How Did The Christian Church Build The Byzantine Empire

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At first, the Byzantine Empire is an allied nation of the West, although later it becomes an opponent. In both cases, the Byzantine Empire stands as a shield against Eastern expansion, first Persian and later Moslem. The Byzantine Empire is the name applied to what remained of the eastern Roman Empire after 450AD. It is centered around the eastern end of the Mediterranean, and located between the Nile Valley, the southern shore of the Black Sea, and inland as far as Mesopotamia. The principal city of the Byzantine Empire is the former eastern capital, Constantinople.
The main fear of emperors in Rome and Constantinople is how to preserve the empire continuously. Once Rome is sacked in the fifth century AD, their fear changes to "how to rebuild the empire." That shows two realistic problems such as how to raise an army, and how to build a system of administration. The answers to both problems need human, prosperity and imperial union.
In the Byzantine Empire, the Christian Church becomes a method to solve the both problems. The …show more content…

The Eastern Orthodox Church takes the first seven Ecumenical Councils and considers itself as the True Church. The Eastern Orthodox Church is organized with an episcopal authority within the Four Patriarchs of Alexandria, Antioch, Constantinople, and Jerusalem and consecrated bishops. Their worship is very formulary and extremely illustrated, all of them are principle to the Church's life, background, and practice. Their images, which contain portrait of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, biblical scenes, or saints, are believed to create a recognition of the existence of God. Eastern Orthodoxy is very doctrinal and places great authority in the Bible, the Creeds, and the seven ecumenical councils. Like all other Christians, Orthodoxy is Trinitarian, believing that God present in three