No, I am suggesting that you do it. It is expected that posters at CAF show respect for the Catholic Church. I think that means that your are expected to find a “nice” way of expressing disagreement. Rhetoric like "squishy indifference to the truth ",
That is how I see it. I don’t think it is particularly rude, but my sensibilities are different than yours. If you are so offended, you are free to report me to the nearest moderator. I will trust their judgment.
is not nice, and worse it just isn’t true.
A great deal of things that I don’t feel are true are being discussed approvingly in this particular discussion. I don’t pretend my opinion is anything other than that. It would be nice if everyone else involved in this discussion would maintain the same level of intellectual honesty.
Good so we agree that they are not all wrong.
Eh…I’m not entirely sure I explained myself correctly, then. Let me try again: Since Islam gets certain aspects right at a surface level (i.e., number), but with the
wrong referent in mind (their god who does not beget, is not the Holy Trinity, etc.), then they’re actually NOT right. They just appear to be if you don’t bother to look at things beyond a certain level. I remember getting into a conversation here on CAF with a certain Muslim poster who insisted that the Qur’an does not misunderstand and misrepresent the Holy Trinity as three separate gods (as it really seems to do, from a surface reading). Accepting him at his word, I then asked him if it would be appropriate in that case, if I were to decide to become a Muslim, for me to continue my Trinitarian prayers and the actions associated with them (crossing myself, prostrating before icons, kissing the cross, etc.), and he made it very clear that no form of Trinitarian anything is allowed in Islam. Keep in mind that this was after arguing that Islam somehow acknowledges Christians as monotheists. So it would seem that for Muslims merely getting God right in terms of number is not good enough. I agree, and likewise apply that to those who would say that the members of other religions somehow worship the true God by virtue of being able to count to one.
We also agree that it is good to build in these “similarities” to advance their acceptance of the true God. I have heard from people who are very effective in doing just that. Their approach is to build on “similarities”, then lead to differentiation. Not to draw the line ath the outset. That way bears fruit.
Hmm. Well, I would probably prefer something more akin to our God and Savior’s sermon on the mount from the book of Matthew: “You have heard it said that (Islamic claim), but I say (Christianity), because ______.” I think it is vitally important not to emphasize the supposed correctness of an Islamic stance due to its surface similarity, but to oppose that which needs to be always strenuously opposed. We cannot really advance a Muslim’s acceptance of the true God from within the Islamic parameters, because by accepting Islam they are
rejecting the true God, so we must get them first to think outside of their paradigm or else it will merely produce more useless platitudes. I am not interested in that. In the famous
apologetic writing of the monk of Bet Hale and the Muslim Emir (known as the first Syriac-language disputation on Islam from a Christian perspective), the monk has a little back and forth with the Arab, and seizing upon a quote from the Qur’an by the Arab in which Christ is called “the Word of God and His Spirit”, the monk responds: “Either you estrange the Word of God and His Spirit from Him, or you proclaim him to be the Son of God straightforwardly.”
This, I believe, is exactly the right approach in dealing with the supposed similarities of Islam and Christianity. Not to confirm them in their errors by pretending that they can get there (God) from here (Islam), but to show them that there really is only one way, and it is not Islam. Notice that this does not involve closing off dialogue at the outset (the monk talked with the Arab for quite a while, after all, before getting down to brass tacks), but likewise does not involve making the kinds of objectionable statements about Islam worshiping our God, either (the sorts of statements referenced by Apotheoun). We don’t need to go out of our way to be jerks, but even more so we don’t need to lie and provide false hope when there isn’t any. As I have written here before, should a Muslim be granted eternal rest with the Lord (and I must believe that such is
possible), it is not because of Islam but in spite of it and their adherence to it. Islam and hence Muslims quite simply do not worship God.
It just shows that you are not holding to a principle, but are engaing in special pleading.
Hogwash. Your own CCC advances the same view by treating adherents of different religions differently (or else why would Muslims be called “first among” anything?). I have done nothing else by saying that Christians ought to treat Christians differently than others, and hence this is not the thread for the discussion you want to have about the OO.