studies of religion year 11 religious tradition: christianity

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Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

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Page 1: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Studies of Religion

Year 11

Religious Tradition:

CHRISTIANITY

Page 2: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

• Origins

• Principal Beliefs

• Sacred Texts and Writings

COURSE CONTENT

• Core Ethical Teachings

•Personal Devotion

Page 3: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The origins of Christianity

•The historical and cultural context in which Christianity began

Page 4: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Historical background to Christianity: under domination of the Roman Empire

Judaism and the Jewish Scriptures: the Jewish context, the Messiah

The influence of the Greek and Roman world of the first century CE

Page 5: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The origins of Christianity

• Jesus Christ

Page 6: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The principal events in the life of Jesus

His birth, teaching and ministry, death, resurrection and ascension

Jesus as the model for Christian life

Page 7: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The teaching of Jesus had several distinct features. Jesus :

•Had a sense of intimacy with and total dependence on God whom he called Father;

•proclaimed that the Reign (or Kingdom) of God was at hand;

•Identified closely with the poor and dispossessed;

•Challenged the religious authorities

Page 8: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The origins of Christianity•The development of early Christian communities

The early church as found in the New

Testament after the death of Jesus

Acts of the Apostles; Pentecost; St Paul.

Page 9: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The Jesus Movement.

Wrestling with their Jewish heritage.

Paul’s Missions and Letters.Paul’s Congregations.

The roles for women.

Diversity of Early Christianity.

Page 10: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The origins of Christianity

•The expressions of Christianity in Australia: Anglicanism, Catholicism, Orthodoxy, Pentecostalism, Protestantism.

In the 1996 census 70.9% of the population identified themselves as Christian.

In the 2001 census 68% of the population identified themselves as Christian –

20.7 Anglicans;

26.6 Catholics:

20.7 Other

Page 11: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The development of the denomination

Distinguishing features

The basic beliefs

Governance

The roles of men and women

Significant rituals

Page 12: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Catholic Beliefs and Practices

Page 13: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Anglican Beliefs and Practices

Page 14: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Uniting Church Beliefs and Practices

Page 15: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Coptic Beliefs and Practices

Page 16: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Lutheran Beliefs and Practices

Page 17: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The Principal Christian beliefs about:

•The divinity and humanity of Jesus Christ

Christianity affirms the full divinity and complete humanity of Jesus Christ.

The Christian doctrine of the Incarnation is that Jesus was fully God yet became fully man. While remaining fully divine and for the salvation of the world, the second person of the Holy Trinity, God the Son, took upon himself a complete human nature in Jesus Christ.

Page 18: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The question of Jesus’ nature as a human figure and an incarnation of God was a question of some conjecture in the early Church.

Various religious thinkers proposed answers to this question that raised allegations of heresy, leading eventually to the Councils of Nicea in 325, Ephesus in 431 and Chalcedon in 451.

These Church Councils refused all efforts to compromise or deny the fullness of both humanity and divinity in the person of Jesus.

Page 19: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The determination of these Councils was that Jesus was at once fully human and fully divine, equal in nature and without sin.

In addition, the Council of Ephesus bestowed upon Mary the title ‘theotokos’, mother of God, emphasising the complete humanity that brought the suffering of Christ’s crucifixion to reality and the divinity that brought about the glory of his resurrection.

Christians believe that the human person of Jesus Christ reveals the divine person of God the Son.

Page 20: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The Principal Christian beliefs about:

•The death and resurrection of Jesus Christ

Christians are sometimes described as an Easter people, an acknowledgement that the Christian faith is seated firmly in the events of the death and resurrection of Christ and his subsequent ascension into heaven.

 

Page 21: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Christians believe that Christ, in his fully human nature, suffered the pain and humiliation of his trial and crucifixion as redemption for the sins of all people.

In this loving act he brings all people back to the potential of a full and loving relationship with God.

Christians also believe that after his death Christ, fully divine, rose from death and ascended into heaven to overcome the finality of sin and fulfil the promise of eternal life with God.

Page 22: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The Principal Christian beliefs about:

•The nature of God and the Trinity

•There is one God, Christianity is devotedly monotheistic.

•God is a Holy Trinity, one being of three co-equal natures- Father Creator, Son Redeemer and the Holy Spirit the Sanctifier

Page 23: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The belief that God can be One and at the same time co-exist as three Divine persons is a ‘mystery of faith’. However it is not treated in the same way by all streams of Christianity.

The western Church emphasises the full equality of God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit, whereas the Eastern Church emphasises the Monarchy of the Father. The origin of the spirit and God’s role in creation was one of the points of difference that led to the separation of the Roman and Eastern churches in 1054 (The Great Schism or the East-West Schism).  Christians believe that the Trinity is ultimately a mystery of faith beyond the limits of human reason.

Page 24: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The principal Christian beliefs about:

•RevelationRevelation (Latin, taking away the veil) refers to the

disclosure by God of what was previously unknown.

Christianity, as well as Judaism and Islam claim to be revealed religions. In unique historical events

God has revealed God’s will and law to humanity.

The revelations were primarily given in the written forms of the Christian Bible (O.T. & N.T.), the

Hebrew scriptures (O.T.) and the Islamic Qur’an (Koran).

