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Maronite Christian
    A Christian community of Arabs in Lebanon, in communion with the Pope. By emigration they have spread to Cyprus, Palestine, Egypt, South America, and the United States and now number about one million. Their liturgy [said mainly in liturgical Syriac] is of the Antiochene type, with innovations taken from the Latin rite. Their ecclesiastical head, under the pope, is called patriarch of Antioch; he lives in Lebanon. As in other Eastern rites, the parish priests are usually married. The Maronites have been a distinct community since the 7th century, when they separated in the doctrinal dispute over Monotheletism; they returned to communion with the pope in the 12th century In the 19th century, massacres of Maronites by the Druze brought French intervention; this gave France its modern hold in Lebanon and Syria. Besides the Maronites there are two other groups in Syria in communion with the Pope-the Melchites and the Syrian Catholics.

Where does Maronite originate from?
    After the Ascension of Christ, the disciples went, as commanded, all over the world, teaching the Gospel, baptizing in the name of Trinity, and founding new churches.  One of those places was Antioch in Syria, where, as noted in The Acts of the Apostles, the followers of Jesus were first called Christians.  These churches, founded locally, used the local languages and, in addition to baptism, celebrated the Eucharist as Christ has commanded.

    These churches kept in contact with each other through visits and correspondence, the most notable correspondent and visitor was Apostle Paul.  When St. Paul was returning to Jerusalem from his third apostolic journey, he found a thriving Christian community at Tyre in Lebanon and stayed there for a week.  This shows how busy the early Christians were in founding local churches. Some were under the authority and direction of the Patriarch of Jerusalem, some under the Patriarch of Antioch, and later, under the Patriarchs of Constantinople and Rome.  Just as the first Disciples acknowledged the primacy of Peter, the Patriarchs generally acknowledged the primacy of his successor, later known as the Pope.  Today, our church looks to the Patriarch of Antioch and all the East, who, in turn, is subservient to the Pope of Rome. Our present patriarch, Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir, has been elevated to the rank of Cardinal by Pope John Paul II.

    A very saintly man named Maron decided to devote his life to God in solitude of a mountain.  This was some time prior to the middle of the fifth century A.D. That much is known because his biography was written in 440 A.D.  His solitude did not last long, for all kinds of people came to him to be cured, both physically and spiritually.  He re-dedicated a nearby pagan temple to God, and spent much time preaching the gospel and converting pagans. On account of his miracles and saintly life, he was canonized a saint. Because of the intensity of his teaching and the example if his holy life, many converts organized themselves into monasteries and called themselves 'Maronite" to show the ideal which they attempted to follow.  The earliest ones were trained and directed by St. Maron himself.  Among those he trained were St. Simon Stylites and St. Eusebius.  His influence spread over a large area of Asia Minor, including Lebanon and Syria.  It is no surprise that many Christians called themselves "Maronites."

    In the early days of the spread of Christianity, theological questions were often fought over wither bitter intensity.  In the years preceding 451 A.D., many Christians pondered over the nature of Christ.  Was he God?  Some Christians reasoned that the divine nature of Christ was so powerful that it annihilated the human.  They were called the "Monophysites," meaning "one nature".  The Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon in 451 decreed that monophysitism was a heresy and that Christ was both fully human and fully God.  That is the doctrine of the Catholic Church to this day.  However, after the Council, some of the monophysites attempted to coerce the others to believe in the single nature of Christ, and to prove their point, they slew 350 Maronite monks and wounded an equal number.  Such is the stuff from which unyielding martyrs are made, and Chalcedonianism and Maronitism became, and remain, synonymous.  The Superior of the Monastery of St. Maron addressed an appeal to Pope St. Hormizdas, relating the event and asking him to rise up and defend them.  The letter is addressed to "Hormizdas, the Universal Patriarch, who sits in the See of Peter, the Prince of the Apostles."

    That was the first document showing the fact that the Pope was acknowledged as the supreme pontiff.  During later years, there were occasional strains in the relationship between the Maronites and the Roman pontiff.  Some of them were caused by the language barriers: neither side understood the other.  Also  in those days, travel and correspondence were fraught with many dangers and delays.  In order to cultivate better correspondence between the Church of Rome and the churches of the East, two successive popes, Paul III and Pius IV, to found a Maronite College in Rome, where Maronite priests could study Western languages and liturgy.  Finally, on July 5, 1584, Pope Gregory XIII, acting on further instance of Patriarch Sarkis, founded the Maronite college of Rome, where Maronite priests could study.

