The 12 disciples go to non-Greek areas: India, Parthia, Ethiopia, Arabia.
They teach repentance, obedience, and the Kingdom of God.
Paul begins his Gentile mission; his writings cause confusion in some assemblies.
❗ 66–70 AD – Fall of Jerusalem
Roman armies destroy the Temple.
Believers flee to Pella; the Jerusalem Assembly scatters.
The center of the faith is no longer Jerusalem.
❗ 70–140 AD – Shift Begins
Greek-speaking believers begin to rise in influence (especially in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch).
Conflict grows between Paul’s followers and the Hebrew Nazarenes.
Hebrew writings are ignored in favor of Greek letters.
After the Bar Kokhba Revolt (132–135 AD), Jewish believers are banned from Jerusalem.
Church leadership begins to shift fully into Gentile hands.
⚠️ 140–180 AD – Paul’s Teachings Elevated
Marcion (c. 144 AD) rejects the Hebrew Bible, promotes Paul exclusively.
“Old Testament” vs. “New Testament” mindset begins.
Hebrew Gospel is silenced; Torah seen as a curse.
The faith begins to look more Roman than Hebrew.
⚠️ 180–250 AD – Greek Church Fathers Rise
Leaders like Irenaeus, Origen, and Tertullian reinterpret Scripture using Greek philosophy.
Torah-keeping believers are declared heretics.
The faith aligns with Paul and Luke, not Peter and James.
Teachings like Replacement Theology emerge: "God rejected the Jews; the Church replaced Israel."
Sabbath, feasts, and Hebrew customs are abandoned.
Latin begins entering Church use, especially in Rome.
🔥 250–303 AD – Roman Persecution Peaks
Massive persecution under Decius and Diocletian.
Many scrolls burned.
Only those willing to compromise survive.
The Nazarene faith goes underground.
⚔️ 313 AD – Constantine Legalizes Christianity (Edict of Milan)
Roman power unites with religion.
The state begins to control doctrine.
True Hebrew faith is outlawed or absorbed.
The Roman Church is born — not in Jerusalem, but in Rome.
Latin becomes the official Church language.
The Gospel of Yeshua is buried under Roman theology.