
Imagine you’re a first-century disciple of Jesus who time-travels to the year 1050 A.D. You attend a local church, but after the assembly ends, you’re bewildered. You’re not even sure you met with fellow disciples. So much has changed—doctrine, structure, and worship—that the church looks almost nothing like the one Jesus started. Over the past 1,000 years, doctrinal drift has made the church of the 11th century nearly unrecognizable.
What began as a grassroots movement of house churches had become two rival institutions: the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox churches. Both had developed layers of ritual, hierarchy, and doctrine unknown to the apostles. While the name “Christianity” remained, many core teachings and practices had shifted. Sometimes radically.
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