Christianity is a religion converted from Judaism in the 1st century C. E. It is based on Jesus Christ's lifetime, doctrine, death, and resurrection People who believe in him are called "Christians". Christianity actually has many sects and beliefs. Until the end of the 20th century, most Christian believers were in the west, it spread to every land, now the largest religion in the world. Traditional Christian beliefs include faith in God, believe that God is entity, exists as father, son, and holy spirit, and that Jesus is holy and sent to the world as human being's Savior .
Christian faith has hundreds of different sects, and thousands of different interpretations and teachings based on the Bible. For me it seems that I've heard a lot about two of these groups. And the evangelists and the progressists seem to be at the end of Christian 's range of faith. Should we really differentiate the difference between us and their way of life? My answer is James 3:10 of NIV, my brothers and sisters. This should not be. I grew up to be an evangelist and have spent nearly 50 years with this faith. After casting doubt on my beliefs and what I have taught over the years, my idea came to be an improvement, not evangelism. Of course this does not mean that I suddenly became anti-evangelist, it is not my enemy of brothers and sisters who follow traditional evangelical methods.
Various experts on this subject are trying to identify what Christian sects are part of Protestantism. If Christian sects are considered Protestantism, it is a consensus that most people acknowledge that the following three basic principles of Protestantism must be recognized. Luther emphasized that faith in the Bible is the source of the Church's supreme authority. The early reformist church believed in critic but serious reading of the scriptures and used the Bible as a higher authority than the church tradition. Many of the abuses done in the Western Church before the Protestant Reform led the reformers to reject the majority of their traditions, but some remain traditional, the liturgy and religious reform church It was reorganized into a religious belief.
Bishop Protestant Christian sects are Protestant denominations brought to the United States by their historic immigration groups and hence they are sometimes called legacy churches. The largest church is the church of Bishop (English), Presbyterian (Scottish), Methodist (English and Welsh), and Lutheran (German and Scandinavian) churches. The mainstream Protestantism, including the British Church (76%), Presbyterian Church (64%), and the United Christian Church, is the largest number of graduates and graduate students per capita and the other Christian sect in the United States . As a best earner