Lebanese Protestant Christians

Lebanese Protestant Christians (Arabic: بروتستانت لبنان) refers to Lebanese people who are adherents of Protestantism in Lebanon and who are a Christian minority in an overwhelmingly Muslim (28% Shia, 28% Sunni), 5.5% Druse and Christian (24% Maronite, 5% other Catholic, 8% Eastern Orthodox) and 3% Oriental Orthodox and Protestant, 1%.

Lebanese Protestant Christians
Languages
Vernacular:
Lebanese Arabic
Religion
Christianity (Protestantism)

Most Protestants in Lebanon were converted by missionaries, primarily English and American, during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. They are divided into a number of denominations, including Presbyterian, Congregational, and Anglican. They are perceived by some to number disproportionately highly among the professional middle class.

The Lebanese Protestant Christians constitute less than 1 percent of the population and live primarily in Beirut (Greater Beirut).[1]

Under the terms of an unwritten agreement known as the National Pact between the various political and religious leaders of Lebanon, the Protestant community in Lebanon has one reserved seat in the Parliament of Lebanon. (see Politics of Lebanon#Legislative_branch)

Notable people

gollark: osmarksarchiveformat™, but firecubez.
gollark: I feel like if I *did* have some sort of dead man's switch it would lose any sort of power through being activated accidentally or ironically.
gollark: It should also wipe your search history.
gollark: > When adding files, zpaq uses a rolling hash function to split files into fragments with an average size of 64 KB along content-dependent boundaries. Then it computes the SHA-1 hash of the fragment and compares it with saved hashes from the current and previous versions. If it finds a match then the fragment is not stored. How does *thiß* work?
gollark: Bee you.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.