328 lines
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Plaintext
328 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Newsgroups: soc.culture.arabic,soc.religion.islam
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From: lhermi@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (Lotfi Hermi)
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Subject: Developement of religious strata Judaism and Christianity (related to Islam)
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Organization: Oberlin College Computer Science
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Date: Fri, 18 Dec 1992 04:36:31 GMT
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Message-ID: <1992Dec18.041028.29184@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
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Lines: 318
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Here is a glimpse in Ibn Khaldun's Muqadimah in which he describes the
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development of the Jewish and Christian religions he also points to the
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relationship the three monotheistic religions have with political autho-
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rity and leadership.
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Save for analysis.
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Lotfi
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[31] Remarks on the words "Pope" and "Patriarch"
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in the Christian religion and on the word "Kohen"
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used by the Jews.
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It should be known that after the removal of its
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prophet, a religious group must have someone to take care
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of it. (Such a person) must cause the people to act according
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to the religious laws. In a way, he stands to them in the
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place (khallifah, caliph) of their prophet, in as much as (he
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urges) the obligations which ( the prophet) had imposed
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upon them. Furthermore, in accordance with the afore-men-
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tioned need for political leadership in social organization,
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the human species must have a person who will cause them
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to act in accordance with what is good for them and who will
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prevent them by force from doing things harmful to them.
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Such a person is the one who is called ruler.
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In the Muslim community, the holy war - Jihad - is a religious
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duty, because of the universalism of the (Muslim) mission
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and (the obligation to) convert everybody to Islam either by
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persuasion or by force. Therefore, caliphate and royal au-
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thority are united in (Islam), so that the person in charge
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can devote the available strength to both of them at the
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same time.
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The other religious groups did not have a universal mis-
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sion, and the holy war was not a religious duty to them, save
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only for purposes of defense. It has thus come about that the
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person in charge of religious affairs in ( other religious
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groups) is not concerned with power politics at all. (Among
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them,) royal authority comes to those who have it, by acci-
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dent and in some way that has nothing to do with religion.
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It comes to them as the necessary result of group feeling,
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which by its very nature seeks to obtain royal authority, as
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we have mentioned before, and not because they are under
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obligation to gain power over other nations, as is the case
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with Islam. They are merely required to establish their re-
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ligion among their own (people).
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This is why the Israelites after Moses and Joshua re-
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mained unconcerned with royal authority for about four hun-
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dred years. Their only concern was to establish their re-
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ligion. The person from among them who was in charge of
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their religion was called the Kohen. He was in a way the
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representative (caliph) of Moses. He regulated the prayers
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and sacrifices of the Israelites. They made it a condition for
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(the Kohen) to be a descendant of Aaron, as it had been
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destined for him and his children by divine revelation.
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For (supervision of the) political matters which naturally
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arise among human beings, the Israelites selected seventy
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elders who were entrusted with a general legal authority.
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The Kohen was higher in religious rank than they and more
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remote from the turbulent legal authority. This continued to
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be (the situation among the Israelites) until the nature of
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group feeling made itself fully felt and all power became
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political. The Israelites dispossessed the Canaanites of the
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land that God had given them as their heritage in Jerusalem
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and the surrounding region, as it had been explained to them
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through Moses. The nations of the Philistines, the Canaan-
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ites, the Armenians [!], the Edomites, the Ammonites, and
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the Moabites fought against them. During that (time), po-
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litical leadership was entrusted to the elders among them.
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The Israelites remained in that condition for about four
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hundred years. They did not have any royal power and were
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annoyed by attacks from foreign nations. Therefore, they
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asked God through Samuel, one of their prophets, that He
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permit them to make someone king over them. Thus, Saul
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became their king. He defeated the foreign nations and
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killed Goliath, the ruler of the Philistines. After Saul,
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David became king, and then Solomon. His kingdom flour-
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ished and extended to the borders of the Hijaz and further to
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the borders of the Yemen and to the borders of the land of
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the Romans ( Byzantines) . After Solomon, the tribes split
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into two dynasties. This was in accordance with the neces-
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sary consequence of group feeling in dynasties, as we have
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mentioned before. One of the dynasties was that of the ten
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tribes in the region of Nablus, the capital of which is Samaria
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(Sabastiyah), and the other that of the children of Judah
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and Benjamin in Jerusalem. Nebuchadnezzar, the king of
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Babylon, then deprived them of their royal authority. He
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first (dealt with) the ten tribes in Samaria (Sabastiyah),
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and then with the children of Judah in Jerusalem. Their royal
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authority had had an uninterrupted duration of a thousand
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years. Now he destroyed their temple, burnt their Torah,
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and killed their religion. He deported the people to Isfa-
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han and the 'Iraq. Eventually, one of the Persian Kayyanid
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( Achaemenid) rulers brought them back to Jerusalem,
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seventy years after they had left it. They rebuilt the temple
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and re-established their religion in its original form with
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priests only. The royal authority belonged to the Persians.