Sunni Muslim
    The largest division of Islam. Sunni Islam is the heir to the early central Islamic state, in its acknowledgement of the legitimacy of the order of succession of the first four caliphs, in contrast to the Shi'a rejection of the first three as usurpers. It can also be seen as the aggregate of the adherents to the four extant schools of religious law [fiqh], the Hanafi, Maliki, Shafii, and Hanbali schools. With no centralized clerical institution, Sunni Islam should be understood as an umbrella identity, grouping close to 90% of the approximately one billion Muslims, stretching geographically from the Indonesian islands to the African steppes, through the Indian subcontinent, central Asia, and the Arab world, and ideologically from ecstatic Sufism to the puritanic literalism of the Wahhabis and Salafias, through scholasticism and secularism. The scholastic formulation, the most constant expression of Sunni Islam throughout its history and geographic span, proposes the relation of the human being with the Divine as essentially individual, with no intermediaries. In actual practice, however, religious scholars [ulama], together with mystic shaykhs, pious persons, and popular saints [awliya], are often recognized as enjoying a religious authority of varying degrees. The Sunni theoretical characterization of the Prophet Muhammad as a mere executor of Divine will has not precluded the intensive devotional rituals directed to his person that flourish in a diversity of forms across the Sunni world. The prime center of scholastic learning in Sunni Islam is the mosque-university of al-Azhar in Cairo.

Shi'a Muslim
   
The second largest branch of Islam, Shiites currently account for 10-15% of all Muslims. Shi'a Islam originated as a political movement supporting Ali [cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam] as the rightful leader of the Islamic state. The legitimacy of this claim, as initially envisioned by Ali's supporters, was based on Muhammad's alleged designation of Ali as his successor, Ali's righteousness, and tribal customs, given his close relation to the Prophet. Ali's right passed with his death in 661 to his son Hasan, who chose not to claim it, and after Hasan's death, to Husayn, Ali's younger son. The evolution into a religious formulation is believed to have been initiated with the martyrdom of Husayn in 680 at Karbala [today in Iraq], a traumatic event still observed with fervor in today's Shi'a world on the 10th of the month of Muharram of the Muslim lunar year.

    The Shi'a focus on the person of the Imam made the community susceptible to division on the issue of succession. The early Shiites, a recognized, if often persecuted, opposition to the central government, soon divided into several factions. The majority of the Shiites today are Twelve-Imam Shiites [notably in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, India, and Pakistan]. Others are Zaydis [in Yemen], and the Ismailis [in India, Pakistan, Syria, and Yemen]. The central belief of Twelve-Imam Shiites is the occultation [or disappearance from view] of the 12th Imam. The 12th Imam is considered to be the only legitimate and just ruler, and therefore no political action taken in his absence can be fruitful. While this position has provided Shiite clerics with the means to survive an often hostile environment, the need for an alternative formulation capable of framing political militancy has fostered activist movements within the Shiite tradition, occasionally leading to dissidence: see Babism.

    The religious authority of the Shi'a clerics is derived from their role as deputies of the absent 12th Imam; they are as such the recipients of the khums religious tax, a source of substantial economic autonomy. Shiite clerics are often refered to as mullahs and mujtahids. The most prominent clerical position is that of marja al-taqlid. The Shiite clergy does not, however, have a formal hierarchy. The honorific ayat Allah or ayatollah [sign of God] is a modern title that does not correspond to any established religious function.

    In Iran, the Safavid adoption of a Shiite state religion led to the expansion of clerical involvement in public life, under the tutelage of the political elite. The threat of European colonialism in the 19th century presented the opportunity for Shiite activist thought to gain impetus. The attempt of the Pahlevi monarchy in the 20th century to curtail the influence of the clerics further strengthened clerical political militancy. Benefitting from a ubiquitous clerical network, and enjoying a credibility unblemished by the corruption within the autocratic regime, Ruhollah Khomeini served as the culmination of the reintegration of activism into the Shiite mainstream. With the Iranian revolution in 1979, the Shiite activist formulation progressed toward stressing the nonsectarian pan-Islamic character of its ideology. Islam, it suggests, should be lived as a tool for the empowerment of the oppressed, not merely as a set of devotional practices; hence the Iranian support for the Palestinian, Afghan, and Lebanese causes.

