Syncretistic prayers with Muslims... any advice?

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since it basically means what the bishops have always all taught as a unit
And since this teaching on the muslim god has never been taught prior…it would be neither infallible nor binding. Gotcha! 👍
It is not uncharitable for me to point out what is demonstrably true: the Second Vatican Council’s Dogmatic Constitution on the Church teaches that Muslims and Christians have the same God…
It does not say that muslims have the true God. If it is saying that muslims have the true God, then since it is admitted that the muslim god is not Triune…then you would be saying that Christians and muslims worshiop the same non-Triune god. Ridiculous. Thankfully this “teaching” is not binding on the Catholic faithful.
From Lumen Gentium, one of Vatican II’s dogmatic constitutions. It says Catholics can be bound to assent in good faith to the Church’s teachings even if infallibility is not explicitly invoked…
But it is not binding.
None of the quotes you’ve provided constitute the opposite teaching: .
I beg to disagree.
As I said, Blessed Pope John Paul II himself called Islam “a religion without redemption.”.
And then says that we have the sane God and kisses the Koran. Good thing it is not binding.
So there’s certainly continuity here…
Not at all.
Please note:
Muslims acknowledge the Creator.
No. The one true God…is the Triune God.
They profess to hold the faith of Abraham; it does not claim that they actually do.
They do not hold the faith of Abraham.
They do, however, “along with us adore the one and merciful God”.
Not at all. They do not adore the one true Triune God.
 
Mickey, this is not a bad point, but the bishops of Vatican II eschewed the proposition-defining and proposition-rejecting style of earlier synods in favor of a more pastoral style.
They “eschewed the proposition-defining and propostition-rejecting style of earlier synods???”

I think if it was specifically related to the Catholic faithful that they are bound to believe that they worship the same god as the muslims…you would have a mass exodus.
Plenty of things signal that Lumen Gentium is binding on Catholics, particularly its status as a dogmatic constitution, of which the Second Vatican Council issued only four. It is the highest authority of a Vatican II document.
So now you are saying that it is an infallible document?
 
If it is saying that muslims have the true God, then since it is admitted that the muslim god is not Triune…then you would be saying that Christians and muslims worshiop the same non-Triune god. Ridiculous.
Look, you don’t have to agree with me in order to acknowledge that there is another logical possibility: that they erroneously deny that their God is Triune.
 
Look, you don’t have to agree with me in order to acknowledge that there is another logical possibility: that they erroneously deny that their God is Triune.
No, no. no. They consciously and knowingly reject the Triune God. That is why there is no other logical possibility.
 
Come on everyone, how come you are still at this topic?

This is just a matter of perspective here. The ones disagreeing that Allah is not the same God is looking at the issue from one perspective and those claiming it is the same God is looking at it with another.

Depending on what context you are dealing with, each one is important to be noted. VII merely highlights the important fact that Muslims are trying to or think they are following the God of Abraham. So credit is given to them to that end. But they obviously do not follow the God of Abraham but some non-existent being that they believe revealed the Koran.
 
And since this teaching on the muslim god has never been taught prior
But this isn’t true. It has always been taught. You can find plenty of harsh things said by Christians about Muslims, but the only place where you can find Christians saying that Muslims worship a false god is in medieval Byzantium, and that was based on a mistranslation of the Qur’an into Greek, which led Byzantine theologians to think that Muslims worshiped a solid metal sphere.

To say that Muslims worship a false god is to make nonsense of classical Christian monotheism. It reduces the New Testament, the Fathers, and the scholastics (not that you care about the last, but RCs do) to gibberish.
It does not say that muslims have the true God. If it is saying that muslims have the true God, then since it is admitted that the muslim god is not Triune
No, nothing of the sort is admitted. The God Muslims worship is certainly Triune.

Muslims just don’t recognize this fact about the God we all worship.

Now if you want to argue that they don’t “know God” in a salvific sense, that’s a different issue. Obviously I stand with Vatican II in taking a more generous view even there, but I grant that this is a bit iffier in terms of the Tradition (though it has some precedent).
No. The one true God…is the Triune God.
This is not a point under dispute in this thread.

