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  <title>S1E2 - The World that Christianity Entered</title>
  <description>Christianity did not begin as one movement with one center. It emerged across a fragmented Mediterranean shaped by empire, trade, migration, language, and local tradition. Different cities, different languages, different communities. Same stories, sharply different meanings. This episode maps that landscape — not as a church, but as a network. Overlapping communities, shared names, conflicting interpretations, no central authority capable of resolving anything. In Jerusalem, Jesus followers remained inside Jewish life, shaped by Law, Temple memory, and covenant. In Antioch, Jewish and non-Jewish followers interacted and clashed. In Alexandria, Christianity met philosophy and allegorical reading. In Asia Minor, itinerant teachers competed with local cults. In Rome, Christian communities lived on the social margins. Some saw Jesus as a Jewish teacher. Others as a divine being. Some emphasized his teachings, others his death or resurrection. Some insisted on Jewish law; others rejected it. Geography intensified the differences. Distance was slow. Letters were copied, edited, and lost. Authority remained local and fragile. Disputes could persist for generations without resolution. Translation was never neutral. There was no canon yet. Some communities knew certain gospels but not others. Some relied on Paul; others rejected him. Survival of texts was often accidental. Disputes were settled not by appeal to scripture, but by persuasion, reputation, lineage, and what worked. This was Christianity before victory. Before orthodoxy. Before councils. Before creeds. Before canon. Before empire. By mapping the early Christian world in its instability, this episode makes later developments visible not as inevitable progress, but as contingent outcomes. Not from tradition. From evidence. </description>
  <author_name>Christianity Unfolded</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.christianityunfolded.com</author_url>
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