Is dialogue with Islam possible? Yes, Vatican says

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This is an interesting article about when it is permissible to lie or use deception against those who wish to kill innocents, in the context of Catholicism:

ncregister.com/blog/jimmy-akin/pope-francis-and-lying-to-save-life

EDIT:

And one from this very website:

catholic.com/magazine/articles/is-lying-ever-right
Hiding someone from getting killed is hardly lying; it is more of an act of escaping. But I can see what you are trying to say, that Christians also did lie at some point. I am more interested in the fact that lying are allowed by Muhammad in Islam.
 
Just because there is a rule in Islam that states a Muslim can lie about their religion, when threatened with death, doesn’t mean they will lie in a causal dialogue.
Sorry for being late to the party and I like much of what TruthBearer said and disagree with others. Let me focus on this one point, hopefully without doing damage to the larger debate.

The problem is the basis of ‘threatened’. In my country, taqiyya seems to be acceptable in dakwah activities. Many of the nationalists Malay (50% of the population who controls the political power, and are by definition Muslims) deems that Islam (and hence Malayness) is under threat from Christians (10% of the population and not in control of political power). They then respond to these threats by converting many of our children and taqiyya seems to be accepted tool as their religion is perceived to be under threat.

Of course, in Malaysia we have inter-ethnic political problems that is peculiar to us and this is not necessarily Islam. Most Malaysians (including Muslims) are discerning enough to know that the root is not religious in nature but politics using religion to retain political power. Just as I would see ISIS as a socio-political problem based differently in various countries but using religion as the justification for their views.

As with many of us working on apologetics in Malaysia to explain our faith & differences with Islam to our youths, I am fast coming to a realisation that it is not just differences between Islam & Christianity we need to explain but (very controversially) differences between Islamic teachings and practices of Muslims we need to explain. Here, I am not just talking about the very obvious divergence in ISIS but also in the minds of many ordinary and sincere Muslims.

These could be scriptural (many Muslims think that Abraham sacrificed Ismail but the name of the son was never mentioned in the Quran), doctrinal (many Muslims think they can’t touch pork/pictures of pigs/smell pork dishes/say the word pig when the prohibition is only against eating pork), historical (many Sunni Muslims are unaware that Islam is very varied throughout the world and not monolithic as they would encounter in their local community).

Part of the problem (other than the political issue and also the desire of some cleric seeking to retain power over their congregations) is the religious education where the focus is on recitation of the Quran and limiting the scriptural studies to only understanding of classical Arabic instead of the context etc like we do. I understand that this is due to the literalist view of the scriptures that is fundamental to Islam (Quran was written by the hand of God who is omnipotent and Mohammad was an illiterate, etc etc) but this is something that hopefully exposure to education will lead informed Muslims to question the fundamentals of their faith very much like Christians have done in the Enlightenment (and in my opinion, being all the better for it).

So, I would see the inter-religious dialogue, while always desirable, works best only if
  • nationalistic politics is kept out of it
  • dialogue starts with a pluralistic point of view (many Muslim clerics start with the point that whatever stated in the Quran is literalistically correct - or at least certain preferred passages are while those not preferred are ignored). If they don’t, then that should be where the dialogue needs to deal with before moving on
  • it recognises that there are often fundamental differences between Islamic teaching and practices and how the we can help Islam bridge that gap
  • it helps Muslims move away from a tribalistic view of the umat (rallying to the defense of any Muslims victimised world-wide but not to non-Muslims similarly aggrieved)
  • the Church refrains from triumphalism and acknowledges that there has been hurt caused by Catholics in the past, eg Crusades, Israel (whether we agree that the perceived hurt is justified or not).
At the risk of viewing all Muslims in the same way, I note that inter-religious dialogue with Muslims seem to be on firmer ground in US than most other countries because (1) secularism distances politics from the religious sphere; (2) education has helped Muslims view their religion more in a rational than a literalist manner and (3) diversity has helped opened up the mind of Muslims and recognising their place in the universality of the human race.
 
Sorry for being late to the party and I like much of what TruthBearer said and disagree with others. Let me focus on this one point, hopefully without doing damage to the larger debate.

The problem is the basis of ‘threatened’. In my country, taqiyya seems to be acceptable in dakwah activities. Many of the nationalists Malay (50% of the population who controls the political power, and are by definition Muslims) deems that Islam (and hence Malayness) is under threat from Christians (10% of the population and not in control of political power). They then respond to these threats by converting many of our children and taqiyya seems to be accepted tool as their religion is perceived to be under threat.

