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CHRISTIANITY AND WORLD CULTURE
註釋

Christianity is the confidence custom that spotlights the figure of Jesus Christ. Confidence alludes both to the adherents' Act of trust and to the substance of their confidence. As a custom, Christianity is in excess of an arrangement of strict conviction. It additionally has produced a culture, a bunch of thoughts furthermore, and a lifestyle, practices, and curios that have been given over from one age to another since Jesus originally turned into the virtuous object. Christianity is, in this manner, both a living practice of confidence and the way of life that confidence abandons. The study of world Christianity starts with the premise that Christianity is and has always been a multi-cultural, diversified religion with no single dominant form. All Christians have lived in unique cultural environments throughout history, which they have accepted and rejected.

Culture indicates what people learn after birth, including language, religion, and customs or traditions. Culture is a lifestyle of a gathering; the behaviours, beliefs, values, and symbols that they accept, generally without thinking about them, are passed down along by communication and imitation from one generation to the next. Individuals can change matters of culture by individual choice after they are born.

These two terms help us identify human patterns and understand a country's driving forces. Christianity has and is still facing many challenges throughout history across all continents because of the diverse traditions and cultures in which it finds itself. Christianity has turned into the biggest of the world's religions and, topographically, the most generally diffused of all beliefs. It has a voting demographic of multiple billion adherents.

Christianity has learned to adapt to different world cultures, thereby causing a change in the beliefs and practices of many countries. It has been able to grow and surpass every other religion. To say that Christianity "centers" on Jesus Christ is to say that, in some way, it unites its convictions and practices and different customs about a recorded figure. Christians who embrace neighbouring cultures use indigenous languages, music, art forms, and rituals to further their goals. Christians have a long history of appropriating non-Christian objects and imbuing them with Christian meaning, making many cultures approve of its practices and believe its teaching. Christians continue to borrow new languages and civilizations to convey the story of Jesus as Christianity finds a home in new cultural settings. In the context of their unique cultural and religious tradition, Christ, the "Man for All Cultures," assists people in discerning and living according to God's plan. As a result, Christianity cannot be culturally homogeneous. This link between Christ and culture was presupposed by the churches of the Apostolic time.

Christianity survived for centuries against opposition from different religions and cultures; after it was adopted as the Emperor's religion, it quickly developed a strong institutional structure that would outlive the Empire itself. Many cultures and countries of the world are still against the teachings and practice of Christianity, making it illegal, forbidden, and also persecuting its citizens for it.