Edwin
 
Come on everyone, how come you are still at this topic?

This is just a matter of perspective here. The ones disagreeing that Allah is not the same God is looking at the issue from one perspective and those claiming it is the same God is looking at it with another.

Depending on what context you are dealing with, each one is important to be noted. VII merely highlights the important fact that Muslims are trying to or think they are following the God of Abraham. So credit is given to them to that end. But they obviously do not follow the God of Abraham but some non-existent being that they believe revealed the Koran.
Not obvious at all.

I am not convinced by their claim that the God of Abraham revealed the Qur’an. But that doesn’t justify me in saying that they follow some non-existent being instead of the God of Abraham.

This is not a trivial issue. It has huge consequences for Christian theology and for peace in the world. On one side is Christian tradition, sound reason, charity, and justice. On the other mere prejudice and the flawed opinion of some medieval Byzantine scholars based on a bad translation.

Edwin
 
Come on everyone, how come you are still at this topic?

This is just a matter of perspective here. The ones disagreeing that Allah is not the same God is looking at the issue from one perspective and those claiming it is the same God is looking at it with another.

Depending on what context you are dealing with, each one is important to be noted. VII merely highlights the important fact that Muslims are trying to or think they are following the God of Abraham. So credit is given to them to that end. But they obviously do not follow the God of Abraham but some non-existent being that they believe revealed the Koran.
And the original question regarded Syncretistic prayer with Muslims…any advice?
Yes…Don’t consider it. Rather pray that they may be led to the Light of Christ, by the power of The Holy Spirit, to the Glory of God The Father.
Peace be with you.
Francis
 
Not obvious at all.

I am not convinced by their claim that the God of Abraham revealed the Qur’an. But that doesn’t justify me in saying that they follow some non-existent being instead of the God of Abraham.

This is not a trivial issue. It has huge consequences for Christian theology and for peace in the world. On one side is Christian tradition, sound reason, charity, and justice. On the other mere prejudice and the flawed opinion of some medieval Byzantine scholars based on a bad translation.

Edwin
I think while it might be a sensitive issue, as the last part of your paragraph highlights, the answer is clear cut.

The God of Islam is the God who revealed the Qur’an. Did God of Abraham reveal the Qur’an, from what we know, he did not.

So while the God of Islam might have characteristics of our God, the being Muslims worship does not exist when looked at it that way.

This is why VII states that they claim to follow the God of Abraham. But in fact, they don’t.

To put it simply, it is like someone who claims to follow Christ but believes Christ taught genocide and his divine revelation is in Mein Kampf. So does he actually follow Christ? NO.

So the issue is clear cut as far as I can see.
 
And the original question regarded Syncretistic prayer with Muslims…any advice?
Yes…Don’t consider it. Rather pray that they may be led to the Light of Christ, by the power of The Holy Spirit, to the Glory of God The Father.
Peace be with you.
Francis
Oh sorry, I got involved in this thread long time back and did reply to that originally.

My belief is that an occasional prayer session (rightly done) is fine to perhaps start dialogue. But I think the goal must always be in sight, i.e. to bring them back to the Catholic Church.

Hence why I think regular prayer is bad because it might make it feel like ‘You are Muslim, I am Catholic, so lets just let it be. We even pray together after all’ mentality on both sides.
 
Not obvious at all.

I am not convinced by their claim that the God of Abraham revealed the Qur’an. But that doesn’t justify me in saying that they follow some non-existent being instead of the God of Abraham.

That is a confusing staement. On one hand you say you don’t believe their claim that The God of Abraham revealed the koran. (So who did?) And if their belief is based on the koranic teaching then who do they believe the revelation came from and who do they follow?
Then on the other hand you intimate thet they do follow The God of Abraham.
Either God did reveal the koran or He did not. And only if He did could one possibly state that Muslims follow The God of Abraham.
Which of your above statements do you hold to be true?


