The Prophet Muhammad knew Christians in his lifetime and respected them along with Jews as "People of the Book." Because of their monotheism and roots in the revealed Jewish Bible, the Prophet and his successors extended conquered Christians (and Jews) more freedoms than conquered pagans.
In the approximately 1,300 years of history since the life of the Prophet, the relationship between Christianity and Islam has rarely been harmonious. As it spread, the Muslim Empire quickly conquered much of the Judeo-Christian Holy Land and the Christian Byzantine Empire. The Christian Crusades of the 11th through 13th centuries, waged in large part against Muslims, served only to widen the divide between the two faiths. Constantinople, the "New Rome" and the center of Eastern Orthodox Christianity, fell to the Turks in 1453 and has lived under Islamic rule ever since.
In recent centuries, mutual distrust between Christians and Muslims has continued to grow. On the other hand, some have pointed out that the conflict has more to do with political tensions and divergent cultural worldviews than with religion, and efforts have been made by both Christians and Muslims to find common ground and engage in respectful dialogue.
To illustrate the similarities and differences between the two largest religions of the world, the following chart compares the origins, beliefs and practices of Christianity and Islam. Please note that numbers are estimates and beliefs and practices are oversimplified for brevity's sake.
History & Stats
|
Christianity
|
Islam
|
date founded |
c. 30 AD
|
622 CE
|
place founded |
Palestine
|
Arabian Peninsula
|
founders & early leaders |
Jesus, Peter, Paul
|
Muhammad
|
original languages |
Aramaic and Greek
|
Arabic
|
major location today |
Europe, North and South America
|
Middle East, Southeast Asia
|
adherents worldwide today |
2 billion
|
1.3 billion
|
adherents in USA |
159 million
|
1.1 million
|
adherents in Canada |
21 million
|
500,000
|
adherents in UK |
51 million
|
1.6 million
|
current size rank |
largest in the world
|
second largest in the world
|
major branches |
Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant
|
Sunni, Shiite
|
Religious Authority
|
Christianity
|
Islam
|
sacred text |
Bible = Old Testament (Jewish Bible) + New Testament
|
Qur'an (Koran)
|
inspiration of sacred text |
views vary: literal Word of God, inspired human accounts, or of human origin only
|
literal Word of God
|
status of biblical prophets |
true prophets
|
true prophets
|
status of Jewish Bible |
canonical
|
noncanonical but useful as a (corrupted) inspired text
|
status of Jewish Apocrypha |
canonical (Catholic);
useful but noncanonical (Protestant) |
noncanonical
|
status of New Testament |
canonical
|
noncanonical but useful as a (corrupted) inspired text
|
summaries of doctrine |
Apostle's Creed, Nicene Creed
|
Six Articles of Faith
|
religious law |
canon law (Catholics)
|
Sharia
|
other written authority |
church fathers, church councils, ecumenical creeds (all branches);
papal decrees, canon law (Catholics) |
Hadith
|
Beliefs & Doctrine
|
Christianity
|
Islam
|
ultimate reality |
one creator God
|
one creator God
|
nature of God |
Trinity - one substance, three persons
|
unity - one substance, one person
|
other spiritual beings |
angels and demons
|
angels, demons, jinn
|
revered humans |
saints, church fathers
|
prophets, imams (especially in Shia Islam)
|
identity of Jesus |
Son of God, God incarnate, savior of the world
|
true prophet of God, whose message has been corrupted
|
birth of Jesus |
virgin birth
|
virgin birth
|
death of Jesus |
death by crucifixion
|
did not die, but ascended bodily into heaven (a disciple died in his place)
|
resurrection of Jesus |
affirmed
|
denied, since he did not die
|
second coming of Jesus |
affirmed
|
affirmed
|
mode of divine revelation |
through Prophets and Jesus (as God Himself), recorded in Bible
|
through Muhammad, recorded in Qur'an
|
human nature |
"original sin" inherited from Adam - tendency towards evil
|
equal ability to do good or evil
|
means of salvation |
correct belief, faith, good deeds, sacraments (some Protestants emphasize faith alone)
|
correct belief, good deeds, Five Pillars
|
God's role in salvation |
predestination, various forms of grace
|
predestination
|
good afterlife |
eternal heaven
|
eternal paradise
|
bad afterlife |
eternal hell, temporary purgatory (Catholicism)
|
eternal hell
|
view of the other religion |
Islam is respected as a fellow monotheistic religion, but Muhammad is not seen as a true prophet
|
Christians are respected as "People of the Book," but they have mistaken beliefs and only partial revelation
|
Rituals & Practices
|
Christianity
|
Islam
|
house of worship |
church, chapel, cathedral, basilica, meeting hall
|
mosque
|
day of worship |
Sunday
|
Friday
|
religious leaders |
priest, bishop, archbishop, patriarch, pope, pastor, minister, preacher, deacon
|
imams
|
major sacred rituals |
baptism, communion (Eucharist)
|
Five Pillars: prayer, pilgrimage, charity, fasting, confession of faith
|
head covered during prayer? |
generally no
|
yes
|
central religious holy days |
Lent, Holy Week, Easter
|
Eid-al-Fitr, Eid-al-Adha, month of Ramadan
|
other holidays |
Christmas, saints days
|
Mawlid, Ashura
|
major symbols |
cross, crucifix, dove, anchor, fish, alpha and omega, chi rho, halo
|
crescent, name of Allah in Arabic
|
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