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1 posted on 03/16/2011 7:41:17 AM PDT by DogwoodSouth
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To: DogwoodSouth

Brigitte Gabriel, for one.


2 posted on 03/16/2011 7:48:13 AM PDT by Scanian (i)
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To: DogwoodSouth; NYer

Bump and ping


4 posted on 03/16/2011 4:18:21 PM PDT by redhead ("I think I'm the best fish filleter in the whole third grade." --Piper Palin)
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To: DogwoodSouth; netmilsmom; thefrankbaum; Tax-chick; GregB; saradippity; Berlin_Freeper; Litany; ...
This is quite an excellent article!! As more christians flee from the Middle East, it is so important for all of us to understand the roots of our faith which they have maintained over these 2000 years.

The rest of the article


Who are the Maronites?

Maronite icon of St. Maron in prayer
Christianity's history in Lebanon really is fascinating. Like most of the Middle East, Lebanon was once solidly Christian in a time when all Christians were in union with the Pope. Up until the fifth century, Christians there considered themselves a part of the Church of Antioch, an ancient city which was an important center of early Christianity. The Lebanese Christians revered St. Maron (d. 410) as their founder. He was a monk who moved from Antioch to a mountain in Syria to be a missionary and to lead a life of asceticism. St. Maron's disciples moved into present-day Lebanon in the early fifth century and spread the Gospel throughout the region. Christians in Lebanon, then, were referred to as Maronites.

After the Council of Chalcedon in 451, the patriarch of Antioch rejected the Council's decisions on the nature of Christ while the monks and faithful in Lebanon were strong supporters of the Council. The Church of Antioch then separated from the Catholic Church (the birth of "Oriental Orthodoxy" - the first large-scale schism in Church history) and the Maronite Catholics in Lebanon were persecuted for adhering to the decisions of the council and they suffered hardships at the hands of anti-Chalcedon Christians. During the Muslim conquest of Syria in the first half of the seventh century, most Maronite Catholics fled to the mountains of Lebanon. Under Muslim rule over the next 400 years, the Maronites in Lebanon existed in a precarious state: they were largely cut-off from the rest of the Christian world -- so much so that the Roman Catholic Church did not even know that they still existed. During those years, starting in the year 637, the Maronites established their own line of patriarchs to lead their Church. The Maronite Church remained isolated for over four hundred years.

During the 12th century Crusades, Christian soldiers passing through Lebanon were shocked to be greeted by a local, indigenous Christian community: the Maronites. During the Crusades, the Maronite Church assisted the Crusaders and affirmed their loyalty and union with the Pope, the Successor of St. Peter. In fact, the Maronite Church is one of only three Eastern Churches that have never in their history been outside of communion with the Bishop of Rome. (The other two are the Italo-Albanian Church in southern Italy and Sicily, and the Syro-Malabar Church in southwestern India - a community which traces its roots all the way back to the first century missionary activity of the Apostle Thomas!)

St. Elias Maronite Catholic Church in Birmingham, Ala.
Today, Maronite Catholics are still the largest Christian group in Lebanon, making up about 22% of the country's total population. This is, by far, the largest concentration of Christians in the Middle East. There are approximately 200,000 Maronite Catholics in the U.S., but most American Maronites assimilated into Roman Catholic parishes through the years because there were not very many Maronite Catholic parishes and priests in the U.S. There are currently two Maronite eparchies (the equivalent to dioceses) in the U.S.


A Roman rite Catholic may attend any Eastern Catholic Liturgy and fulfill his or her obligations at any Eastern Catholic Parish. A Roman rite Catholic may join any Eastern Catholic Parish and receive any sacrament from an Eastern Catholic priest, since all belong to the Catholic Church as a whole. I am a Roman Catholic practicing my faith at a Maronite Catholic Church. Like the Chaldeans, the Maronites retain Aramaic for the Consecration. It is as close as one comes to being at the Last Supper.

Please freepmail me if you would like more information on the Eastern Catholic Churches.

5 posted on 03/17/2011 12:53:29 PM PDT by NYer ("Be kind to every person you meet. For every person is fighting a great battle." St. Ephraim)
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