Jewish Ideas Daily
 
January 5, 2012
The State of Christianity
By _Elliot  Jager_ 
(http://www.jewishideasdaily.com/authors/detail/elliot-jager) 

 
On a sun-drenched day during the week before Christmas, Jerusalem's Church 
of  the Holy Sepulchre was crowded with pilgrims from Nigeria.  They were  
taking turns kneeling and praying at a marker on the spot where, sacred 
history  has it, Jesus was crucified, entombed, and resurrected.  (Other 
Christians  consider the holy place to be the nearby Garden Tomb.)  Back in 
Nigeria 
on  Christmas Day, a wave of murderous bombings by Muslim extremists hit 
several  churches.  Plainly, the Christian faith is at once thriving and  
struggling.  _Global  Christianity_ 
(http://pewforum.org/uploadedFiles/Topics/Religious_Affiliation/Christian/Christianity-fullreport-web.pdf)
 , a new report 
from the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life,  describes and measures 
both phenomena.
 
Jews have more than a passing interest in the state of Christianity, not  
only because of Christianity's origins in Judaism and fraught relationship 
with  Jews but also because nowadays, many believing Christians consider 
themselves  friends of the Jewish people and Israel.  Consider, for instance, 
the 
fact  that growing numbers of Hispanic-Americans are embracing an 
Israel-friendly  evangelical Christianity.  Note the fact that Israel's Prime 
Minister,  Benjamin Netanyahu, hopes to visit several African countries with 
substantial  Christian populations in the coming months.  
Given the trends in Muslim civilization, it matters to Jews that there are  
more Christians than Muslims in the world and that Christians make up about 
the  same portion of the global population today—32 percent—as they did a 
century  ago.  With almost 80 percent of the U.S. population of Christian 
heritage,  the Americas are today the world's largest bastion of Christianity. 
 Post-modern Europe comes in only second.  It no longer has the most  
Catholics or Protestants, though it remains home to most of the world's 
Orthodox  
Christians, thanks to believers in Russia, Ukraine, Greece, and Romania.  
The report does not explore the continent's _declining_ 
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/bsp/hi/pdfs/03_04_07_tearfundchurch.pdf)   
commitment to its 
religious heritage, which is marked enough so that Prime  Minister David 
Cameron 
recently exhorted Britons not to be _afraid_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-16231223)  to assert their  country's 
Christianity. 
Around the world, half of all Christians are Catholic; Protestants make up 
37  percent, Orthodox Christians 12 percent. Catholics are most strongly 
represented  in Brazil, Mexico, the Philippines, the United States (where about 
one in four  is Catholic), and Italy.  The United States is home to the 
largest number  of the world's Protestants, followed by Nigeria and—somewhat 
surprisingly—_China_ (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-14838749) .  Germany 
is  evenly divided between Protestants and Catholics—who, together, total 
only  around 70 percent of the population (five percent are Muslim).  The  
percentage of Protestants is greater in the Congo—over 95 percent—than in the  
place where Luther launched the Reformation in the 16th century.   
Christianity in sub-Saharan Africa is generally robust.  In Nigeria,  Africa's 
largest country, Pew figures the Christian population at 50  percent. 
The picture is quite different in the Middle East, where Christianity was  
born but which is now home to less than one percent of Christian believers.  
Just four percent of today's Middle Easterners are Christian, mostly  
Catholic or Orthodox.  The country with the largest proportion of  
Christians—38 
percent—is Hezbollah-dominated Lebanon.  In raw numbers,  however, the 
largest body of Christians in the Mideast, about a third of them,  consists of 
Coptic Christians living in Egypt.  Though the CIA _World  Factbook_ 
(https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/eg.html)  
places 
their percentage of Egypt's population at nine percent, Pew  says the figure 
is only about half of that—and shrinking.  The reason may  not be hard to 
deduce: Egypt's Sunni Muslim majority has _not_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-15242413)  been  particularly 
tolerant of Christianity.  With 
Hosni Mubarak's fall and the  rise of _Islamist_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/middleeast/la-fg-egypt-elections-20111225,0,4907137.story
)   parties, the prospects for Christianity in Egypt hardly leave room for  
optimism. 
Intriguingly, the Pew study counts substantial numbers of Christians in 
Saudi  Arabia: 1,200,000, or 4.4 percent of the population.  Left unsaid, 
however,  is that these are mostly not Arabs but Filipino and Indian 
expatriates 
who,  because of state-sanctioned intolerance, may not be practicing their 
faith  openly.  The United Nations does _not_ 
(http://www.ohchr.org/EN/countries/MENARegion/Pages/SAIndex.aspx)   seem overly 
concerned about this type 
of bigotry. 
Pew reports that 100,000 Christians, almost all Arabs, live in the West 
Bank  under Mahmoud Abbas's Palestinian Authority.  Those who speak for them,  
such as the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Fouad Twal, tend to be PLO  
marionettes.  At this time of year, for instance, the Sunni-dominated PLO  
cynically promulgates the fairy tale that Jesus was a "_Palestinian_ 
(http://www.christiannewstoday.com/Christian_News_Report_900407.html) "  and 
Christmas is 
a Palestinian holiday, while over in Hamas-run Gaza several  thousand 
Christians live under _siege_ (http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=42143) .  Meanwhile, 
Israeli  authorities granted West Bank and Gaza Christians passage into Israel 
to visit  family for the holidays and issued 400 separate permits allowing 
them travel  abroad from Ben-Gurion Airport. 
As for Christians in Israel proper, Pew places their numbers  at 150,000, 
up from 34,000 when the state was founded but down by 10,000 from  Israel's 
Central Bureau of Statistics figure in 2008.  Eighty percent are  Arabs, the 
remainder immigrants from the former Soviet Union.  Israeli  Christians, 
naturally, enjoy full freedom of worship.  (By tradition, the  Jerusalem 
municipality distributes free Christmas trees to all comers.)  Pew's figures do 
not count Israel's thousands of foreign workers, such as  Filipino and African 
caregivers or Romanian laborers, or foreign clerics  assigned to the 
country. 
Life is not always easy for Israel's Christian evangelicals, many of whom  
have been treated _shabbily_ 
(http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=226871)   by 
officious bureaucrats at the Shas Party-controlled 
Ministry of Interior.  The ostensible justification is a (mostly) unfounded 
dread of missionary  activity; actually, most Christian fundamentalists are 
in Israel on personal  spiritual journeys or expressly to build support for 
the Jewish state in the  larger Christian world. 
Making strange bedfellows, many liberal and ultra-Orthodox Jews—insecure in 
 their different ways—have demonstrated an unseemly intolerance toward 
fervently  believing Christians.  Though Jews have been treated with contempt 
by 
the  Christian world from time immemorial, it seems myopic and 
counterproductive to  view 21st-century Christianity, with its 2.18 billion 
adherents, 
as if it were  continuing, robot-like, in that benighted legacy.  In fact, as 
fate would  have it, Christian and Jewish civilizations at the present time 
have every  reason to seek possibilities for collaboration.  Strangely 
enough, what's  "good for the Jews"—and the Jewish state—is to see Christianity 
 thriving.

-- 
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