The role of women in the early Christianity declined, "Suddenly Jesus met them and asked." "They came to him, grasped his feet, and worshiped him." (Matthew 28: 9) # Near the end of each of the four Christian Gospels, a woman lost sight of Jesus' body It was the first time. He was the first person to report the people who saw him after his death. Of course, this is a big sign of women's high participation in early Christianity. Having such a high position will undoubtedly create power, influence, and importance in the early church.
In the early church history, women played an important role in the development of Christianity. Jesus broke the traditional law of Moses and recognized the important role that women played in the early church. Paul and apostles remained faithful to Jesus' attitude towards women. Nevertheless, the Roman Catholic Church strongly refused to recognize the women's ability and qualifications to be appointed to priesthood officials. In raising the question of whether today's church can deviate from the attitudes of Jesus and the apostles, the sacred congregation examines various arguments and supports a positive response to this problem.
The opposite of the original church was one of the reasons why the Roman theater declined in the 4th century. Early Christians saw relationships between dramas and heathen religions, and the fathers of the church believed that the evil person depicted on the stage taught unethical behavior. Therefore, after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, large-scale cultural performances have disappeared. Ironically, the earliest recorded drama in Western Europe was a church ritual. Indeed, in the Middle Ages, the church began to show certain passage of the Bible. These dramatic evolutions evolved into a story of Christmas and Easter at the writing stage, so the illiterate masses were able to understand the Latin etiquette. The biggest theater drama activity in France, Germany, UK area is seen. Therefore, the Catholic Church is more coordinated by using dramas and dramas to spread the gospel.
Women are famous for their early Christianity, especially in the intimate circle of Mary Magdalene, and as the leader of his followers community. According to archaeological and written evidence, this practice quickly disappears as women were appointed as leaders of liturgy in the early church, and since Christianity became a national religion in the fourth century AD. But as a Christian community, pilgrims, writers, and supporters of theologians and mystics women continue to be leaders in the development of monastic traditions.