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Alexander and the Greeks then defeated the Persians,
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and the Jews came under Greek domination. The Greek rule
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then weakened, and, with the help of (their) natural group
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feeling, the Jews rose against the Greeks and made an end
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to their domination over them. (Jewish) royal authority was
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in charge of their Hasmonean priests. (The Hasmoneans)
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fought the Greeks. Eventually, their power was destroyed.
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The Romans defeated them, and ( the Jews) came under
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Roman domination. (The Romans) advanced toward Jerusa-
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lem, the seat of the children of Herod, relatives by marriage
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of the Hasmoneans and the last remnant of the Hasmonean
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dynasty. They laid siege to them for a time, finally conquer-
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ing (Jerusalem) by force in an orgy of murder, destruction,
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and arson. They laid Jerusalem in ruins and exiled (the Jews)
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to Rome and the regions beyond. This was the second de-
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struction of the temple. The Jews call it ''the Great Exile.''
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After that, they had no royal authority, because they had lost
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their group feeling. They remained afterwards under the
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domination of the Romans and their successors. Their re-
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ligious affairs were taken care of by their head, called the
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Kohen.
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The Messiah (Jesus) brought (the Jews) his religion, as
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is known. He abolished some of the laws of the Torah. He
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performed marvelous wonders, such as healing the insane
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and reviving the dead. Many people joined him and believed
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in him. The largest group among his following were his
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companions, the Apostles. There were twelve of them. He
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sent some of them as messengers (Apostles) to all parts of
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the world. They made propaganda for his religious group.
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That was in the days of Augustus, the first of the Roman
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emperors, and during the time of Herod, the king of the
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Jews, who had taken away royal authority from the Hasmo-
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neans, his relatives by marriage. The Jews envied (Jesus)
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and declared him a liar. Their king, Herod, wrote to the
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Roman Emperor, Augustus, and incited him against (Jesus).
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The Roman Emperor gave ( the Jews) permission to kill
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him, and the story of Jesus as recited in the Qur'an oc-
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curred.
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The Apostles divided into different groups. Most of them
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went to the country of the Romans and made propaganda for
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the Christian religion. Peter was the greatest of them. He
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settled in Rome, the seat of the Roman emperors. They
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then wrote down the Gospel that had been revealed to Jesus,
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in four recensions according to their different traditions.
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Matthew wrote his Gospel in Jerusalem in Hebrew. It was
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translated into Latin by John, the son of Zebedee, one of
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( the Apostles) . ( The Apostle) Luke wrote his Gospel in
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Latin for a Roman dignitary. (The Apostle) John, the son of
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Zebedee, wrote his Gospel in Rome. Peter wrote his Gospel
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in Latin and ascribed it to his pupil Mark. These four
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recensions of the Gospel differ from each other. Not all of
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it is pure revelation, but (the Gospels) have an admixture
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of the words of Jesus and of the Apostles. Most of (their
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contents) consists of sermons and stories. There are very
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few laws in them.
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The Apostles came together at that time in Rome and
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laid down the rules of the Christian community. They en-
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trusted them to Clement, a pupil of Peter, noting in them
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the list of books that are to be accepted and in accordance
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with which one must act.
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(The books which) belong to the old religious law of the
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Jews are the following:
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The Torah, which consists of five volumes.
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The Book of Joshua.
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The Book of Judges.
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The Book of Ruth.
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The Book of Judith.
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The four Books of Kings.
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The Book of Chronicles.
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The three Books of Maccabees, by Ibn Gorion.
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The Book of Ezra, the religious leader.
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The Book of Esther and the story of Haman.
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The Book of Job the Righteous.
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The Psalms of David.
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The five Books of David's son, Solomon.
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The sixteen Prophecies of the major and minor prophets.
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The Book of Jesus, the son of Sira, the minister of
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Solomon.
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(The books of) the religious law of Jesus that was re-
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ceived by the Apostles are the following:
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The four recensions of the Gospel.
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The Book of Paul which consists of fourteen epistles.
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The Katholika (General Epistles) which consist of seven
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epistles, the eighth being the Praxeis (Acts), stories
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of the Apostles.
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The Book of Clement which contains the laws.
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The Book of the Apocalypse (Revelation) which contains
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the vision of John, the son of Zebedee.
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The attitude of the Roman emperors toward Christianity
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varied. At times, they adopted it and honored its adherents.
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At other times, they did not recognize it and persecuted its
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adherents and killed and exiled them. Finally, Constantine
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appeared and adopted Christianity. From then on, all (the
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Roman emperors) were Christians.
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The head of the Christian ( community) and the person in
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charge of ( Christian religious) institutions is called Patriarch.
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He is their religious head and the representative (caliph) of
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the Messiah among them. He sends his delegates and rep-
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resentatives to the remote Christian nations. They are called
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"bishop," that is, delegate of the Patriarch. The man who
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leads the prayers and makes decisions in religious matters is
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called ''priest." The person who withdraws from society and
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retires into solitude for worship is called ''monk." The latter
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usually seek solitude in (monastic) cells.
