Christian Mission: How Christianity Become A World Religion

Words: 860
Pages: 4

As Christians, we neglect to look back at our history and see just how far Christianity has come and who has contributed to it becoming a world religion. Dana L. Robert starts from the Christianity 1450’s all the way to Christianity today. In Robert’s book, Christian Mission: How Christianity Become a World Religion, she discusses the implication of missions to the globalization of Christianity, and expands our understanding of Christianity as a culturally diverse world religion. Robert has not tried to write an all-inclusive story of the spread of Christianity, much less a record of theological disagreements or religious organizations and conflicts; she has touched on subjects like global networking, women in world ministry, human rights, …show more content…
He is remembered as an “apostle” to the Gentiles; he is described in contemporary terms a missionary, meaning the “one who is sent” (p.11). The churches that he and other apostles founded were almost immediately categorized by “internal and cultural differences,” a shared feature even to this day. The developing of the gospel across cultural boundaries started as soon as Jews and Greeks learned to agree to take one another as members of the same family of God, and as the gospel was translated into additional languages. “Christendom” began to take shape with the formation of Christianity as the official religion of the Roman Empire. It grew as new tribes were converted, often with the intention of digging deeper into the growing secular influence of the bishop of Rome. Outside the Roman Empire, Christianity was adopted by kings or many people in Persia (p.14-25). Robert also writes about the influence of Monk and Holy Men, “they would live life wandering, living peacefully and suffering for Christ” (p.25). Most Christians believe that Christianity began as a “western” religion; Robert brings history into the light and proves that it did not start off that