Christianity and Islam
Christianity and Islam
Christianity and Islam
Christianity and Islam Christianity and Islam arose in the same geographic and
cultural setting: West Asia. Both drew from the ancient traditions of that region,
particularly that of the Jewish people and Judaism (see Chapter 4). Despite the
dispersal of the Jewish people, their religion survived both in its own right and as a
profound influence on the development of Christianity and Islam. Christianity came
first, inspired by the life and death of its founder, the Jewish prophet Jesus of
Nazareth (d. ca. 35 C.E.). His death and resurrection (restoration to life), according to
Christian belief, became the mythic center of the Christian religion as it symbolized
to Christians the eternal life of those who followed the Christian faith. The name of
the religion is drawn from the appellation Christ, Greek for the Hebrew “Messiah,”
which means “anointed.” Five hundred years later, Islam, which means “submission
to the will of God,” was founded by the prophet Muhammad (ca. 570–632 C.E.).
Believers in Islam also regarded Jesus as a prophet, though Muhammad was believed
to be the ultimate prophet of God, known in Islam as Allah.
Though it failed in attempts (between 630 and 655) to reconquer Italy permanently
and reestablish imperial control in the western Mediterranean, the eastern Roman,
or Byzantine, empire produced a rich synthesis of Greek culture, Roman
institutions, and Christianity. Its Christian character was perhaps most brilliantly
expressed in the great sixth-century church of Hagia Sophia (“Holy Wisdom”) with
its splendid mosaics; its political sophistication was shown in the revision and
codification of Roman law. A commission appointed by the Emperor Justinian (r.
527–565) undertook the task of legal codification between 529 and 565. They
produced the Corpus Juris Civilis, or “Body of Civil Law,” the means by which
Roman law would influence later European law.
The early Christian period in Nubia was shaped by the decline of Meroe and Kush by
the third century B.C.E. and the rise of Roman North Africa and Christian Egypt to the
north. By the end of the sixth century C.E., a substantial Christian community existed
in the middle Nile as three distinct kingdoms: Nobadia, Makuria, and Alodia.
Excavations at the sites of Dongola and Faras have revealed multiple churches and
cathedrals, as well as a Christian royal palace. Most of the sacred buildings were built
of unbaked brick. Both paintings and written documents survive from this period. By
711 C.E., however, the spread of Islam would surround and isolate these Christian
lands. Invasions of Egypt (641 C.E.) and north Africa (660 C.E.) by Muslim forces led
to the presence of Islam that has continued to today. It would take several more
centuries for the cultural impact to be felt across this vast region.
Axum Further east, toward the Ethiopian highlands, the state of Axum was also
reached by the dispersion of eastern Orthodox Christianity, this time through the Red
Sea port cities. The official introduction of Christianity has been attributed to the
first consecrated bishop of Axum, Frumentius of Constantinople, in 315 C.E.
Frumentius received the support of the two brother kings, Abraha (Ezana in the only
surviving inscription of the time) and Atsbaha. One of the primary motivations for
the fourth-century conversion to Christianity by Axum’s King Ezana was the trading
advantage offered to Axum as a result of religious connections with the Byzantine
world; status as a Christian polity conferred certain guarantees of prices and trading
partners. Axum was renowned as a center of gold and other luxury- good production.
Some notice of the Axumite kingdom’s wealth and power was taken by classical
authors such as Pliny the Elder, who mentioned the trade port of Adulis on the Red
Sea around 60 C.E. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, a sailing guide to the
Mediterranean, Red Sea, and Indian Ocean, also from the first century C.E., mentions
both Adulis and the city of Axum. From the time of Ezana, pilgrimages of
Ethiopians to holy places in Jerusalem and Rome became common and continuous.
By the sixth century C.E., Axum stood at the axis of a giant web of trade routes
reaching from the interior of the African continent to Asia and the Mediterranean.
Pre-Axumite and early Axumite religions included the moon god, of south Arabian
origin, and Mahrem, a god of war. Their associated symbols, the crescent moon and
disc, eventually gave way to the cross, which appeared exclusively on stone stelae
and coins minted from the time of Ezana. Like the inscriptions from the time of the
Mauryan ruler Ashoka in the third century B.C.E., who claimed the support of Buddha
for his kingship, inscriptions carved into stone monuments and appearing on coins
during King Ezana’s reign proclaimed his reliance on the new Christian religion: “I
will rule the people with righteousness and justice, and will not oppress them, and
may they preserve this Throne which I have set up for the Lord of Heaven.” From its
beginnings at Axum, the Christian state of Ethiopia survived throughout much of the
second millennium C.E., in part because the mountainous terrain permitted the
isolation of the Christian communities and their defense against hostile neighbors.
