Compare And Contrast Christianity And Islam

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Islam and Christianity became more popular religions between 1000 and 1300 CE. Starting with the Islamic empire experiencing political fragmentation caused the Government to split and spread so far that it began to have contact with many of their neighbors. Muslim merchants carried the word of the Quran far and wide by commercial networks. Sufism became decisive in the spread of Islam and was a popular form of religion, highly mystical and communal.

Sufi, which stands for wool, is what many of the early mystics wrapped themselves in marking their penitence. To seek a closer union with God, they performed ecstatic rituals such as repeating over and over again the name of God. With the spread happening faster and faster, the common people found it irresistible due to the emotional content and strong social bonds. While Sufi missionaries carried the universalizing faith to India and other places is when Islam truly became a religion for the people.

Islam eventually became more accommodating because they embraced Persian literature, Turkish ruling skills and Arabic language contributions in law, religion, literature and science. This culture eventually created another core region which is now what we call the Middle East.
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The period 1000-1300 witnessed an intense localization of politics because there was no successor to the Roman Empire or Charlemagne's. On the other hand, the territory united under a shared sense of its place in the world. Some inhabitants even began to believe in the existence of something called "Europe" and referred to themselves as Europeans. This was because of the universalizing faith of Catholicism. It was not the Christianity of the post-Roman era that was dominated by monks in monasteries. Members of the laity were expected to revere and support their monks, nuns and clergy, but not imitate