Introduction: Christianity is the world's largest religion with more than 1 billion fans. It accounts for 33% of the world's population. It can not be compared with other religions. Other religions like Judaism and Sikhism have less than 1% of believers. Christianity began around the 1st century AD when Jesus Christ of Nazareth was born, but he did not start to preach between the ages of 10 and 11. It was not until the year 313 AD that Emperor Constantine of Rome accepted his teachings as a religion of the state.
The Roman Empire was the birth of Christianity and democracy, the main development of modern history. Christian theology summoned authority to follow invariably, inviolate individual believers. This is higher than other rulers like Caesar. This idea defines and supports the concept of freedom under the law. The concept of separation of power and restriction of power by Western Christian organizations, especially the Roman Catholic Church in the fight between Emperor Rome and local monarchs.
Ancient Greece, until the rise of Christianity, was a period of nearly a thousand years in the history of Greece. Most historians regard it as the basic culture of Western civilization. Greek culture has a strong influence on the Roman Empire and the Roman Empire has brought its version to many parts of Europe. Early inhabitants of Humanity in Greece were Crete, over 9,000 years ago, but there is evidence that the tools of the island can be traced back over 100,000 years ago. The earliest evidence of the ancient Greek civilization is Minos of Crete and its history dates back to 3600 BC. On the mainland, the Mycenae civilization climbed around 1600 BC and continued until about 1100 BC on behalf of the Minos civilization of Crete, leading to an era known as the age of darkness in Greece.
Early Christians maintained great compatibility between faith and reason, but at this point in history, we began to enter the rise of Christianity (the rise of Judaism). Practice is completely different. And the Jews practiced for years. Beginning with Christian caregivers, early Christian philosophers began to express a less important role that reason should play in religious world. Tetoliang began to express the view of 1 Corinth advocated by St. Paul and insisted that the religious belief "opposes and transcends rationality." He then says in his De Praescriptione Haereticorum, "When we believe, we no longer want to believe." He continues to argue that Greek philosophy does not need to keep faith and begins to show what is found in faith in a reasonable (rational) way.