Council of Nicaea ❌ Canon of Scripture defined at the Synod of Carthage ❌ Christianity declared the official religion of the Empire ❌ Jerome completes the Latin translation of the Bible ❌ Fall of Rome to the Visigoths ❌ The Huns' invasion of Italy ❌ The sack of Rome by the Vandals ❌
Germanic nation, the Western Goths; sacked Rome in 410 and conquered southern Gaul and Hispania in the years following:
To remove from a high position in church or state, such as the kingship or the office of a bishop:
One who lives alone, a hermit; also someone who lives in a community called a monastery:
Translator of the Vulgate Latin Bible:
Heretical theologian who taught the Son of God is not equal to the Father:
Roman emperor who established Christianity as the official religion of the Roman Empire:
One who withdraws from society and lives alone, usually for religious reasons:
One who takes a vow not to be married:
An early Christian church building based on the form of a Roman court of justice:
The founder of the chief proponent of a heresy:
Adhering to teaching, established, especially by a religious group; adhering to the teachings revealed to the Church by Christ:
A formal statement of religious belief that lays out what Christians must believe:
Roman general and counselor to the young Emperor Honorius:
Sharing 'one substance', one essence, of the same nature:
Greek, meaning 'household':
Asiatic nomads who ravaged Western Europe in the fourth and fifth centuries:
One being trained or educated in the faith but not yet baptized:
Latin, "I believe" - the first word of the Creed:
The heretical teaching of Pelagius, a British Monk, who said that human beings could bring on their salvation by their own merits and works, without grace:
The heretical teaching of Arius of Alexandria that God the Son was a later creation of God the Father and not coeternal with the Father:
Archbishop of Milan and great preacher and collector of hymns:
Germanic nation, conquered southern Gaul and Hispania and then moved to North Africa, where they established a kingdom around Carthage:
Theologian and bishop of Hippo:
King of the Visigoths, sacked Rome in 410:
Pope who saved Rome from the Huns:
Called for severe self-control and piety:
Greek, meaning "a division":
One who acts for pay, particularly soldiers who serve in the army for pay and not for loyalties or patriotism:
A gathering of bishops that represents the entire Church:
Including the whole civilized world, universal:
The dwelling place of a hermit:
Archbishop of Alexandria, champion of the Trinitarian doctrine of the Council of Nicaea:
A Persian philosophy that taught the material world is evil; only the spiritual world is good:
The creed recited in Catholic Churches today at Mass - it is NOT the statement of faith of the Council of Nicaea:
A list of, especially, sacred books:
A schismatic sect that said that lay Christians and clerics who had cooperated with the Roman persecutors could not be legitimate Christians or priests:
King of the Vandals, conquered Roman North Africa and sacked Rome: the Vandal
King of the Huns: the Hun
Sets up a rival church, causing division of a part of the Church from the whole: