christianity. For five years Tertullian 67 14,6 | values into his Catholic Christianity. He is still a Catholic, 68 14,6 | the spiritual heritage of Christianity. “You have quenched the 69 14,8 | 178, in his critique of Christianity, had already been: done, 70 14,8 | pieces, but his attack on Christianity has never been found. It 71 14,8 | the senate, uttered when Christianity was beginning to show strength, 72 14,9 | Fronto as an assailant of Christianity (chaps. 9 and 31), and it 73 14,9 | which the pagan case against Christianity is presented. Fronto's was 74 14,9 | only literary attack on Christianity made in Latin.~ The scene 75 14,9 | Octavius and forthwith accepts Christianity (chaps. 39-41).~ It is generally 76 14,9 | style Minucius' defense of Christianity decidedly excels Fronto' 77 14,9 | sophisticated philosophical Christianity of Lactantius; it is much 78 14,10| a great service to Latin Christianity in North Africa. His name 79 14,11| great centers of Western Christianity, and we hear the words of 80 14,12| the practical teachings of Christianity, supported with the appropriate 81 14,14| in omitting Jude Western Christianity still clung to the short 82 14,17| fact, it is a defense of Christianity, an apology. In Books i 83 14,17| Books i and ii he presents Christianity, and in the rest he attacks 84 14,17| takes up the argument that Christianity had brought disaster upon 85 14,17| wars and famines before Christianity came. In fact, Christianity 86 14,17| Christianity came. In fact, Christianity gives some hope of remedying 87 14,17| with the Christians, for Christianity teaches the fear of God. 88 14,19| philosophical attacks upon Christianity, one by Hierocles, who is 89 14,19| positive presentation of Christianity. This turned out to be his 90 16 | Constantine and the adoption of Christianity by the empire, the church 91 16 | 44] Rhodo, converted to Christianity by Titian, wrote Against