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The Apostle Peter, the chief Apostle and oldest of the
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disciples, was in Rome and established the Christian religion
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there. Nero, the fifth Roman emperor, killed him. Successor
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to Peter at the Roman see was Arius.
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Mark the Evangelist spent seven years in Alexandria and
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Egypt and the Maghrib making propaganda. After him came
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Ananias, who was called Patriarch. He was the first Patriarch
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there. He appointed twelve priests to be with him, and it was
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arranged that when the Patriarch died, one of the twelve
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should take his place, and one of the faithful be elected to
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take his place as the twelfth priest. Thus, the patriarchate fell
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to the priests.
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Later on, dissension broke out among the Christians with
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regard to the basic principles and articles of their religion.
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They assembled in Nicea in the days of Constantine, in order
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to lay down (the doctrine of) true Christianity. Three hun-
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dred and eighteen bishops agreed upon one and the same
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doctrine of Christianity. They wrote it down and called it
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"the Creed.'' They made it the fundamental principle to
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which they would all have reference. Among the things they
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set down in writing was that with respect to the appointment
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of the Patriarch as the head of Christianity, no reference
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should be made to the independent judgment of the priests,
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as Ananias, the disciple of Mark, had prescribed. That point
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of view was abolished. The Patriarch was to come from a
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large group and to be elected by the leaders and chiefs of the
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believers. It has been so ever since. Later on, other dis-
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sensions arose concerning the basic principles of Christianity.
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Synods concerned with regulating (the religion), were as-
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sembled, but there was no dissension with regard to the
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basic principles (of the method of selecting the Patriarch).
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It has remained the same ever since.
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The Patriarchs always appointed bishops as their dele-
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gates. The bishops used to call the Patriarch "Father" as
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a sign of respect. The priests similarly came to call the
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bishop "Father,'' when he was not together with the Patri-
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arch, as a sign of respect. This caused confusion in the use
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of the title over a long period, ending, it is said, with the
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Patriarchate of Heraclius in Alexandria. It was considered de-
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sirable to distinguish the Patriarch from the bishop in the
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matter of respect (shown to him by style of address) . There-
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fore, the Patriarch was called "Pope," that is, "Father of
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fathers." The name (of ''Pope") first appeared in Egypt,
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according to the theory expressed by Jirjis b. al-'Amid
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in his History. It was then transferred to the occupant of the
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most important see in (Christianity), the see of Rome, which
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was the see of the Apostle Peter, as we have mentioned
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before. The title of Pope has remained characteristic of the
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see of Rome down to this day.
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Thereafter, there were dissensions among the Christians
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with regard to their religion and to Christology. They split
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into groups and sects, which secured the support of the
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various Christian rulers against each other. At different times
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there appeared different sects. Finally, these sects crystallized
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into three groups, which constitute the ( Christian) sects.
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Others have no significance. These are the Melchites, the
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Jacobites, and the Nestorians. We do not think that we should
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blacken the pages of this book with discussion of their dogmas
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of unbelief. In general, they are well known. All of them are
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unbelief. This is clearly stated in the noble Qur'an. (To) dis-
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cuss or argue those things with them is not up to us. It is
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(for them to choose between) conversion to Islam, payment
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of the poll tax, or death.
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Later on, each sect had its own Patriarch. The Patriarch
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of Rome is today called "Pope." He is of the Melchite
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persuasion. Rome belongs to the European Christians. Their
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royal authority is established in that region.
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The Patriarch of the (Christian) subjects in Egypt is
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of the Jacobite persuasion. He resides among them. The
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Abyssinians follow the religion of (the Egyptian Christians).
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The Patriarch of Egypt delegates bishops to the Abyssinians,
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and these bishops arrange religious affairs in Abyssinia. The
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name of ''Pope" is specially reserved for the patriarch of
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Rome at this time. The Jacobites do not call their patriarch
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"Pope." The word (Pope) is pronounced Pappa.
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It is the custom of the Pope with respect to the European
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Christians to urge them to submit to one ruler and have
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recourse to him in their disagreements and agreements, in
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order to avoid the dissolution of the whole thing. His pur-
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pose is to have the group feeling that is the strongest among
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them (concentrated upon one ruler), so that (this ruler) has
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power over all of them. The ruler is called "Emperor"
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(Emperador), with the middle letter (pronounced some-
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how) between dh and z. (The Pope) personally places the
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crown upon the head of (the emperor), in order to let him
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have the blessing implied (in that ceremony). The emperor,
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therefore, is called "the crowned one." Perhaps that is the
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meaning of the word ''emperor."
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This, briefly, is our comment on the two words Pope and
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Kohen.
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''God leads astray whomever He wants to lead astray,
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and He guides whomever He wants to guide."
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