Constantine The Great Impact On Christianity

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Constantine’s Impact on the Development of Christianity

Constantine the Great played an important role in the development of Christianity during the middle ages. Constantine had converted to Christianity in 312 A.D. There were many reasons as to why this had happened. His conversion to Christianity had far reaching effects on the common practice of this religion and on all the factions of Christianity that are present today. Constantine the Great was the first Roman Emperor to actually adapt to Christianity, although historians do controvert to whether Constantine did convert to Christianity because of faith or because of politics. He did have a lot to do with the development of Christianity.

One of the major impacts Constantine The Great
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Another huge alter Constantine had on the development of Christianity was that he changed the Scriptural method of becoming a Christian. This was a positive change because no one could just change to Christianity, this would protect the great religion Christianity which was and still is. Prior to the time of Constantine, a person became a Christian through conversion or the new birth, It was the blood of Jesus that washed away sins. Constantine had waited until just before his death to get baptised because he had believed that baptism washes away sins, and this makes one a Christian which was a typical thought from Pagans throughout the old world and new world. This was another rule for people in the middle ages who were converting to Christianity. It did play a huge part as it decided on who was able to change their religion to …show more content…
For the three centuries prior to Constantine, Christians traveled from the end of the Earth to Jerusalem to view the empty tomb on the Mount of Olives:
Believers in Jesus all congregate from all parts of the world that they may worship at the Mount Of Olives opposite the city to the cave.
Constantine set up two rival centres and Jerusalem was eventually relegated to a backwater. In the Old Testament Book of Kings, Jeroboam set up two golden calves: one at Dan in the north and another at Bethel in the south in order to keep the people from going to Jerusalem to worship Whereupon the king took council, and made two calves of gold, and said unto them, It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem: behold thy gods, O Israel which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt. And he set the one in Dan and the other in Bethel. (I Kings 12:28-29). In the Old Testament, Jeroboam created two rival centres to Jerusalem. One was located in Dan in the North, and the other was located in Bethel in the South. The two became bitter rivals of each