When did the roman catholic church start?
Indeed, Roman Emperor Theodosius I (ruled 379 C.E-395 C.E.) finished what Constantine had started by making Catholicism the State religion. Just before this, in 382 C.E., was the trinity doctrine finally brought to completion, with now the holy spirit being affirmed with “full divinity” along with Jesus Christ and God the Father. Thus, the trinity doctrine now became the mainstay of Catholicism, and eventually spread to almost all the churches of Christendom as “orthodox” doctrine. Though it is accepted and promoted by the churches, it is a doctrine that finds not one shred of evidence in the Bible. Tertullian (160 C.E-220 C.E.?), was first to coin the Latin word “trinitas”, and devised the theory of “one substance in three persons.” The word Catholic means “universal” or “one size fits all.” In order to keep his empire from fracturing into religiously divided segments, Constantine sought to fuse pagan Romans with so-called “Christians”. His main intent was not for the sake of truth, b