Chapter 15


Why did Christianity take hold in some places more than in others?


Christianity just ended up in areas where European settlements already existed. Places like China and Islam already had religions of their own and were doing well with them, so they rejected them. Christianity most easily rooted areas of colonial rule, and region where culture and religion had yet to be developed. It struggled to dominate in regions with stable, firmly established societies and religions, because people did not have a need for a new religion customs and literacy.


Comments

  1. I don't think that Christianity's inability to take root in Eurasia is necessarily reflective of religions having been in place. After all, Christianity predates Islam. I would assert that the prestige of Islamic merchants coupled with early Islam's willingness to integrate some polytheistic beliefs into the system had a greater influence over desire to convert. Additionally, Islam grew out of the polytheistic religions in the fertile crescent. It was not so dissimilar from the beliefs of people in the area.

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