The Rise of
Islam
Islam, the next universal religion, provides an even more powerful example of the
interaction between religion and empire. Islam appeared in the seventh century C.E. in
Mecca, a flourishing trade city located halfway up the Red Sea coast between Egypt
and the Indian Ocean. The people of Mecca traded heavily in Indian spices, Chinese
silks, and Yemeni incenses with both the Byzantine and Sasanid Persian Empires in
the north. They were well aware of world politics. They were also aware of the main
belief systems of West Asia. They knew Zoroastrianism through trading contacts in
Iraq and the Persian Gulf, and Christianity through trading trips north to Syria and
Egypt or across to Christian Ethiopia. They knew something of Judaism, not only
because of business but also because large numbers of Jews lived in Yemen and even
closer in the agricultural town that would later be known as Medina. The Meccans
were themselves believers in a south Arabian pantheon of gods and goddesses. Little
is known of these early beliefs other than that they centered on the sun and moon;
there were also local sacred places that were pilgrimage sites.
Muhammad and the Origins of Islam In the year 610, one of the
businessmen of Mecca, Muhammad, experienced what he later described as a vision
on an evening walk in the hills outside the city. In it he was enjoined by the angel
Gabriel to speak God’s word, to warn humanity of the imminent coming of the day
of judgment and the need to correct greedy and immoral ways. Persuaded that he had
been chosen to be a messenger of God, he dedicated the rest of his life to exhortation
and action: exhortation to lead a just and moral life, action to establish a godly
community in which all members accepted, or submitted to, God’s plan and laws.
Islam is the Arabic word for “acceptance” or “submission.” A Muslim is one who
follows Islam. The community of Muslims was to include all of humanity, not just
Arabs.
Muslim Sacred Text The Qur’an is the sacred book of the Muslims. This book,
a collection made in 651 of Muhammad’s revelations written down by followers as
he uttered them, contains all the principles and precepts necessary to live life
according to God’s plan. Considered to be God’s word and eternal, the Qur’an was
revealed and copied down in Arabic. The effect has been to make Arabic the official,
if not sacred, language of Islam, learned to some degree by all Muslims.
Islamic Law In addition to the Qur’an and its language, Islamic law and daily ritual
held the Islamic community together in faith as it rapidly expanded to include many
diverse cultures. Shari’a, or Islamic law, took its final shape in the ninth century.
Like the Jewish Talmud, it is comprehensive, dealing with dietary laws and prayer
ritual as well as with building codes and punishment for murder. The shari’a is based
on the Qur’an, which functions in effect as the constitution of God. For cases not
clearly addressed by the Qur’an, local customs, hadith (stories about the sayings and
actions of Muhammad), general consensus, and analogy were used to modify and
extend the shari’a, which became the law of the land wherever Muslim governments
held sway.
Muslim Prayer and Pilgrimage While the shari’a defined legal relations in
the Islamic world, the “Five Pillars of Islam” guided everyday individual practice of
Islam. To be a Muslim, one must follow the five primary rules spelled out in the
Qur’an. The first is that Muslims must bear witness or testify that they believe in the
one and only God and that Muhammad was his last prophet. The second is that they
must pray daily. Five times per day is specified in the Qur’an, and they must pray
especially on Friday, when the whole community gathers to hear a sermon. Third,
Muslims must voluntarily give a tenth of their annual income to provide for the poor
of the community. Fourth, during one month of the year, Ramadan, all Muslims must
fast during daylight hours. Finally, at least once
Used by permission for Bridging World History, 14 The Annenberg Foundation copyright © 2004
in their lives, they should go to Mecca on pilgrimage. Today, about 2 million
pilgrims from all over the world visit Mecca each year.
The Expansion and Division of Islam These factors—the Qur’an and its
Arabic language, the Five Pillars of Islam, and the shari’a—together provided a
cosmology that would be the basis for a multicultural community reaching from
West Africa to China. From the beginning of Islamic expansion, efforts were made
to hold this multicultural community together under a single imperial government.
These attempts proved unsuccessful, even though Islam remained the official state
ideology of component parts of the Muslim world just as Judaism had been in the
Jewish Palestinian state and Christianity was in the Roman Empire after 380. As
with Judaism and Christianity, there was pressure from rulers to create and maintain
an orthodoxy, an “official” Islamic credo and ritual.
Political and Religious Authority in Islam Because Islam, like later Judaism,
has no ordained priesthood, religious authority was invoked by scholars and judges.
Informal councils, and conferences of scholars and judges produced over time the
standard positions on free will, revelation, and the role of reason in law and theology.
The close association of political and religious authority made opposition to
established government an issue that had to be justified on theological grounds.
Similarly, theological differences became political issues. Both theological and
political differences caused long-standing and profound divisions in Islam.