This is not a trivial issue. It has huge consequences for Christian theology and for peace in the world. On one side is Christian tradition, sound reason, charity, and justice. On the other "]mere prejudice and the flawed opinion of some medieval Byzantine scholars based on a bad translation./]

Edwin
Can you cite the examples highlighted in green above?
Peace be with you.
Francis.
 
It is not uncharitable for me to point out what is demonstrably true:
You accused me of dismissing a council. Which is false. Apology please.
Okay, now you’re just lying,
Ok, not only did you not apologize for insulting me before but you ramped up the insults by accusing me of lying. Please point to where I am not allowed to interpret the documents in light of Tradition and previous Teachings? But DO NOT accuse me of lying. :mad:
Please note:
  • Muslims acknowledge the Creator
Only if they convert to the One True Faith and accept Jesus, who is Creator.

“Through him all things were made, and apart from him nothing was made that has been made.” John 1:3
  • They profess to hold the faith of Abraham; it does not claim that they actually do
They do not.
  • They do, however, “along with us adore the one and merciful God”
Upon conversion, yes. Otherwise those that reject Jesus are no different then those in John 8:44
So please stop spreading falsehoods about Church teaching.
What falsehood? That Muslims reject Jesus!?
The Catholic Church disagrees with you, as the universally binding teaching of a dogmatic constitution of an ecumenical council proves.
I take the Teaching for exactly what it says. It says “those that acknowledge the Creator…”
Jesus is Creator. Muslims do not acknowledge Jesus, in fact they blatantly reject and blaspheme Him.
Actually, I totally agree. Of course the Qur’an is not inspired by God; that would be ridiculous. It teaches blatant falsehoods.

God is not “the god of the koran,” because the Qur’an teaches falsehoods about him.
Then you agree Muslims worship a false god of the koran. 👍
He has to be, since “the god they claim to be the one true God” is, according to their own claims, the God of Abraham. So the only way it is possible for the god they claim to be the one true God not to be the One True God is if the God of Abraham is not the One True God.
"Jesus said to them, “If God were your Father, you would love Me, for I proceeded forth and have come from God, for I have not even come on My own initiative, but He sent Me.” John 8:42
But He is the One True God. That doesn’t change the fact that we know Him in a way they can’t even imagine, because we know the Son and they do not. But they do at least pray to Him, and He is the intended object of their worship.
The One True God is the Trinity. Father, Son & Holy Spirit, which they reject.
How could they be? John Paul II was perfectly correct to call it “a religion with redemption.”
:eek:
That’s not the issue under discussion.
It’s the question that is begged from claiming Muslims worship the One True God.
 
You accused me of dismissing a council. Which is false. Apology please.

Ok, not only did you not apologize for insulting me before but you ramped up the insults by accusing me of lying. Please point to where I am not allowed to interpret the documents in light of Tradition and previous Teachings? But DO NOT accuse me of lying. :mad:

Only if they convert to the One True Faith and accept Jesus, who is Creator.

“Through him all things were made, and apart from him nothing was made that has been made.” John 1:3

They do not.

Upon conversion, yes. Otherwise those that reject Jesus are no different then those in John 8:44

What falsehood? That Muslims reject Jesus!?

I take the Teaching for exactly what it says. It says “those that acknowledge the Creator…”
Jesus is Creator. Muslims do not acknowledge Jesus, in fact they blatantly reject and blaspheme Him.

Then you agree Muslims worship a false god of the koran. 👍

"Jesus said to them, “If God were your Father, you would love Me, for I proceeded forth and have come from God, for I have not even come on My own initiative, but He sent Me.” John 8:42

The One True God is the Trinity. Father, Son & Holy Spirit, which they reject.

:eek:

It’s the question that is begged from claiming Muslims worship the One True God.
Great post and wonderful quotes.👍
Peace be with you
Francis.
 
But this isn’t true. It has always been taught. You can find plenty of harsh things said by Christians about Muslims, but the only place where you can find Christians saying that Muslims worship a false god is in medieval Byzantium, and that was based on a mistranslation of the Qur’an into Greek, which led Byzantine theologians to think that Muslims worshiped a solid metal sphere.
I think you ought to further research the writings of the Church Fathers regarding the aspect of worshipping false gods in Islam before you constrain Christian criticism on this matter to medieval Byzantium.

To say that Muslims worship a false god is to make nonsense of classical Christian monotheism. It reduces the New Testament, the Fathers, and the scholastics (not that you care about the last, but RCs do) to gibberish.

How so?

No, nothing of the sort is admitted. The God Muslims worship is certainly Triune.

Staggering! Have you actually investigated the practices and beliefs of Islam? If so you should know the god they claim is certainly NOT triune!
Peace be with you.
Francis
 
I think while it might be a sensitive issue, as the last part of your paragraph highlights, the answer is clear cut.

The God of Islam is the God who revealed the Qur’an.
Why start there? You start there in order to get the answer you want. Why do you want that answer so badly?

Muslims, after all, don’t start there (in the relevant sense). They don’t claim that God was unknown before the Qur’an came along. They claim that the Qur’an is the fullest revelation from the God who was revealing himself ever since the beginning. It is therefore irrational and unjust to define the “Islamic God” solely in terms of the Qur’an.

It is far more accurate, as well as more charitable, to say that Muslims falsely believe that God revealed the Qur’an than to say that they falsely believe their god (who revealed the Qur’an) to be the true God.
So while the God of Islam might have characteristics of our God, the being Muslims worship does not exist when looked at it that way.
Right, but that’s not a very reasonable way to look at it for the reasons I gave above.

We need to keep coming back to the parallel with the Jews, little as folks on your side of the debate want to do so:D. We don’t, as Christians, claim that the true God was utterly unknown before Jesus was born. That’s Marcionism, even leaving aside natural revelation. We claim that He wasn’t fully known. It would be unreasonable for a Jew to dismiss our identification of our God with the God of Abraham and the creator of the universe and say, “Christians worship a false god who is the Father of Jesus.” Rather, it would be appropriate for them to say (as they do, in my experience, say), “Christians mistakenly believe that the one God, the God of Israel, is Triune and sent His Son Jesus into the world to save us.”
To put it simply, it is like someone who claims to follow Christ but believes Christ taught genocide and his divine revelation is in Mein Kampf. So does he actually follow Christ?
Part of the problem here, first of all, is that phrases like “follow Christ” and “know God” have connotations referring to someone’s spiritual condition. A person who holds the beliefs you describe isn’t following Christ’s footsteps or Christ’s true teachings. But if such a person believes that the historical Jesus of Nazareth, who is also the Son of God, taught these things, then it is more accurate to say that such a person falsely ascribes these things to Jesus than that such a person isn’t talking about Jesus at all.

Now I think that your equation of Islam to Nazism is nonsense. I think there’s a lot more in common between Islam and Christianity than that from an ethical and spiritual point of view, and that most of the stuff people hold against Islam can be found in Christianity and/or the Bible (though arguably with some safeguards that don’t exist in Islam). But that isn’t the point here. Even if your analogy were accurate and not the offensive travesty it is, your argument would fail.

Edwin
 
Can you cite the examples highlighted in green above?
Peace be with you.
Francis.
Daniel Sahas, *John of Damascus on Islam, *pp. 77ff, speaks of this briefly.
Craig Hanson’s essay “Manuel I Comnenus and the 'God of Muhammad,” chap. 3 of *Medieval Christian Perceptions of Islam, *ed. John Victor Tolan, provides a lot more detail.

However, I have just become aware (in looking up the references for the above sources) of scholarship arguing (fairly convincingly at first glance) that early Muslims *did * have an anthropomorphic, physical view of God. See Wesley Williams, “Transcendent Anthropomorphism in Semitic Tradition and Early Islam,” in the Journal of the American Oriental Society 129 (2009): 19ff. If this is correct, then while the Byzantines erred in thinking that Muslims posited a spherical god, they were not wrong in understanding the term “samad” to have physical connotations (“solid” instead of “hollow”).

