Wednesday, March 10, 2010

10 Dangerous Myths About Muslims

I've done many Q&A's at retreats, youth groups, etc. One of the most asked question is "What do XXXXXX believe?" I think our perception of other religions can be one of Christians' (or any human being for that matter) downfalls. We tend to generalize and judge based on reputation. One religion that stands out is Islam. I took this from a website I came across a long time ago to give some more insight to Islam.

10 Dangerous Myths About Islam and Muslims

1. Islam is a religion of violence. By definition, if you’re a Muslim, then the natural and obvious working out of your religion is to be violent.

Islam as a religious system has not been any more violent than Christianity or Judaism. In the name of these three religions, much harm has been done. No one would accuse “Christianity” as being violent because of the actions of the KKK, yet they call themselves “Christian.” So we cannot blame the actions of less than 1% on the whole of Islam. How do you feel whenever a non-Christian says, "oh, the Crusades is a perfect example of how Christianity is dangerous."

2. Muslims are backward in general. They don’t have a complex or high culture.

Some of the greatest contributions to society, even Western society, has come from Islamic countries. Most historians acknowledge that the Western Renaissance which began in Italy in the 1400’s had it’s roots in the early Arab Renaissance headquartered in Baghdad. Science, math and literature have deep roots in the Arab Muslim world of the Middle Ages.

3. Muslims are Arabs. Or…Arabs are Muslims.

Of the 1.4 Billion Muslims, only about 280 million speak Arabic as their first language. The largest Muslims countries are Indonesia, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. It is true that the Arab world still holds the greatest influence on the rest of Islam since the Qur’an is in Arabic and the holiest sites are all found in the Arab Middle East.

4. Muslims believe in Allah, a false God and they follow Muhammad.

No Muslim would say they “follow Muhammad.” And the only word for “God” in Arabic is Allah. All Arab Christians worship “Allah.” So it’s a silly argument based on semantics.

5. Islam teaches Muslims to kill Christians and Jews.

There is not a single command in the Qur’an for Muslims to go out and kill Christians or Jews. In fact quite the opposite. Read the Qur’an for yourself. The best version and easiest to read in English is the one published by Oxford Press. Only a specific sect of Islam holds to rewarding the death of a Christian. We call that a "militant muslim".

6. Muslims cannot integrate into Western societies because Islam is incompatible with Democracy.

There is no reason to think Islam and Democracy are incompatible. Many Muslims countries have a form of Democracy. There are some political and social realities that make good Democracy difficult, but it doesn’t have to do with Islam.

7. Islam is a cult, not a true mono-theistic religion like Judaism or Christianity.

Islam, Christianity and Judaism have always been called the three great Monotheistic religions.

8. Muslims go along with their teachers and don’t think for themselves.

Islam is incredibly complex with many “versions” like Christianity. Muslims are no more inclined to “go along” with what their teachers say then western Christians are.

9. Islam is against Jesus. They don’t believe in Him.

Ask any Muslim “Do you believe in Jesus” and they are likely to burst into a smile and start telling you how much they love him. We agree, that there are points of misunderstanding, some of which are significant, but that doesn’t mean they don’t “like him.” They don't believe Jesus is God, or that He actually died (which are very HUGE points in Christianity), but the bottom line is, they do not hate Jesus.

10. Muslims resist modernization.

If Muslims resist modernization, they do so only because they see the evils of the west and don’t want them. Things like gangs, pornography, divorce and such are seen as “Western Values” and those are incompatible with Islam.

I hope this helps!

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

What Could Have Been...

Today, after our weekly staff meetings, the youth director (Kev) and I talked about what could have been. How would our lives look different if we didn't end up in ministry? What would we be doing right now?

Kevin said, "I'd probably be a counselor, helping people somewhere." Interesting, because he's doing that now. In other words, he has a calling to help people, and even if there isn't a job opening for him at the local church, he would continue to do what he is already doing.

Chuck Smith, the founder of the Calvary Chapel movement once said, "If you have a choice between being a pastor and something else, always go with something else. However, if all you want to do is to be a pastor, then go ahead and do that." What he is saying is, ministry is a scared calling. Being a minister is your entire being.

Kevin also said he used to work at a Starbucks. He said he did that because he wanted to learn to interact with strangers, because he may need that skill as a church leader. In his case, even if he can't work in a church, he will continue to be a minister for Christ because that is all he can do.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

N-O Spells MIRACLE

As I was reading through the gospels, I couldn't help but notice that the first miracle Jesus performed (water into wine) is preceded by a big fat "NO" to a request. Mary asks Jesus to do something about the wine crisis and Jesus says it ain't his time (btw, the first 'yes' in the Bible brought sin into the world). In the book of Luke, there's a big shift in Jesus' focus half way through the story as he begins to "head towards Jerusalem." He begins saying no, and focuses on his forthcoming crucifixion.

I'm realizing that every amazing work begins with a NO. Maybe I should begin my day by saying no to anything that is not of Him and focus only on the things He wants me to do (if I can figure what that is).

This "No" principle has interesting implications - If this is how God works, then when we ask God for a miracle and He says, "nope!" then maybe he's brewing up something else that's a greater miracle. Maybe the reason he said "no" to one opportunity is because He wants us to experience a greater opportunity. When Sarai was barren (no to babies), God was preparing Isaac. When God said no to Paul (re: going to Asia), He was preparing him for a world-changing mission trip to Europe. When Jesus said no to the devil's temptations (no to bread, no to power, and no to false teachings), Jesus conquered a multitude of sins.

For the past 5 years or so, I've been learning to say no. It's hard. But marvelous.