M
Mr.Ex_Nihilo
Guest
I have been trying to point out the truth and have never backed down from expressing where I felt that Islam was wrong-- and even potentially evil in some cases.Telling the truth is not mutually exclusive to having a dialogue with Muslims. One should be not ashamed to tell the truth, no matter how awful, in order to save someone from the Devil’s grasp. If you see a person who has erred, do you not help him from erring? Do you not point out his errors and lead him back to the truth? Or do you ‘dialogue’ him with sweet lies? Or skirt around the issues hoping he’ll take the hint.
Read my posts in this thread again. They’re certainly not flattering Islam when I actually do speak out against it.
Rodrigo Bivar:
Well I’m glad that you don’t bandy words-- and that you can so easilly tell around one billion people that the world is better off without their faith in it.No. In my view - acknowledging the problem is the first step to cure. If people deny they have a problem then they will never take the steps necessary to solve it. All the self-help groups like Alcoholics Anonymous, and drug addicts help groups know this. Islam is the problem - the world is better off without it. I’m sorry I don’t bandy words - life is short and there is so much to do.
The problem with your analogy is that conversion to Christianity is not a 12-Step program that you rattle off to a person of another faith in order to intellectually bring them to their knees so to speak. In other words, it’s often a long and drawn out process which can take generations to brings about significant change.
Any critique of someone’s faith must be balanced with whatever positive aspects you can see in their faith-- searching for common grounds to agree upon all the while avoiding an extreme mischaracterization of their faith.
The point is that the faith of the Islamic people represent a wide range of personalities, mentalities and behaviors that simply cannot be dismissed so easilly under the banner of “better off without it”.
And, quite frankly, whenever I hear this, I’m essentially hearing that all the people associated with this faith are more or less a write-off in regards to engaging any kind of rational discourse with them-- something which is no different than the attitudes of slave owners towards “the ignorant negroes” that were once believed to be beyond reasoning with too.
There are many Muslims and Catholics who are deeply interested in living together peacefully even if the other side doesn’t agree with them theologically. History has shown that this can be done and that there are long periods in history where this has happened.
So whenever people make claims like the ones I’m hearing in this thread, claims which are totally one-sided and negative toward any chance of redeemable qualities being present in Islam, they make it all the more difficult for some to really make a positive difference in this world by connecting to Muslims thorugh any similarities present.
There’s no doubt in my mind that many would reject the Christian message even if it were preached to them from Christ Jesus himself (and only Christ as God truly knows for sure whether or not they will reject the message).
But, in regards to moderates who may be open to the Gospel message, the people who make claims like the ones I’m hearing in this thread – claims which are totally one-sided and negative toward any suggestion of redeemable qualities in Islam – actually prevent Muslims from entering the Christian faith precisely because of the harsh and unfair characterization contained within their ‘gospel’ message.
I could not help but think of a few people within this thread when I heard the readings today.