Page 25: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Christians believe in a God who has revealed God’s self to humanity and offers Gods’ self in loving relationship to all.

Christians believe God has been revealed in creation, through the teachings and writings of the prophets, through the Holy Spirit and most fully in the person, life and teaching of Jesus Christ.

 Christians see in Christ’ incarnation, life, death,

resurrection and sending of the Holy Spirit, the climax of the process of divine self-disclosure. Christ was simultaneously the agent, the process and the content of revelation.

 God’s revealing of Gods’ self and Gods’ offer of an

unconditional loving relationship are a continuing process through which faithful people are called to live according to Gods’ will and in unconditional love with all humankind.

Page 26: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The Principal Christian beliefs about:

•SalvationSalvation (Latin, ‘making safe’, ‘rescuing’) is a comprehensive term for being delivered from personal or collective suffering and evil.

In the biblical creation story Adam and Eve fall from the Grace of God by choosing not to obey God. Spiritually, this depicts humanity’s loss of original innocence and symbolises the transition from an original unconsciousness state of pure and innocent living in consciousness of failings (such as shame, pride, guilt and greed) that separate man from God.

Page 27: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

It is to provide salvation and so restore this oneness of the soul with God that Jesus came as the Messiah.

Christians believe that all people are created in the image and likeness of God with infinite potential for good. Christians also believe that people are created with ‘free will’ to choose good or to turn away in self interest. This potential to choose self over God, turns people towards sin.  Christians believe that God freely offers salvation in the person of Jesus Christ, whose death and resurrection overcomes the sinfulness of all who accept him as Saviour. During the 16th century the Catholic and Protestant churches alike affirmed that this saving grace of God is not merited but proceeds solely from the love and mercy of God.

Page 28: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Sacred Texts and Writings

•The importance of the Bible in Christianity

•Extracts from the Bible which demonstrate the principal beliefs

Page 29: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

The revealed word of God

Allows access to God’s revelations

Central to Christianity

Premier source of advice on how to live a Christian life

Source of informationcontemplation & spirituality

Page 30: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Core Ethical Teachings

•The Ten Commandments

The Hebrew Scriptures present God’s Law, especially the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 5) in the context of the covenant between God and God’s people.

Christians use the Ten Commandments as organisers for Christian ethical teaching.

The primary source of ethical authority for all Christians is the Bible

Page 31: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Core Ethical Teachings

•The Beatitudes

The Sermon on the Mount is the central ethical discourse in Matthew’s Gospel Ch. 5. It commences with the Beatitudes and goes on to give details of Christian moral living.

The kingdom of heaven belongs to the poor in spirit, the merciful, the peacemakers etc.

The New Testament outlines the way of life expected of followers of Jesus.

Page 32: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Core Ethical Teachings

•Jesus commandment of love

The moral life of Christians is based around his central teachings, especially his commandment of love of God and love of neighbour.

Love & Do what you will!

Maxim – Do Good, Avoid Evil!

Jesus Christ is the foundation of Christian ethical teaching.

Page 33: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Core Ethical Teachings

Throughout the New Testament, especially in the writings of Paul, there is teachings on attitudes, qualities and actions that befit the followers of Christ.

Christian ethics calls on believers to follow these teachings both in their personal lives and in their social outreach and action.

For Christians, following Jesus can never be solitary and inward looking.

Page 34: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Core Ethical Teachings

Sometimes moral questions arise for which there is no direct biblical teaching.

Biblical values can address most situations, but Christians also rely on the traditions of moral reasoning; authoritative teaching, denominational authorities such as synods and prayerful reflection.

All variants of Christianity turn first to the Bible for moral guidance.

Page 35: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

Personal Devotion•Prayer:

Different types of personal prayer , such as –

Bible Study (Plenary Indulgence),

Lectio Divina (Meditation),

Personal Retreat,

Meditation,

The Rosary,

Praying with icons

Page 36: Studies of Religion Year 11 Religious Tradition: CHRISTIANITY

For Review…1. Why is the study of Jewish life essential to an understanding of Christianity?2. Outline the historical and cultural context in which Christianity began.3. Identify one significant event in the life of Jesus. How does this event enrich

our understanding of Jesus' message for our own time?4. How can Jesus’ teachings lead to a deeper understanding of the Kingdom of

God? What are the implications of this understanding for living as a Christian?5. Name some of the leaders of the early Christian communities.6. Detail the results of the Council of Nicea.7. Describe the development of Christian communities after the death of Jesus. 8. Outline some of the unique features of the Orthodox Christian denomination.9. Summarise the beliefs about the nature of God and of the Trinity.10. Define the principal beliefs of revelation and salvation.11. Explain the central belief that salvation is realised in the life, death and

resurrection of Jesus.12. Discuss the importance of the Bible for Christians.13. Discuss the difference in interpretation that is evident between denominations.14. Outline the principal ethical teachings of the Ten Commandments.15. Explain the importance of personal prayer for Christians.16. ‘Be still and know that I am God.’ use specific examples to describe how

personal prayer assists the Christian adherent to achieve this instruction.