
Christianity has often been linked to Western civilization, especially in modern times with the United States. The religion spread after Jesus’ death, but it reached the American continent much later. A world map animation traces Christianity’s historical propagation, beginning in the Middle East and expanding until it appears across every continent, with Antarctica also showing churches. The spread occurred through varied environments, cultures, and societies, leading to changes rather than preservation of a single form. The map includes a legend of major variants, ranging from early Nicene, Celtic, and Chalcedonian Christianity to later Anglican, Lutheran, Baptist, and many other forms.
"Christianity has long been closely identified with Western civilization. The association is especially strong, in modern times, with the United States of America, that source of derisively quoted, quite possibly apocryphal arguments that "if English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it ought to be good enough for our children." But of course, Jesus never heard a word of English, and though the spread of the religion named after him did shift into high gear not long after his death - to say nothing of after Constantine's - it took its sweet time getting to the American continent."
"In fact, it doesn't show up there until more than five and a half minutes into the new eight-minute video from Ollie Bye above, which animates Christianity's historical propagation on a world map. It's a world map by the end, in any case: the view zooms out as the reach of Christianity increases, starting with the region we now call the Middle East and ending up with every continent on display, none of them untouched save Antarctica (which actually does have eight churches of its own)."
"Remarkable though it is that this first-century "desert religion" has taken root in such a variety of environments, cultures, and societies, it hasn't come through that process completely unchanged. Indeed, Bye's map includes a running legend of its major variants, from Nicene, Celtic, and Chalcedonian Christianity early on to Anglican, Lutheran, Baptist, and many more in our time. It makes less sense to speak of the spread of Christianity"
Read at Open Culture
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]