This is a vexed question in scholarship on ancient monotheism generally. Many ancient Jewish texts, not least the Old Testament, also seem to hold to a physical, anthropomorphic view of God. Many people refuse to believe this. So before you jump on this idea as supporting your position, consider the fact that the same scholars who argue this would say that the “early Islamic” view in question is in continuity with that of the Bible! And clearly Muslims eventually came to reject this view of God, just as Jews and Christians did.

Edwin
 
To others reading this exchange: please note that boleyn has placed my earlier words in red.
But this isn’t true. It has always been taught. You can find plenty of harsh things said by Christians about Muslims, but the only place where you can find Christians saying that Muslims worship a false god is in medieval Byzantium, and that was based on a mistranslation of the Qur’an into Greek, which led Byzantine theologians to think that Muslims worshiped a solid metal sphere.
I think you ought to further research the writings of the Church Fathers regarding the aspect of worshipping false gods in Islam before you constrain Christian criticism on this matter to medieval Byzantium.
What specific passages do you have in mind? It’s inappropriate to tell me to do “further research” when you can’t be bothered to support your position yourself. (I don’t blame you for not bothering–this is an informal discussion–I blame you for the offensive and arrogant injunction to do “further research,” which assumes unwarrantably that the ignorance here is mine and not yours.)

I have had this discussion many times before. I have seen passages which purported to support your side of the argument. They did not support it. Trot them out again, and I’ll tell you why. Perhaps you can come up with something new, of course!
Because the New Testament and the Fathers grant that the supreme Deity referred to by pagans is the true God, and orthodox Christianity is based on the belief that Christians worship the same God as Old Testament Jews, even though those Old Testament believers don’t appear to have known anything of the Trinity, and indeed probably worshiped an anthropomorphic, physical deity who had far less resemblance to the God we worship than does the God Muslims and Jews worship today. And finally, medieval scholastic philosophy such as that of Aquinas holds that a rational description of the First Cause of the universe is speaking of the true God. This rational inquiry was common to Jews, Christians, and Muslims, and rested on the work of pagans such as Plato and Aristotle. The entire edifice of scholasticism therefore collapses if your position is correct.
No, nothing of the sort is admitted. The God Muslims worship is certainly Triune.
Staggering! Have you actually investigated the practices and beliefs of Islam? If so you should know the god they claim is certainly NOT triune!
You should know, from my own post, that I think they are wrong about God:D.

Of course they don’t think God is Triune. I think they are wrong. Why does this simple way of looking at the matter not commend itself to you?

Edwin
 
Why start there? You start there in order to get the answer you want. Why do you want that answer so badly?

Muslims, after all, don’t start there (in the relevant sense). They don’t claim that God was unknown before the Qur’an came along. They claim that the Qur’an is the fullest revelation from the God who was revealing himself ever since the beginning. It is therefore irrational and unjust to define the “Islamic God” solely in terms of the Qur’an.

It is far more accurate, as well as more charitable, to say that Muslims falsely believe that God revealed the Qur’an than to say that they falsely believe their god (who revealed the Qur’an) to be the true God.
Exactly. So that is all that matters for us to distinguish the Christian God from the God of Islam. The Christian God has done no such thing.

If I worshiped the Christian God as the exterminator of millions of Jews during WWII, would I be worshiping the same God?

So let us not bring charity in to the issue. With respect to the truth, speaking the truth is Charity. Your last sentence is what I highlighted as perspective before in my posts.

In the sense of how people evaluate similarity, the Muslim God is not similar to the Christian God in major aspects. So this entity, called Allah, while having the some similar properties of the Christian God, has other properties that differentiate him from the Christian one.

So to say that both refer to the same God is rather weird definition of similarity if you ask me.
Right, but that’s not a very reasonable way to look at it for the reasons I gave above.

