Conflict, Conquest, and Conversion: Two Thousand Years of Christian Missions in the Middle East
ISBN: 9780231511094
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Columbia University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Missions -- Middle East -- History;

Conflict, Conquest, and Conversion surveys two thousand years of the Christian missionary enterprise in the Middle East within the context of the region's political evolution. Its broad, rich narrative follows Christian missions as they interacted with imperial powers and as the momentum of religious change shifted from Christianity to Islam and back again, adding new dimensions to the history of the region and the nature of the relationship between the Middle East and the West. Using long-neglected sources, Tejirian and Simon pay particular attention to the role of Protestant and Catholic missions in shaping the political and economic imperialism of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and they delineate the ongoing tensions between conversion and the focus on witness and "good works" within the missionary movement, which contributed to the development and spread of nongovernmental organizations. Through its conscientious, systematic study, this volume offers an unparalleled encounter with the social, political, and economic consequences of such trends.


Eleanor H. Tejirian is an associate research scholar at the Middle East Institute, Columbia University. She is the coeditor, with Reeva Spector Simon, of The Creation of Iraq, 1914-1921 and Altruism and Imperialism: Western Religious and Cultural Missions in the Middle East .



Reeva Spector Simon is the author of Iraq Between the Two World Wars: The Militarist Origins of Tyranny and Spies and Holy Wars: The Middle East in Twentieth-Century Crime Fictio n. She is also a coeditor of The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times .
hidden image for function call