Of course, in Malaysia we have inter-ethnic political problems that is peculiar to us and this is not necessarily Islam. Most Malaysians (including Muslims) are discerning enough to know that the root is not religious in nature but politics using religion to retain political power. Just as I would see ISIS as a socio-political problem based differently in various countries but using religion as the justification for their views.

As with many of us working on apologetics in Malaysia to explain our faith & differences with Islam to our youths, I am fast coming to a realisation that it is not just differences between Islam & Christianity we need to explain but (very controversially) differences between Islamic teachings and practices of Muslims we need to explain. Here, I am not just talking about the very obvious divergence in ISIS but also in the minds of many ordinary and sincere Muslims.

These could be scriptural (many Muslims think that Abraham sacrificed Ismail but the name of the son was never mentioned in the Quran), doctrinal (many Muslims think they can’t touch pork/pictures of pigs/smell pork dishes/say the word pig when the prohibition is only against eating pork), historical (many Sunni Muslims are unaware that Islam is very varied throughout the world and not monolithic as they would encounter in their local community).

Part of the problem (other than the political issue and also the desire of some cleric seeking to retain power over their congregations) is the religious education where the focus is on recitation of the Quran and limiting the scriptural studies to only understanding of classical Arabic instead of the context etc like we do. I understand that this is due to the literalist view of the scriptures that is fundamental to Islam (Quran was written by the hand of God who is omnipotent and Mohammad was an illiterate, etc etc) but this is something that hopefully exposure to education will lead informed Muslims to question the fundamentals of their faith very much like Christians have done in the Enlightenment (and in my opinion, being all the better for it).

So, I would see the inter-religious dialogue, while always desirable, works best only if
  • nationalistic politics is kept out of it
  • dialogue starts with a pluralistic point of view (many Muslim clerics start with the point that whatever stated in the Quran is literalistically correct - or at least certain preferred passages are while those not preferred are ignored). If they don’t, then that should be where the dialogue needs to deal with before moving on
  • it recognises that there are often fundamental differences between Islamic teaching and practices and how the we can help Islam bridge that gap
  • it helps Muslims move away from a tribalistic view of the umat (rallying to the defense of any Muslims victimised world-wide but not to non-Muslims similarly aggrieved)
  • the Church refrains from triumphalism and acknowledges that there has been hurt caused by Catholics in the past, eg Crusades, Israel (whether we agree that the perceived hurt is justified or not).
At the risk of viewing all Muslims in the same way, I note that inter-religious dialogue with Muslims seem to be on firmer ground in US than most other countries because (1) secularism distances politics from the religious sphere; (2) education has helped Muslims view their religion more in a rational than a literalist manner and (3) diversity has helped opened up the mind of Muslims and recognising their place in the universality of the human race.
Many of your perspectives I disagree with.

I’ll just mention one, it seems inconceivable, that Muslims who are the majority in a country where they have political power, would feel threaten by a minority, namely the Christians who have no political power.

And I am not going to entertain the other points I disagree with.
 
Many of your perspectives I disagree with.

I’ll just mention one, it seems inconceivable, that Muslims who are the majority in a country where they have political power, would feel threaten by a minority, namely the Christians who have no political power.

And I am not going to entertain the other points I disagree with.
Of course we find it irrational. You probably do not know much of the political situation in Malaysia. Perhaps I would just mention one incident that made Malaysia well known (or infamous) throughout the Islamic world - banning non-Muslims from using the word Allah. It perplexes many Muslims outside the country but that should be an indication of the irrationality of Muslim authorities in Malaysia.
 
Of course we find it irrational. You probably do not know much of the political situation in Malaysia. Perhaps I would just mention one incident that made Malaysia well known (or infamous) throughout the Islamic world - banning non-Muslims from using the word Allah. It perplexes many Muslims outside the country but that should be an indication of the irrationality of Muslim authorities in Malaysia.
This seems possible (even though there is no basis in Islam for such), while what I pointed out seems inconceivable.
 
This seems possible (even though there is no basis in Islam for such), while what I pointed out seems inconceivable.
Inconceivable maybe in Islamic theory but this actually happens in the real world.

