True…But the fact that it can and has been misused doesn’t mean it’s never true.
But we must ask in what the misuse consists. I think the misuse consists in an attempt to negate the obvious empirical appeal of virtue and truth, by explaining them away as a satanic deception. And frankly, if anything is a satanic deception, then a way of thinking that makes you distrust the true and good would fit the bill!
So to go back to the anti-Catholic example. A person who is told that Pope Benedict’s evident love for Jesus is a Satanic deception doesn’t need to refute the other anti-Catholic claims to know that that one is false. When I read Ratzinger’s description in
Introduction to Christianity of floating over the abyss tied to the Cross, I know I’m reading authentic Christian piety. And if someone tells me that the man who wrote these words couldn’t really love Jesus because he “worships” Mary, then I know they are wrong regardless of what I believe about Mary. And so on.
What’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.
What is good is good. What is true is true. Anything that makes you believe otherwise really
is from Satan.
Catholics can hardly be blamed for being skeptical of the “good” in Islam
You can be blamed for putting “good” in scare quotes. The word “relativism” gets thrown around a lot on this forum, but putting good in scare quotes really is relativism.
Loving your neighbor is good. Period. Caring for widows and orphans is good, period. Praising God the Creator for His compassion is good, period.
Scare quotes are blasphemous in this context.
Of course Satan and/or human error can
use what is good. No dispute about that. But characterizing Islam as a whole as evil or from the devil is simply wrong. And wrong in a disastrous way, because once we start calling good evil or evil good we have lost our bearings altogether.
Why on earth can’t we say that Islam is a mixed human phenomenon and leave it at that? Why this need to go further? It’s theologically untenable, logically incoherent, and spiritually destructive to the person who does it. The fact that it also promotes division and violence among human beings is a further reason to be wary of it, of course
I understand that all being is good and that evil is a privation of being, so we are good here:thumbsup:. I’m still not sure how it relates to the discussion?? I don’t think I said that “the devil” option (which, by the way, I haven’t said is my own personal leaning) is about the Devil creating/giving being to anything.
It’s about the Devil originating good.
Arabs worshiped many gods.
Muhammad said, “There is one God, the Creator, who is just and compassionate–worship Him alone.”
That cannot come from the Devil.
Arabs left female children to die if they didn’t want them.
Muhammad said: “This is unjust and evil–stop it.”
That cannot come from the Devil.
And so on.
What I said was that the Devil tells lies…and his strategy is to hide it in some truth so that it will not be out-rightly rejected…which is very shrewd on his part.
But the truth can’t come from the Devil. And thus the whole can’t be said to come from the Devil.
I don’t think that’s any thing revolutionary. The saints have said it for 2 millenia. The mystic Saints and doctors, in particular…(And who better to consult on matters mystical and supernatural than they?)…all warn us to be weary of the supernatural experiences for the same reason that the Devil is very clever and no one knows when they are being deceived because he always entices spiritual pride and never makes it obvious. That’s why they all advise us to ignore those occurrences and depend entirely on sound spiritual direction to avoid the devil’s deceptions.
Yes, but a “spiritual experience” isn’t, in itself, good. If it appeals to pride it is not virtuous.
Again, it may well be that a demon appeared to Muhammad and persuaded him that he was a prophet, leading him away from humbly accepting the truth of the Gospel.
But the truths that Muhammad taught did not
themselves come from the Devil. And since these truths are central to historic Islam, it would be utterly false to say that Islam as a whole came from the Devil, even if Muhammad’s prophetic claims did.
I see no conclusive reason to think that they did. It seems like the most natural thing in the world that a person who felt called to lead his people away from idols to the one God would come to see himself as a prophet. And it is at least possible that, as you said, there was some kind of true revelation originally involved which got twisted.
So again, I fail to see how any of this is helpful for determining the Christian attitude to Islam.
So I don’t think that acknowledging that the Devil does operate this way in deceptions, mixing some truth with error in order to make it palatable to the “deceived” is saying anything that does not agree with Christian faith and tradition.
If you say “mixing error with truth” then I have no problem with what you are saying But the truth can’t come from the Devil. Period. Truth belongs to God and no one else.
Besides, it was Satan in the Desert who quoted truth right out of scripture to our lord, wasn’t it? And his purposes there were certainly completely evil and meant to deceive.
Yes, but Scripture did not thereby become evil!
Edwin