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CHAPTER IX - Of the Propagation of Christianity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

In this argument, the first consideration is the fact; in what degree, within what time, and to what extent, Christianity actually was propagated.

The accounts of the matter, which can be collected from our books, are as follow : A few days after Christ's disappearance out of the world, we find an assembly of disciples at Jerusalem, to the number of “about one hundred and twenty;” which hundred and twenty were, probably, a little association of believers, met together, not merely as believers in Christ, but as personally connected with the apostles, and with one another. Whatever was the number of believers then in Jerusalem, we have no reason to be surprised that so small a company should assemble : for there is no proof, that the followers of Christ were yet formed into a society; that the society was reduced into any order; that it was at this time even understood that a new religion (in the sense which that term conveys to us) was to be set up in the world, or how the professors of that religion were to be distinguished from the rest of mankind. The death of Christ had left, we may suppose, the generality of his disciples in great doubt, both as to what they were to do, and concerning what was to follow.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1817

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