Somehow, Islamic apologists resemble economists as well as pollsters after the British elections. When there is a difference between Muslim action and theory,
  • first there is a denial that it ever happened;
  • if it did happened, the intention was not as we imagined it to be
  • if we understood it correctly, there must have been some mitigating actions
  • if there was no mitigation, non-Muslims also did the same thing
  • if it was unprecedented, what was done was not in accordance with Islamic teachings.
There is just too much denials, You know, Christianity has a lot to offer Islam (and I am sure vice versa as well) if we both approach inter-religious dialogue with open minds. After all Christianity, being >6 centuries older than Islam, may be able to teach Islam how to deal with what we went through 6 centuries ago with the Reneissance/Enlightenment, which Islam is about to go through now. But Islam has to have a little more humility & a little less defensiveness and drop its starting point that Islam is always right.

Just sharing my community’s lifetime of living with the good and bad of Islam.
 
Inconceivable maybe in Islamic theory but this actually happens in the real world.

Somehow, Islamic apologists resemble economists as well as pollsters after the British elections. When there is a difference between Muslim action and theory,
  • first there is a denial that it ever happened;
  • if it did happened, the intention was not as we imagined it to be
  • if we understood it correctly, there must have been some mitigating actions
  • if there was no mitigation, non-Muslims also did the same thing
  • if it was unprecedented, what was done was not in accordance with Islamic teachings.
Very well said. Thanks!
 
Inconceivable maybe in Islamic theory but this actually happens in the real world.

Somehow, Islamic apologists resemble economists as well as pollsters after the British elections. When there is a difference between Muslim action and theory,
  • first there is a denial that it ever happened;
  • if it did happened, the intention was not as we imagined it to be
  • if we understood it correctly, there must have been some mitigating actions
  • if there was no mitigation, non-Muslims also did the same thing
  • if it was unprecedented, what was done was not in accordance with Islamic teachings.
There is just too much denials, You know, Christianity has a lot to offer Islam (and I am sure vice versa as well) if we both approach inter-religious dialogue with open minds. After all Christianity, being >6 centuries older than Islam, may be able to teach Islam how to deal with what we went through 6 centuries ago with the Reneissance/Enlightenment, which Islam is about to go through now. But Islam has to have a little more humility & a little less defensiveness and drop its starting point that Islam is always right.

Just sharing my community’s lifetime of living with the good and bad of Islam.
In both Islam and Christianity, there are bad believers, the wrong actions of these believers shouldn’t be equated as the religion. That is all I am saying.

Each religion has its own system and it is not so easy to make changes, because every change will produce a result. The result could be positive or negative. What works in one religion may not work so easily in another religion. Changes should only be made by those with spiritual insight.

Heresies are sometimes the products of so-called good ideas.
 
Many of your perspectives I disagree with.

I’ll just mention one, it seems inconceivable, that Muslims who are the majority in a country where they have political power, would feel threaten by a minority, namely the Christians who have no political power.
I guess it is just a pretext to achieve absolute power or to further their inner ambition to control or subjugate religious minorities in their countries.
 
I guess it is just a pretext to achieve absolute power or to further their inner ambition to control or subjugate religious minorities in their countries.
I wouldn’t want to be a religious minority in any religious country, whether Muslim or Christian. While both religions teach justice and mercy, they are still practiced by sinners. It is one reason I have decided not to follow any religion.

There is a reason why America was founded upon the idea that the State needs to be separate from the Church. It is one of the things the founding fathers of this country got right. I am proud to be an American.
 
I think we need to ask first what is Islam?
If you would like to know what Isalm is all about, some 20 years ago, I heard a series of lectures on the whole history and derivation of Islam that goes back to pre-islamic times as to how this religion started and the role of Mohammed to create a monthestic religion from the more than 360 pagan gods at the time. and the evolution to modern times. Lookup “The Sword of Allah” by Dr. Chuch Missler. Even though 20 years ago, you would think it was just written last year.

Many say, even Muslims that Islam means “Submission”. This is a very modern day interpretation … The word “Islam” really means “that strength which characterized a desert warrior who, even when faced with impossible odds, would fight to the death for his tribe.”
 
Dr Chuck Missler was accused of plagarism in the 1990’s in two his books and in his comments Missler took personal full responsibilty for that issue stating that it was carlessness and oversight due to sloopiness, carelessness, and failure to correctly review the material before publication. Chuck Misssler is a well-known, respected Biblical scholar with a noted reputation for truth hsving been on 60 minutes and other national shows several times, and having written thousands of briefings and other materials much of which he gives away for free. Missler was a Naval school graduate, executive manger with both Ford Motor company Western Digital among other entrepenurial endeavors along the way.

