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How Christians Should Respond to Muslim
Outrage at the Pope's Regensburg Message
About Violence and Reason
September
20, 2006
By
John Piper
"Whoever
offends our Prophet Mohammed should be killed
on the spot by the nearest Muslim.”
Those were the words of Sheikh Abubakar
Hassan Malin to a gathering of Muslims in
Mogadishu on Friday, September 15, 2006.
On Saturday, Palestinians wielding guns
and firebombs attacked five Christian churches
in the West Bank and Gaza.
On Sunday, September 17, in London, outside
Westminster Cathedral, Anjem Choudary addressed
a demonstration and said that those who
insulted Islam "should be subject to
capital punishment."
These
were among the reactions to a speech
given by Pope Benedict XVI at Regensburg
University, in Germany on Tuesday, September
12. Perhaps connected to the speech was
the murder on Sunday in Mogadishu of sixty-six-year-old
Leonella Sgorbati, an Italian Catholic nun
serving as a nurse in a children's hospital.
In
the speech, the pope was addressing the
foundation of the secular university. The
subject was faith and reason. He was arguing
that the foundation of the university, and
the spread of truth and faith, lay in the
rationality of God.
He
asked, "Is the conviction that acting
unreasonably contradicts God's nature
merely a Greek idea, or is it always and
intrinsically true?"
He answers, "I believe that here we
can see the profound harmony between what
is Greek, in the best sense of the word,
and the biblical understanding of faith
in God."
In
other words, the pope is arguing that the
university, and all people, have an obligation
to act in accordance with reason, because
reason is rooted in God. At this point,
he brought in a discussion of the difference
between Islam and Christianity on the relationship
between God and reason.
Christianity,
he argues, sees reason as rooted in God.
But, citing a noted French Islamist R. Arnaldez,
he says that "Ibn Hazn went so far
as to state that [in Islam] God is not bound
even by his own word, and that nothing would
oblige him to reveal the truth to us. Were
it God's will, we would even have to
practice idolatry."
This,
he implies, disconnects God and reason and
opens Islam to a use of violence in spreading
their faith that is not governed by reason.
He cites Sura 2, 256 from the Qur'an, where
Mohammed says that there is no compulsion
in religion. Then he draws attention to
the later developments in the Qur'an by
quoting the Byzantine emperor Manuel II
Paleologus in 1391 in Ankara (today's capital
of Turkey).
The emperor apparently said that Mohammed
taught that one could "Spread by
the sword the faith he preached."
Then the pope said,
The
emperor goes on to explain in detail the
reasons why spreading the faith through
violence is something unreasonable. Violence
is incompatible with the nature of God and
the nature of the soul…. God is not
pleased by blood, and not acting reasonably
is contrary to God's nature. Faith is
born of the soul, not the body. Whoever
would lead someone to faith needs the ability
to speak well and to reason properly, without
violence and threats…. To convince
a reasonable soul, one does not need a strong
arm, or weapons of any kind, or any other
means of threatening a person with death….
The decisive statement in this argument
against violent conversion is this: not
to act in accordance with reason is contrary
to God's nature.
These
references to the role of reason in Islam,
and the apparent endorsement of violence
(in parts of the Qur'an) as a way of spreading
Islamic faith, have outraged Muslims and
sparked violence and calls for violence.
Subsequently,
the pope said, "I am deeply sorry for
the reactions in some countries to a few
passages of my address at the University
of Regensburg, which were considered offensive
to the sensibility of Muslims. These in
fact were a quotation from a medieval text,
which do not in any way express my personal
thought."
How
should Christians respond to this situation?
I will suggest ten responses that flow from
the Bible.
1.
Admit that the Christian church has often
been too entangled with civil governments,
with the result that violence has been endorsed
by the church as a way of accomplishing
religious, and not just civil, goals.
The
Crusades, for example, stand as a monument
to collective Christian blindness to the
teaching of Jesus. We should make every
effort today to avoid political alignments
between the Christian church and any civil
government or political party. (See my article,
Tolerance,
Truth-Telling, Violence, and Law.)
2.
Make clear that the use of God-sanctioned
violence between Israel and the nations
in the Old Testament is no longer God's
will for his people. The coming of the Messiah,
Jesus Christ, as a suffering servant,
rather than a warlord, and his gathering
of a people from all nations rather
than only one, are two of the many reasons
why the Christian church today should
not - and almost universally does
not - endorse or use violence to promote
the gospel of Jesus Christ.
3.
