Welcome to Middle East Resources
Home>
Missiology
+
Good Intentions or Scriptural Principles in Missio>
The Ark of Salvation or the Titanic of Pluralism?>
The Insider Movement in Missions>
The Missiology of Kamil Abdul Messiah>
Islam Not a Stepping-Stone Towards Christianity>
The Problem of Israel>
A Dangerous and False Theory>
Immunity>
The Christian Mind>
Church Facing Global Challenge of Islam>
Islam Is More Than a Religion - I>
Islam Is More Than a Religion - II>
Passionate Western Apologists for Islam>
Pauline Missiology - Part I>
Pauline Missiology - Part II>
A New Minority in North Africa>
World Missions in the New Century>
Pluralism in Theology and in the Church>
The New World of Globalization>
Universalism>
Articles
+
The Apologetic Methods...thesis by Eric R. Dye>
Dawn and Sunset of Modern Missions>
Toward Understanding the Turmoil in Islamic Lands>
Alarming Trends in Christian Witness to Muslims>
From Religion to No Religion>
From Faith to Unbelief>
The Absence of Freedom of Religion in Islam>
The Trinity and Christian Missions to Muslims>
Studies in Contemporary Islam>
A Middle East Reader>
The New Christians of North Africa & The ...>
An Example of the New "Enlightened" Hermeneutics>
Toward a Tanweeri (Enlightened)>
Jacques Ellul's View of Islam & Dhimmitude>
The Law of Apostasy in Islam Must Change>
Reflections on Carl Trueman's Fascination>
The Status of Women in Islam>
My Appreciation and Critique of Bernard Lewis>
Denials of Armenian Genocide>
Bernard Lewis on Triumphalist Religions>
Distinctively Christian Lifestyle>
Islamic Reform
+
Islam & the Non-Muslims>
Ex-Muslims Attracted to Western Secularism>
Why the Copts of Egypt Fear Fridays>
On Defining the "Other">
Book Reviews
+
Pilgrims of Christ on the Muslim Road>
The World in the Post Nineties>
The Arab Christian>
Troubled By the Truth>
Hated Without a Cause?>
Islam and War>
Now They Call Me Infidel>
Islam in Context: Past, Present, and Future>
Islam and the Cross Zwemer Selections>
Faith & Intifada - edited>
Christ in Islam & Christianity - Robinson>
American Muslims - Asma Hassan>
Onward Muslim Soldiers - Robert Spencer>
After Jihad - Noah Feldman>
A Muslim & Christian in Dialogue>
Islam: Its Prophets, Peoples, Politics & Power ->
Islam Unveiled - Robert Spencer>
What You Need to Know About Islam and Muslims - Br>
Jesus in the Quran - Parrinder>
Islam and War - Kelsay>
Christianity Under Islam
+
The Plight of Eastern Christians Revisited>
The Early Church: Western and Eastern>
The Middle East: At the Rise of Islam>
The Middle East After the Islamic Conquest>
The Western Church and Its Response>
Position Papers
+
While Western Christians Theorize...>
A Statement of Missionary Concern>
Re-Thinking Missions Today>
Neo-Evangelicalism and Its Impact on Missions>
The Christian in a Muslim Society>
Arabic Bible Versions
+
Fifty-three Years in Syria>
The Treasures of St. Catherine's Monastery>
The Translation of the Bible Into Arabic>
Online Book>
Bibliography>
Current Affairs
-
Why Islam Is Different from All Other Faiths>
Learning from the "New" Maghrebi Christians>
Algerians Alienated from Islam Turning to Christ>
The Desperate Plight of Iraqi Christians>
Our Men and Their Men>
Why Do our Young Adults Become Apostates?>
Losing the War against Jihadism>
Bernard Lewis Strikes Back>
The Debacle of the "Common Word" Initiative>
Season's Greetings or Islamic Propaganda?>
Western Dhimmitude>
Anxious for Dhimmitude>
Islam's Peace Offensive>
A New Minority in North Africa>
Why Don't The Christians Learn...>
Saying No To Moral Equivalence>
Does 'Blaming the Other' Fix Our Problems>
The Myth of Islamophobia>
Why Do The Copts of Egypt Fear Friday>
Leaving the Muslim Brotherhood>
Islam: Empire of Faith (A Review)>
Treasures
+
The Calvinistic Doctrine>
J. W. Sweetman: Pioneer Missionary Scholar>
Zwemer's Favorite Hymn>
A Letter from Saudi Arabia>
The Correspondence of John Calvin>
Tapestry
+
To God Alone be the Glory Chapter 3>
Alonzo Kallemeyn, Christian Business Man>
Dr. Dick L. Van Halsema>
The Layman's Theologian>
Handel's Humble Librettist>
The Bible and Islam Online
+
Preface>
Introduction>
Chapter 1 -- The Gospel According to Paul>
Chapter 2 -- Introducing Jesus>
Chapter 3 -- The Gospel in the Old Testment>
Chapter 4 -- Conclusion>
Chapter 5 -- Islam Viewed From a Biblical...>
Chapter 6 -- Proclaiming the Gospel to the Muslims>
Chapter 7 -- Islam and the Quest for Modernity>
Chapter 8 -- Missions to Muslims in the Twenty...>
Glossary>
About Us>
Blog>
Links>
Site Search>
Contact Us>
Anxious for Dhimmitude

By Mark D. Tooley
FrontPageMagazine.com | 10/18/2007

A large group of senior Islamic clerics and teachers has recently issued “A Common Word Between Us and You,” a statement addressed to churches urging greater comity between Muslims and Christians. The clerics unapologetically espouse Muslim teachings, while asserting there is common theological ground between the two faiths. The Vatican and some conservative Protestants have commented that the Muslim outreach merits a thoughtful response.

