| which extended from Scotland to the Persian Gulf, from the Atlantic Ocean to the 
borders of what is now Russia and the eastern shore of the Black Sea, thus including North 
Africa, Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Asia Minor, Turkey in Europe, France, Germany, Austria, 
Spain, Portugal, Britain, and other lands. Although the whole might of the Roman Empire 
long continued to strive to root out Christianity, yet the Christian Church, like an 
impregnable fortress, successfully withstood these attacks in the might of God Most High. 
Thus was fulfilled Christ's promise that the gates of Hades or Destruction should not 
prevail against His Church (Matt. xvi. 18). Nay more, the number of Christians steadily 
increased, in spite of persecution, until in many places the temples of the idols were 
almost deserted and the sacrifices at an end. Although they were so numerous, yet the 
persecuted Christians never rose in rebellion against their persecutors, but patiently 
endured all that the cruelty of their enemies could devise against them. At last the Emperor Constantine received the Christian faith about the year 314 of the 
Christian era, though he was not baptized until at least several years later. The 
Christians were then delivered from persecution; but this led many people to enter the 
Church without true conversion and proper instruction. Many of them brought heathen ideas 
with them, and these led to the gradual corruption of religion. The Sacred Scriptures were 
not properly studied, saint-worship was introduced and spread. The love of many became 
cold, and religion began to grow formal and external, losing spirituality and purity. 
Hypocrisy and contentions prevailed, heresies multiplied. Instead of loving God and their 
fellow-men, too many of these baptized heathen began to hate one another, to quarrel about 
forms and ceremonies, and even to persecute one another. Hence many of them fell into 
deadly sin, and many introduced the worship of the Virgin Mary, of the saints, and of 
images. This was an abomination
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