Admit that there are many Muslims today
who do not approve of violence in the spread
of Islam. Admittedly, to many of us in the
West, their number seems small and their
voice seems muted by the reputation of the
more violent strains of Islam. We do not
know how large that segment of Islam is.
4.
Point out how Islam, in its most sacred
writings and authoritative teachings, belittles
Jesus Christ, not just occasionally in the
news, but constantly by its dominant claims.
Islam denies that Jesus Christ was and is
God, a central truth of the New Testament
and the Christian church (John 1:1-3; Colossians
2:9; Hebrews 1:8).
Dominant
streams of Islam deny that Jesus died on
the cross and therefore deny that the claim
that his death atones for sin and propitiates
the wrath of God is true (1 Corinthians
15:1-3; Romans 3:21-26; Galatians 3:13;
1 Peter 2:24; 3:18). Therefore, defenders
of Islam daily defame Jesus Christ and insult
the glory of his gospel.
5.
Point out that, in response to this constant
defamation of Jesus Christ, there are no
public threats or demands for apologies.
This is not because we do not love Jesus
above all things, or because we have no
zeal for the glory of his name. It is because
he told us to expect this (Matthew 10:25;
John 15:20) and then modeled for us how
to react: "When he was reviled, he
did not revile in return; when he suffered,
he did not threaten, but continued entrusting
himself to him who judges justly" (1
Peter 2:23).
6.
Do good to those who hate you - and, of
course, those of other faiths who don't
hate you (Luke 6:27). This is not because
Christians do not believe in vengeance.
We simply believe that it is not ours to
give. And this age is not the time to give
it.
This is an age of mercy and patience and
forgiveness toward those who malign the
King of the universe. He will have his Day
of Wrath. But we are too sinful to be entrusted
with that righteous judgment. Rather, we
should obey the words of the New Testament:
"Beloved, never avenge yourselves,
but leave it to the wrath of God, for it
is written, "Vengeance is mine, I will
repay, says the Lord."
To the contrary, "if your enemy is
hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give
him something to drink; for by so doing
you will heap burning coals on his head""
(Romans 12:19-20).
7. Seek to win others to saving faith in
Jesus by persuading with words,
not imposing with force. This was the way
the gospel spread among many religions in
the early centuries of the Christian church.
The earliest teachers said, "Therefore,
knowing the fear of the Lord, we persuade
others" (2 Corinthians 5:11).
When
the New Testament speaks of the "sword
of the Spirit" (Ephesians 6:17) or
"the weapons of our warfare" (2
Corinthians 10:4), it clearly means the
word of God and power of spiritual persuasion.
8.
Always be ready to die, but never to kill,
for the sake of commending Jesus Christ
as the Son of God who died for sinners and
rose again as the Lord of the universe.
Jesus promises to triumph through our accepting
suffering, not our causing suffering. He
died to save all who will believe - from
every nation and religion.
e
calls us to follow him on this Calvary Road.
"Truly, truly, I say to you, unless
a grain of wheat falls into the earth and
dies, it remains alone; but if it dies,
it bears much fruit" (John 12:24).
This is not the death of a suicide-murderer.
This is the death of one who loves his enemies
and, as he dies, prays, "Father, forgive
them, for they know not what they do"
(Luke 23:34), and,"Lord, do not hold
this sin against them" (Acts 7:60).
9.
Pray for the salvation of all those who
belittle Jesus Christ. Pray that they would
put their faith in Jesus Christ who died
for our sins so that if anyone - from any
nation or any religion - would embrace him
as Lord and Savior and Treasure of their
lives, they would be saved from the guilt
of sin and the wrath of God. They would
have eternal life and joy.
This
is the way the great apostle Paul prayed:
"Brothers, my heart's desire and
prayer to God for them is that they may
be saved" (Romans 10:1).
10.
No matter the cost, continue to exalt and
commend Jesus Christ as the great and only
Savior that he is. Say with the apostle
Paul, "It is my eager expectation and
hope that I will not be at all ashamed,
but that with full courage now as always
Christ will be honored in my body, whether
by life or by death. For to me to live is
Christ, and to die is gain."
The day will come when every knee will bow
to Jesus as Lord and as God (Philippians
2:10-11). Until that day comes, affirm with
Paul: "I do not account my life of
any value nor as precious to myself, if
only I may finish my course and the ministry
that I received from the Lord Jesus, to
testify to the gospel of the grace of God"
(Acts 20:24).
Longing
for the Savior to be exalted,
By John Piper. ©Desiring God. Website:
www.desiringGod.org. Email: mail@desiringGod.org.
Toll Free: 888.346.4700.
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