ABSTRACT

Religions of revelation and redemption, like Christianity, promised knowledge through enlightenment and salvation through revelation, and in this way differed from the reason of Greek-Roman pagans, which was dependent on the animal systems. The Church taught its hierarchy based on the teachings of the Gospels and the books of the Apostles. This teaching in itself was a process of inner adaptation to Christ and to the Holy Ghost emanating from him. The communications in the world of their faith were transmitted by noetic-neural functions exclusively. The Christian teaching and the Church had a great attraction in the early Middle Ages, because they offered entry into an inner and super mundane kingdom, and offered to human potential new possibilities for development and fulfillment. The idea to liberate Jerusalem, the birthplace of Christianity, out of the hands of the infidels, was greeted with great enthusiasm.