Encyclopedia of Islam



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Christianity and Islam

  

141  J




Fide Orthodoxa. The Quran also rejects monasti-

cism, which had become a major expression of 

Christian piety and asceticism in the Middle East 

by that time.

Other than the adherents of Arabian polythe-

ism, who were fought until they converted to 

Islam, non-Muslims within lands controlled by 

Muslim governments have historically been dealt 

with as dhimmis, protected by the government and 

allowed freedom of religion so long as they paid a 

poll tax (

jizya

) and did not publicly offend Muslim 

sensibilities. Where Christianity had been deeply 

rooted before the coming of Islam, it generally 

has retained a presence. Thus, in the countries of 

the Fertile Crescent, such as i

raq

, s


yria

 (includ-

ing J

ordan


, p

alestine


, and Lebanon), but also in 

e

gypt



, there are strong Christian communities 

with historical ties to the Christian churches and 

communities that were present in the Middle East 

before the rise of Islam. This is also true of India, 

which has a Christian community tracing itself 

back to the first century and which has had an 

uninterrupted presence there. North Africa west 

of Egypt, on the other hand, witnessed a relatively 

quick, complete 

conversion

 to Islam within a 

few centuries of its appearance, although Jewish 

communities continued to thrive there until the 

mid-20th century. In a

ndalUsia

 (Spain), Chris-

tians continued to thrive and partake of public 

life during the period of Muslim rule (711 to the 

final conquest of Granada in 1492). The Christian 

Arabs of Andalusia as well as Jews provided an 

important conduit for transferring the scientific 

and philosophical knowledge of Islamdom—far 

more sophisticated than that of Europe at the 

time—to the north.

In most Muslim-majority countries today, 

there are numerous Catholic, Orthodox, and 

Protestant churches. Even leaving aside the Prot-

estant churches, there are as many as 20 Apostolic 

churches, depending on how they are counted. 

This is largely because, as a result of missionary 

efforts and splits along the way, a single, formerly 

“national” church may split numerous times. 

Thus, for instance, the Assyrian Church of the 

East (found mainly in northern Iraq, southern 

t

Urkey


, Syria, i

ran


, southwest i

ndia


, and now the 

United States), which has its own rite and inde-

pendent hierarchy, has a Catholic counterpart, 

named the Chaldean Catholic Church. The Coptic 

Orthodox church of Egypt similarly has several 

counterparts, including the Melkites (in union 

with Constantinople), Coptic Catholics (Rome) 

and Protestant Coptic (Presbyterian). When, as in 

the last example, Protestant churches are included, 

the number of churches becomes extraordinarily 

difficult to count. In general, however, one can say 

that the churches divide as follows: 1) those that 

come out of the Assyrian Church of the East; 2) 

those that can be called the Orthodox churches of 

the East, who recognize the patriarch of Constan-

tinople as primus inter pares (first among equals); 

3) the Oriental Orthodox churches, such as the 

Coptic and Armenian, which share theological 

orientation and mutual recognition; 4) the vari-

ous Catholic churches and Catholic counterparts 

of other churches (mainly quite recent in origin); 

and 5) Protestants of various denominations. 

Depending on how one defines the “Islamic 

world,” there are as many as 47 million Christians 

today living in lands that are Muslim majority 

or have been historically vital centers of Islamic 

government and civilization, including India. The 

largest populations are in i

ndonesia

 (19 million), 

followed by s

Udan


 (9.5 million) and Egypt (at 

least 4.5 million).

Thus, Christians have survived and sometimes 

thrived under Muslim rule, and in many cases, 

Christians were able to attain positions of great 

power and wealth in Muslim-majority lands. Two 

periods since the rise of Islam have seen Chris-

tians conquer Muslims within their heartlands. 

The first period is that of the c

rUsades


 and Recon-

quista. The Crusades were a series of expeditions 

(1095–1291) by European Christians to retake 

Jerusalem for Christianity and to fight Muslims 

in the Holy Land as part of a holy war blessed by 

the Catholic pope. The Crusades met with limited 

K  142  


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