

Historians estimate that over 15 formerly Christian-majority countries and territories were conquered during the early Islamic conquests and Ottoman expansion. However, the vast majority were not immediately forced into Islam.
Instead, early Muslim rulers generally allowed Christians to keep their faith under the dhimmi system—a legal status that required the payment of a special tax (the jizya) in exchange for protection and the freedom to practice their religion.
While there were instances of forced conversions by certain militant dynasties (such as the Almohad Caliphate in North Africa and Spain), the shift to an Islamic majority in these regions largely occurred over centuries. This transformation was driven primarily by indirect pressures, such as heavy taxation, social and economic discrimination, and the desire for upward mobility within the ruling Islamic societies.
Historically, the notable Christian regions and ancient nations that eventually transitioned to Islamic majorities following conquests include:
Enumerated powers are the specific, explicitly listed powers granted to the federal government by the U.S. Constitution. Found primarily in Article I, Section 8, this system ensures the national government remains one of limited, defined authority, with all unlisted powers reserved to the states and the people
Enumerated (adjective) means to name, list, or count items one by one. It typically describes things that are specifically specified, designated, or detailed in a distinct sequence.
WATCH
https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZP8puPYGS/
https://youtu.be/Vh2AD_fgOhA?si=P5W7ub-pgX5HKeBz
This video argues that early Christianity was an Israel-centered, covenantal movement rather than the inception of a universal Gentile religion. It asserts that the movement's primary focus was the fulfillment of Israel's redemptive story and the imminent judgment of the Old Covenant age, which concluded in AD 70.
Key Historical Frameworks
The Shift to Gentile Christianity
After 135 CE, the video contends that Gentile-led Christianity increasingly reinterpreted Israel’s fulfilled story as its own, shifting from a covenantal movement to a universal institutional religion. This process included:
Why the 'Israel-Only' Paradigm was Missed
The narrator suggests that this historical reality has been obscured for nearly 2,000 years due to: