Church History

Why So Many Churches?: 1,000 Years of Doctrinal Drift – Part 5

Doctrinal Drift

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.

Continue reading →
Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Church History

Why So Many Churches?: The Day Christianity Split in Two – Part 4

Split

July 16, 1054 AD started like any other day in Constantinople. By evening, Christianity had officially split for the first time in its thousand-year history. A Roman church representative walked into Hagia Sophia, the magnificent cathedral of the Eastern church. He placed a letter of excommunication on the altar, then walked out. The letter condemned the Patriarch of Constantinople and anyone who followed him.

One thousand years of Christian unity ended with a piece of parchment. How did it come to this? And what does this ancient split teach us about handling disagreements in our churches today?

Continue reading →
Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Church History

Why So Many Churches?: How Constantine Compromised the Church – Part 3

Constantine

Picture this: You’re a Christian in the year 310 AD. You meet in secret. You hide your faith from neighbors. Roman soldiers could arrest you for believing in Jesus. Just a few years later, emperor Constantine legalized Christianity in the Roman Empire. Within a few generations, Christianity goes from outlawed to embraced, then elevated to the empire’s official religion. What happened? And how did this dramatic shift plant seeds that eventually grew into today’s denominations?

Continue reading →
Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Church History

Why So Many Churches?: Truth Comes Under Attack – Part 2

Truth

The church’s response to heresy shaped Christianity for centuries to come. False teaching didn’t wait for the church to mature. Deception appeared almost immediately after Pentecost. The apostles spent much of their time correcting errors and defending truth.

This early battle against heresy explains much about how our denominations formed. The church’s defensive strategies—some brilliant, others problematic—echo through history to today.

Understanding this struggle helps us appreciate both our theological heritage and our current divisions.

Continue reading →
Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Church History

Why So Many Churches?: The Unity Jesus Prayed For – Part 1

Unity

Why do thousands of Christian denominations exist when Jesus started just one church? Jesus prayed for unity among His followers. He asked His Father that believers “may be one” (Jn 17:21). He wanted this unity to convince the world of His divine mission. 

Yet today, Christianity fragments into countless denominations. This division confuses outsiders and weakens our witness. Instead of showing the world a united body so that “the world may believe” (Jn 17:21) we’ve often displayed the opposite. Some people reject faith entirely because Christians can’t agree among themselves. 

Continue reading →
Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Church History