://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/09/12/once-dominant-lebanese-christians-now-a-minority/
Once dominant Lebanese Christians now a minority 


BEIRUT: Lebanon, which Pope Benedict XVI will visit this week, is home to 14 
Christian denominations among 18 officially recognized faith communities. But 
figures on religious affiliation in Lebanon are only approximate, because a 
national census has not been conducted since 1932, when Lebanon was still under 
French mandate and 51 percent of the population was Christian. And there is 
little prospect of conducting a new one because of the sensitive political 
issue of maintaining parity among confessional groups. An unwritten, but 
rigorously followed tradition mandates that the president always be a Maronite 
Christian, the prime minister Sunni Muslim and the parliament speaker a Shiite.

After the Copts of Egypt, Lebanon’s Christian community is indisputably the 
second-largest in the Middle East. Christians now represent nearly 35 percent 
of the country’s registered population of some 4.6 million people, according to 
researcher Youssef Shahid Doueihi, of Lebanon’s Maronite Foundation in the 
World. They consist of six jurisdictions that submit to the authority of the 
pope, with the Maronite church being the largest Christian group in the 
country. There are also four eastern Orthodox communities, three Protestant 
sects and the Egyptian Coptic church, the latest to have been officially 
recognized.

The Maronite Church traces its origins to the fourth century Syrian monk Saint 
Maron, who sought refuge in north Lebanon’s Qadisha Valley after fleeing 
persecution. It united with Rome in 1736, but maintains its own traditions and 
practices, including a liturgy in the ancient Syriac language. Many of today’s 
Christians are descendants of those who converted to Latin, Protestant and 
Anglican rites during the Ottoman Empire’s various alliances with European 
powers in the 19th century. The Armenians, who fled genocide in Turkey during 
World War I, are divided into mainly Apostolic (Orthodox), as well as Catholic 
and Protestant churches.

The Chaldeans, who are affiliated with Rome, came from Iraq in the 1950s, 
attracted by what was then an oasis dominated by Christians in a region shaken 
by nationalist coups. Maronites, who today number just under one million, were 
the most powerful community prior to Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war. Their 
influence has since waned as their numbers drop through emigration and low 
fertility rates. The Maronites along with some 310,000 Greek Orthodox and 
204,000 Greek Catholics-a sect that split from Rome in the 18th 
century-represent nearly all of Lebanon’s 1.59 million Christians.- AFP


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