We need to keep coming back to the parallel with the Jews, little as folks on your side of the debate want to do so:D. We don’t, as Christians, claim that the true God was utterly unknown before Jesus was born. That’s Marcionism, even leaving aside natural revelation. We claim that He wasn’t fully known. It would be unreasonable for a Jew to dismiss our identification of our God with the God of Abraham and the creator of the universe and say, “Christians worship a false god who is the Father of Jesus.” Rather, it would be appropriate for them to say (as they do, in my experience, say), “Christians mistakenly believe that the one God, the God of Israel, is Triune and sent His Son Jesus into the world to save us.”
I am not even sure why you are comparing Jews with Muslims. The God of Jews is actually the one true God. When the Jews say that God destroyed Sodom, that is not fiction. It is true. When Jews say that God gave the ten commandments, it is not fiction, it is true.

But when Islam says that God gave them the Qur’an, that is a false claim. So I don’t see the similarity between Jews and Muslims.

The only claim I can see you make is that Jews don’t accept Christ. But what I would like to point out is that though they don’t accept, what they have as Divine Revelation is 100% true. They just don’t want to believe in the extra bit of revelation that came after.

In the Muslim case, none of which they have is Divine Revelation.
Part of the problem here, first of all, is that phrases like “follow Christ” and “know God” have connotations referring to someone’s spiritual condition. A person who holds the beliefs you describe isn’t following Christ’s footsteps or Christ’s true teachings. But if such a person believes that the historical Jesus of Nazareth, who is also the Son of God, taught these things, then it is more accurate to say that such a person falsely ascribes these things to Jesus than that such a person isn’t talking about Jesus at all.
I think we are once again going in to the territory of perspective. If you perceive the concept of ‘following’ as merely what one states outwardly, then sure. All the power to your claim.

But in actual sense, I don’t think such a way of perceiving is accurate. I can construct the most blood thirsty God and then ascribe the name God of Abraham. For then to you to say that ‘hey we both follow the same God’ I feel is problematic and stretching this concept of ‘follow’ rather thin.
Now I think that your equation of Islam to Nazism is nonsense. I think there’s a lot more in common between Islam and Christianity than that from an ethical and spiritual point of view, and that most of the stuff people hold against Islam can be found in Christianity and/or the Bible (though arguably with some safeguards that don’t exist in Islam). But that isn’t the point here. Even if your analogy were accurate and not the offensive travesty it is, your argument would fail.
Maybe you didn’t get my point.

I am simply showing you the inherent problem in your reasoning. You want to claim that since some properties are shared, or that they claim to follow the God of Abraham, they follow the God of Christianity. I just showed you how ridiculous such an argument would be.

If I define a God with 90% Christian properties and then add on Nazism to it, and worship and spread the teachings, I wouldn’t be following the God of Christianity. Not even in the Biblical sense of the word ‘following’ do I qualify to claim such a thing.

So your insistence, other than simply saying, its a ‘travesty’, ‘uncharitable’ has not really shown any actual reasoning or acceptable definition of ‘following’ to warrant me or anyone to rethink their position.

What I think you are confusing is the Catholic Teaching. The Catholic Church teaches that they claim to follow the God of Abraham. So they are trying and intend to so for that they have been credited. But by no means do they actually follow the God of Abraham. To claim as such destroys the foundations of Christianity 😉
 
To say that Muslims worship a false god is to make nonsense of classical Christian monotheism. It reduces the New Testament, the Fathers, and the scholastics (not that you care about the last, but RCs do) to gibberish.
Nonsense. The god of Islam is not the one true God of Abraham. The god of Islam is not the Trinitarian God. The only time such a parallel was implied… happen around VII…which is what we have been talking about.
The God Muslims worship is certainly Triune.
No…not according to them…unless you are invoking invincible ignorance.
Muslims just don’t recognize this fact about the God we all worship.
Hence they do not worship the one true God.
Obviously I stand with Vatican II in taking a more generous view
Obviously.
 
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