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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 13, 2023

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In the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine) after the rise of Islam there was much concern with Christianity's dearth of rules and codes of conduct compared to the ascendant Islam. The belief of the day, which everyone assumed as true, was that the fate of the Empire was directly linked to the proper religious conduct of the people and Emperor. The only logical explanation for the Muslim military's victory over the Empire was Loss of God's Favor. It actually took two centuries before the Roman elite even recognized that Islam existed as a separate distinct religion (the historical record of the Arab's themselves also lacks good evidence of Islam being a fully formed, distinct religion for about 2 centuries after the death of Mohammad, when the very earliest accounts of his life first start appearing. This is not a can or worms I'm trying to open here). Many in the Empire's elite considered them to be Jewish heretic fundamentalists. Either way God obviously let them win so there has to be a reason(s). Multiple attempts to flush out of a more attractive set of personal conduct guidelines and criminal law based on the Old Testament while keeping within the Empires traditions were launched after various military defeats. Its both a very broad subject and one that lacks much satisfying primary sources. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantine_law#Middle_Byzantine_period has a very incomplete overview laundered through modern understandings.

The only logical explanation for the Muslim military's victory over the Empire was Loss of God's Favor

Funnily enough, this is a very common (maybe the most common) line in Islamism: Muslims are in an abject state today because, unlike at the peak of their power, they are less devout and hardline.

However, I don't think this would suffice as proof that modern Islam doesn't have pre-existing behavioral prescriptions right?

This is just the most common theme in Abrahamic faiths. There were plenty of Jewish apocalyptic movements that insisted on stricter requirements or more purity. But it didn't mean Judaism didn't have an existing set of prescriptions.