In the 21st century… most Catholics, Protestants, and Jews don’t react violently when their religion is ‘insulted.’
Right. But in the past they did.
The premise of the OP and of several other posts in the thread is that Muslims behave more violently than Christians because their religion is fundamentally more violent.
But the evidence would also support the less flattering (to Christians) explanation that it’s because Western Christians are more secularized.
If Catholics issued a fatwa every time someone slandered the pope, ridiculed our faith, or mocked us on TV or in the movies… imagine the bad press we’d get! Would anyone say “most Catholics I know are decent, law-abiding citizens”? Maybe. Maybe not.
The fatwa remark is unfair, because obviously if the Pope issued a fatwa calling for violence, people would judge Catholicism based on that. Similarly, one may judge the version of Shi’ite Islam dominant in Iran based on fatwas issued by Iran’s leadership.
Leaving that aside, the answer is that most people would and obviously do judge Catholics based on the actions of a few. Look at the abuse scandals for instance. But what’s key is that these judgments are unjust and Catholics rightly resent them. Hence, Catholics (and everyone else) should not engage in this kind of behavior toward others. The fact that most people act this way isn’t the point. People are sinful. But we should try not to sin.
And I would argue that this
is a difference between Christianity and Islam. Christianity has the teaching to love our enemies and turn the other cheek. Islam does not have anywhere near as strong an incentive toward this kind of loving behavior–they are much more focused on retributive justice and much more approving of retaliation when they believe injustice has been committed.
So let’s show the difference between Christianity and Islam by treating Muslims as we would like them to treat us, not as we think they would treat us.
Lastly, in my 37 years on God’s green earth, I have NEVER seen an “Allah bless America” bumper sticker.
While there’s nothing wrong with saying “God bless America,” I often find that people use that phrase to express a kind of idolatrous nationalism. The fact that Muslims don’t engage in this is a point in their favor, in my opinion.
Muslims generally recognize that their faith is more important than their national identity. I wish more Christians realized this.
Edwin