Greek Orthodox
    A community of Christian churches whose chief strength is in the Middle East and E Europe. Their members number over 250 million worldwide. The Orthodox agree doctrinally in accepting as ecumenical the first seven councils and in rejecting the jurisdiction of the bishop of Rome [the pope]. This repudiation of the papal claims is the principal point dividing the Orthodox from Roman Catholics. Eastern Christians who have returned to communion with the pope are called Eastern Catholics, or Uniates; in every respect apart from this obedience to Rome, they resemble their Orthodox counterparts. This use of the terms Catholic [obeying the pope] and Orthodox [belonging to one of the Orthodox churches] is not technical, for both groups call themselves both Catholic and Orthodox. The word Orthodox became current at the time of the defeat [753] of iconoclasm in Constantinople. Orthodox acceptance of the seven councils resulted in the exclusion from their communion, on grounds of heresy, of the Nestorian, Jacobite, Coptic, and Armenian churches; it also involves holding a sacramental doctrine of grace ex opere operato and of veneration of the Virgin Mary, two points differentiating the Orthodox from Protestants.

Druze
    A religious community of Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan, with important overseas branches in the Americas and Australia. The religious leadership prefers the name Muwahhidun [Unitarians]. Their religion started in the 9th Century CE as a break-away group from Islam. Darazi [a preacher] and Hamza ibn Ali ibn Ahmad [a Persian mystic] were instrumental in popularizing the religion. Darazi announced that God had manifested himself in human form as al-Hakim Bi-amr Allah, [985 or 996-1021 CE], a Muslim caliph from Cairo Egypt. The Druze now believe that Darazi distorted the message; he was, in essence, excommunicated and later executed.

    The concealment of the substance of the faith is a religious obligation, marriages outside the faith are forbidden, and initiation from lay status [jahil, ignorant] to clerical [aqil, knower] is restricted. The Druze formed principalities that fought the Crusaders and secured considerable independence under nominal Mamluk and Ottoman rule. They currently total about 200 to 300 thousand members.

Armenian Catholic
    An autonomous Christian church, sometimes also called the Gregorian Church. Its head, a primate of honor only, is the catholicos of Yejmiadzin, Armenia; Karekin II became catholics in 1999. His rule is shared by the patriarchs of Jerusalem and Constantinople and by the catholicos of Sis [Cilicia]. In general, Armenian practices resemble those of other Eastern churches; the priests may marry and communion is distributed in both bread and wine, although the use of unleavened bread is a Western practice. The liturgical language is classical Armenian. Armenia became Christian at the end of the 3d century through the missionary work of St. Gregory the Illuminator. In the next century the young church made itself autonomous, apparently because of the efforts of the metropolitan bishop of Caesarea, St. Basil the Great, to impose certain reforms. After the Council of Chalcedon the Armenians rejected the orthodox position; this adoption, at least tacit, of Monophysitism completed the isolation of the Armenian Church from the rest of Christendom. Part of the Armenian Church reunited with Rome temporarily in the 13th and 14th century, and missionary work by the Roman Church in the 14th century resulted in many converts. In 1740 the Catholic Armenian rite was officially organized, in communion with the pope but under its own patriarch. Today there are Armenian churches in every continent.

Alawites
    Islamic sect, stemming from the Twelve Shiites. They live in Syria, mainly in the mountains near the city of Latakia, but many also live in the cities of Hama and Homs, and in recent decades there has been a migration to Damascus.

    Their exact number is not known, but estimated to be between 1,5 and 1,8 million. Most of them live from agriculture, but the Alawites are also central in the leadership of Syria, as the president Bashar al-Assad is an Alawite [similar to his late father, Hafez].

    Their name is a recent one — earlier they were known as Nusairis, Namiriya or Ansariyya. The names 'Nusairi' and 'Namiriya' came from their first theologian, Muhammadu bni Nusairi n-Namiri. The name 'Ansariyya' came from the mountain region in Syria where this sect lived.

Protestant
    A form of Christian faith and practice that originated with the principles of the Reformation. The term is derived from the Protestatio delivered by a minority of delegates against the [1529] Diet of Speyer, which passed legislation against the Lutherans. Since that time the term has been used in many different senses, but not as the official title of any church until it was assumed [1783] by the Protestant Episcopal Church [since 1967 simply the Episcopal Church] in the United States, the American branch of the Anglican Communion. Protestantism as a general term is now used in contradistinction to the other major Christian faiths, Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy.

Roman Catholic
    Christian church headed by the Pope, the bishop of Rome. Its commonest title in official use is Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. "Roman Catholic" is a 19th-century British coinage and merely serves to distinguish that church from other churches that are "Catholic." The term "Roman Church," when used officially, means only the archdiocese of Rome. Roman Catholics may be simply defined as Christians in communion with the Pope.


           
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