But the Religious Left, always anxious to burnish its multicultural credentials, has responded to “Common Word” with enthusiasm.

The National Council of Churches’ (NCC) top (though outgoing) interfaith official hailed the Islamic outreach, saying it will fuel the “urgency” of the NCC’s own Muslim-Christian dialogue. Part of the NCC’s own interfaith ministry, as Shanta Premawardhana described it, is standing “in solidarity with Muslims at a time when many Muslims in the United States faced significant levels of discrimination,” post 9-11.

Premawardhana thanked the Muslim clerics and scholars for speaking out against Muslim “extremists.” Similarly, he boasted, the NCC is trying to “counter the voices of extremist Christians with initiatives aimed at teaching Christians about Islam and helping churches build relationships with mosques in their local communities," Premawardhana added.

Actually, “Common Word” did not criticize Muslim “extremists.” Nor did it attempt to modify Islamic teachings that demand that non-Muslims live in subordination to Islamic authority in majority Muslim societies. But it did call for non-violent interaction between Muslims and Christians, and it actually speaks of “freedom of religion.” This makes it “moderate.”

Perhaps an even more effusive reaction to “Common Word” was a quickly organized but lengthy statement from Ivy League seminary scholars, who were “deeply encouraged and challenged” by the Muslim outreach. They titled their piece “Loving God and Neighbor Together,” dedicated it, in typical seminary speak, to the “Infinitely Good God whom we should love with all our being.”

“We receive ‘A Common Word as a Muslim hand of conviviality and cooperation extended to Christians world-wide,” the academics enthused. “In this response we extend our own Christian hand in return, so that together with all other human beings we may live in peace and justice as we seek to love and our neighbors.”

The Ivy League seminary professors included with every reference to Jesus Christ a “Peace be Upon Him,” in a wan attempt to show the Muslims how attuned they are to Islamic lingo. No doubt the Islamic scholars will be impressed.

And the Ivy Leaguers opened their manifesto with apologies for Christianity’s perceived sins against Islam. “We want to begin by acknowledging that in the past (e.g. the Crusades) and in the present (e.g. the war in Iraq) Christians have been guilty of sinning against our Muslim neighbors.”

Naturally, the Ivy Leaguers want the Muslims’ forgiveness for all of Christianity’s countless outrages. “Before we ‘shake your hand’ in responding to your letter, we ask forgiveness of the All-Merciful One and of the Muslim community around the world.”

The “Common Word,” unlike the left-wing Western religious response to it, carefully avoided political statements. There is no mention of Iraq, or the Palestinians, or even of the Crusades. No apologies are offered for any of Islam’s historic depredations, nor did the Islamic clerics request any apologies from their Christian audience. But the Religious Left, when conversing with perceived victims of the Christian West, is always anxious to extend remorse.

The Ivy Leaguers also took some other political swipes, warning against serving “idols” such as a “ruler, a nation, [or] economic progress,” which leads to “deep and deadly conflicts.” The professors commended the Muslim clerics & scholars for their “generosity” and courage.

“It is with humility and hope that we receive your generous letter, and we commit ourselves to labor together in heart, soul, mind and strength for the objectives you so appropriately propose,” the Ivy Leaguers concluded portentously, sounding like a sad caricature of the Founding Fathers.

The Ivy League signers of “Loving god and Neighbor Together” included the dean of Yale Divinity School, the president of Princeton Theological Seminary, the dean of Harvard Divinity School, and several seminary professors from those schools.

Unlike the responses from the NCC and the Ivy Leaguers, the Muslim statement definitively asserted Islamic beliefs about Allah, about Muhammad as his only Prophet, about the authority of the Koran, and about divine judgment. Neither the NCC nor the academics appeared to be anywhere near as resolute in presenting Christian doctrines about God, Jesus Christ, the Bible, and the end times.

If the Muslim scholars behind “Common Word” do not already know it, they will soon learn: left-wing clerics and scholars in the West often will not talk about much less defend Christian theology because they themselves do not believe in its historic doctrines. For them, Christianity is mostly just a vessel through which the goals of the political Left can advance.

In dialogues with Muslims, the Religious Left wants to apologize for Christianity and form common alliances against traditional Christians and Jews, while also denouncing various foreign and military policies of the U.S. No doubt, many “Common Word” Muslim scholars and clerics will be glad to indulge this. But if they are looking for substantive exchanges over theological differences between Christianity and Islam, they will have to look elsewhere.


Mark D. Tooley directs the United Methodist committee at the Institute on Religion and Democracy.

Middle East Resources
bashir2824@msn.com

Powered by Faithwebsites