P
patrick457
Guest
Fran,
I understand your concern. And thanks for being honest/candid.
Iâm not denying that Islam (the radical/fanatic version of it in particular) does in a way pose a sort of threat to Christianity as a competing religion, but I guess Iâm only taking issue at your - not just your, really; many peoplesâ - over-generalization of Muslims as a monolithic, Borg-like âtheyâ who all think the same and who have the exact same interpretation of their religion.* I mean, as a Catholic and as a foreigner living in Japan Iâve been really on the receiving end of this for a number of times. I guess it really just now strikes me the wrong way whenever someone does this.
(Iâm not necessarily knocking you for the act of generalizing: this is a common human trait. Me, I wonât claim to be not guilty of painting groups with a broad brush myself. To my shame.)
To be honest, it almost reminded me of the way a number of Japanese (especially ones on the internet) paint âKoreansâ in a broad brush: a race of boorish, Japan-hating dog-eaters who should be wiped off from the face of the earth.
Reminds me of the good old days when we Catholics are accused of having this super-computer under the Vatican containing the name of every Protestant in the world. Hey, maybe Islam has its own super-computer in the bowels of Mecca. Which would makes sense, if we believe Jack T. Chickâs theory that Islam was really founded by the Church.

Oh, and no, I donât say âdeath to Americaâ. I just say, âdarn you, Americaâ. ⊠See, I over-generalized there.
(Sorry, Americans. I donât hate you all; I just donât like some aspects of your country. I mean, tornadoes. How can you live with that?) 
Speaking of which, funny how Iran has become one of the faces of Islamic extremism in the West, when it has the lowest mosque attendance of any Islamic country: in fact, 70% of the population are reputed to not even do their daily prayers, and only 2-3% attend Friday mosques. Heck, this is the country that engendered Ferdowsi and his Shahnameh (Book of Kings) - a book containing and glorifying the legends of pre-Islamic Iran - in the middle of the countryâs Islamicization. Iran is even probably one of the few Muslim countries that continued to have a tradition of figural depiction in art even after Islam seeped in. Heck, the Persians even got away with depicting Muhammad.
Thatâs all from me in this thread. I really have nothing important to say anymore. Iâve made my case.
I understand your concern. And thanks for being honest/candid.
Iâm not denying that Islam (the radical/fanatic version of it in particular) does in a way pose a sort of threat to Christianity as a competing religion, but I guess Iâm only taking issue at your - not just your, really; many peoplesâ - over-generalization of Muslims as a monolithic, Borg-like âtheyâ who all think the same and who have the exact same interpretation of their religion.* I mean, as a Catholic and as a foreigner living in Japan Iâve been really on the receiving end of this for a number of times. I guess it really just now strikes me the wrong way whenever someone does this.
(Iâm not necessarily knocking you for the act of generalizing: this is a common human trait. Me, I wonât claim to be not guilty of painting groups with a broad brush myself. To my shame.)
To be honest, it almost reminded me of the way a number of Japanese (especially ones on the internet) paint âKoreansâ in a broad brush: a race of boorish, Japan-hating dog-eaters who should be wiped off from the face of the earth.
- I think radical Muslims themselves are to blame for this even. Part of me suspects that they project this - their - image of Islam as a single, unified, monolithic system, for ideological reasons likely. And non-Muslims and even some Muslims buy it, to the detriment of those who donât really think the same way as them. Itâs about as bad as the likes of, say, Jack T. Chick or the Landover Baptist Church becoming the âfaceâ of Christianity.
And does that mean that every Muslim will agree with that anti-Western, âletâs conquer Europe and kill all the Christiansâ sentiment? So Muslims are now these sleeper agents waiting for that signal to grab their bombs from the basement and blow people up?Have you seen the news video of the Ayatolla in Iran giving a speech last year and the crowd just started yelling out âdeath to Americaâ. (hope youâre not yelling out the same sentimen!) And muslim groups have clearly stated that Europe is to become a muslim contenent. This is rather threatening to me. They keep telling us theyâre already in Rome and soon things will begin to happen.
Reminds me of the good old days when we Catholics are accused of having this super-computer under the Vatican containing the name of every Protestant in the world. Hey, maybe Islam has its own super-computer in the bowels of Mecca. Which would makes sense, if we believe Jack T. Chickâs theory that Islam was really founded by the Church.
Oh, and no, I donât say âdeath to Americaâ. I just say, âdarn you, Americaâ. ⊠See, I over-generalized there.
Speaking of which, funny how Iran has become one of the faces of Islamic extremism in the West, when it has the lowest mosque attendance of any Islamic country: in fact, 70% of the population are reputed to not even do their daily prayers, and only 2-3% attend Friday mosques. Heck, this is the country that engendered Ferdowsi and his Shahnameh (Book of Kings) - a book containing and glorifying the legends of pre-Islamic Iran - in the middle of the countryâs Islamicization. Iran is even probably one of the few Muslim countries that continued to have a tradition of figural depiction in art even after Islam seeped in. Heck, the Persians even got away with depicting Muhammad.
Thatâs all from me in this thread. I really have nothing important to say anymore. Iâve made my case.