Meanwhile, Malik had been appointed to the
Lebanese Cabinet. He was
Minister of National Education and Fine Arts in 1956 and 1957, and
Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1956 to 1958. While a Minister, he was elected to the
National Assembly in 1957, and served there for three years. Around this time, he was also elected to the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the
American Philosophical Society. Following the outbreak of the
Lebanese Civil War, which raged from 1975 to 1990, Malik helped to found the
Front for Freedom and Man in Lebanon, which he named as such, to defend the Christian cause. It was later renamed the
Lebanese Front. A
Greek Orthodox Christian, he was the only non-
Maronite among the Front's top leaders, who included
Phalangist Party founder
Pierre Gemayel and former
President and
National Liberal Party leader
Camille Chamoun. Malik was widely regarded as the brains of the Front, in which the other politicians were the brawn. Malik was also noted as a theologian who successfully reached across confessional lines, appealing to his fellow
Greek Orthodox Christians,
Catholics, and
Evangelicals alike. The author of numerous commentaries on the
Bible and on the writings of the early
Church Fathers, Malik was one of the few Orthodox theologians of his time to be widely known in Evangelical circles, and the evangelical leader
Bill Bright spoke well of him and quoted him. Partly owing to Malik's ecumenical appeal, as well as to his academic credentials, he served as President of the
World Council on Christian Education from 1967 to 1971, and as vice-president of the
United Bible Societies from 1966 to 1972. Malik also famously worked alongside fellow Lebanese diplomat and philosopher
Karim Azkoul. He is related to founder of
postcolonialism Edward Said through marriage. At a UN session in December 1948, Malik described Lebanon as follows: ==Academic career==