Of course with that kind notoriety comes people who always want want to knock him or deflect what is important and change the subject. The plagarism attacks are not at all related to Missler’s lectures / wrtitings on the history of Islam and how it go to where it is today. If you want to dispute what he says on any issue then bring up that issue don;t try and discredit a guy for a mistake he and his staff made and personally accepted responsibility for. The “Sword of Allah” is very well-doen set of lectures that has all the apprpriate referenes as to the origin of the research.
 
Instead of “dialogue”, we should be focusing on preaching the Truth. I understand the Vatican feels that it has to play the politically correct game because of politics and that’s deeply unfortunate that they are so concerned with pleasing the sensibilities of the world in terms of religious pluralism. But now is not the time for feebleness. We need strong warriors for Christ to stand up His Church, not simpering wimps who think that “understanding” and “tolerance” will solve our problems. Time to wake up and realize that some religions just can’t be reasoned with.
 
The word “Islam” really means “that strength which characterized a desert warrior who, even when faced with impossible odds, would fight to the death for his tribe.”
This is pure falsehood. Only the uneducated would believe such falsehood.

Islam means submission. It comes from the 4th form of the Arabic root, aslam meaning “he submitted.” All you have to do is studied Arabic morphology (Sarf) to know that. And even simpler than that, is find an Arabic dictionary, like Hans wehr, which have the Arabic roots in there. But you need to know a little bit of Arabic morphology (Sarf) to properly understand it.
 
This is pure falsehood. Only the uneducated would believe such falsehood.

Islam means submission. It comes from the 4th form of the Arabic root, aslam meaning “he submitted.” All you have to do is studied Arabic morphology (Sarf) to know that. And even simpler than that, is find an Arabic dictionary, like Hans wehr, which have the Arabic roots in there. But you need to know a little bit of Arabic morphology (Sarf) to properly understand it.
Reference on the early meaning of Islam!
Dr. M. Baravmann, The Spiritual Background of Early Islam, E. J. Brill, Leiden, 1972; Dr. Jane Smith, M. Historical and Semitic Study of the Term Islam as Seen in a Sequence of Quran Commentaries, University of Montana Press, for Harvard University Dissertations,
1970.

And yoput referenes to say that this is falsehood? do your homework…
 
This is pure falsehood. Only the uneducated would believe such falsehood.

Islam means submission. It comes from the 4th form of the Arabic root, aslam meaning “he submitted.” All you have to do is studied Arabic morphology (Sarf) to know that. And even simpler than that, is find an Arabic dictionary, like Hans wehr, which have the Arabic roots in there. But you need to know a little bit of Arabic morphology (Sarf) to properly understand it.
And, by the way, I am educated with several graduate degrees and spent years as a distingushed scientist in the US?

People need to be educated about Islam and know theri agenda …

Violence is commanded by the Quran (Sura 9:5)
The goal of Islam is the subjection of planet earth by the sword if necessary. If Islam is resisted "their punichment is execution, or crucifxion. or the cutting off of hands and feet from opposite sides, or … " Sura 5:33

And so on. They do give you a chance to become a Muslin. Once you reject Islam you will be killed. (Quran, Sura 8:59)

ISIS is just doing what the Quran tells them to do …God loves the Muslim and wants all to come to Him, but you must be willing and accept the free gift of salvation.

The God of the Quran (AI-Ilah, the Moon God) is not the same on God that is in the Old and New Testament, although they try to tell you differently.

it gord on and on.
 
No matter what anyone says, and no matter how some Muslim spokespersons put it, Islam is very commonly enforced on a populace by force. Is this part of Islam or isn’t it? If it is, then there’s no dialogue possible.

Islam, it seems to me, is a bit slippery. Some parts of the Koran appear to contradict other parts, particularly as regards “infidels”. Later parts indicate that violent jihad is an absolute obligation of all Muslims, excepting only when they lack the strength to do it. “Infidels” can convert to Islam, be killed, or (if “people of the book”) continue to live if they submit, pay the tax. They then have the status of prisoners of war forever, always subject to the will of the Muslim rulers.

So, how does even the best-intentioned Muslim escape all of that? I don’t think they can, and I think that’s one of the reasons we don’t see a lot of argument against violent jihad coming from Islamic clerics. And when we DO see it, it’s carefully parsed and has holes in it. One of the most common is the condemnation of “unjust” killings. “Unjust” killings are killings of Muslims. So there’s really no such thing as “unjust” killings of “infidels”.

And, of course, “infidels” can be a very broad brush, including those who do not accept the more literal interpretations of the Koran.
 
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