Why I am Drifting from Catholicism to Islam

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Believe it or not, people who have a vile hatred of Islam have done a great deal more to help promote the growth of Islam in the world than most devout Muslims can ever hope to accomplish on their own.
Yes, I think that’s absolutely true. That’s why I get so mad at the anti-Islamic threads on this board. I think they amount to pro-Islamic propaganda (not that they are meant as such).

Naturally, I will go farther than you. I don’t think Islam in itself has much to recommend it. I think it is fueled largely by its relative simplicity (compared to other great religions) and by disgust with the failings of Christianity.

Edwin
 
Yes, I think that’s absolutely true. That’s why I get so mad at the anti-Islamic threads on this board. I think they amount to pro-Islamic propaganda (not that they are meant as such).

Naturally, I will go farther than you. I don’t think Islam in itself has much to recommend it. I think it is fueled largely by its relative simplicity (compared to other great religions) and by disgust with the failings of Christianity.

Edwin
Hear HEAR!!

Dead-on as usual, Edwin! 🙂

It is the religion of the simple minded. It is simple enough to make the hypocracy of bad Christians very obvious.

It is also simple enough to call unrealistically simplistic, and it’s promoters are simple enough to not see the dishonesty in saying that proclaiming islam is unreal in it’s simplicity is “hateful disrespect which must be quashed by violent force of arms” instead of the simple difference of opinion which it is dealt with in the marketplace of ideas.

The simple-minded, like the single-celled, infest where the light does not shine, and the cloth does not wipe.
 
Now, I held a fairly negative view of Islam until about a year ago.
That’s a very good reason to “go slow” with regard to conversion. When you have had negative stereotypes of a religion, it’s easy to go to the other extreme. That was my experience with regard to Catholicism. (I did not convert to Catholicism, but I almost did. Sometimes I wish I had. But one valid reason why I didn’t was that I wanted to be sure that I wasn’t simply overreacting to my anti-Catholic background.)
Firstly there is the concept of the Trinity. . . . I really don’t see how this is other than linguistic acrobatics.
The question is whether we can ever adequately describe God in words. All our language about God is “linguistic acrobatics” in a sense.
can anyone honestly say this idea doesn’t strike you as intuitively false?
It certainly does not. It is rather rude to generalize from your own experience to that of others. It is “simple monotheism” that seems intuitively false to me. (Whether Islam is really as simply and logical as all that I’m not sure–and I say that out of respect to Islam, not as a criticism. The Sufis, who seem to me to be by far the most profound and interesting Muslims, certainly have a rather wacky view of God themselves.) The wackiness of Christian theology seems to me to correspond well to the weirdness of the world in which we live. If there is a God at all, of course He’s going to be a God of mystery and paradox.
Secondly there is the matter of Jesus’ Crucifixion. I know, “God is just, and infinite sin must be reconciled by and infinitely perfect sacrifice”
Why would I want to use that particular rather frigid and legalistic formulation? It has its merits, but it’s hardly the central Christian tradition. I would urge you to read Athanasius *On the Incarnation. *That’s a view of the Atonement on which almost all Christians can basically agree. The basic idea there is that we are enslaved to the powers of sin and death–but we were justly enslaved because we chose to disobey God and listen to Satan instead. That’s why the sacrifice of Jesus was necessary. Jesus submitted Himself to death in order to free us from it and break its power over us. (Read Athanasius–he puts it much better than I do!)

Again, I think it’s important to ask whether this corresponds to reality as we perceive it. Granted that no explanation of the Atonement is going to be sufficient, it’s clear that we live in a world where simple justice does not prevail. God does not strike down the wicked and reward the righteous on a regular basis. The reality is darker and more complex than that. Again, if there is a God, and if that God is acting to deliver us from sin and evil, I would expect that action to take some tragic and paradoxical form. Any other kind of divine action would seem thin and tinny against the lurid backdrop of the world we see all around us.
God s omnipotent, yet He must kill himself, excuse me His Son, no excuse me, the human nature of his Son, which is what died, of course that’s not the sacrifice as human nature is not infinite perfection, so Christ was sacrifices, his human nature is what died, yet that was not the totality of the sacrifice, but all of Christ was sacrificed? Am I missing something? Does this make any sense? I really think this doctrine can only survive so long as the issue is examined episodically rather than the totality of the concept.
This is incredibly arrogant and insulting to the generations of Christians who have thought deeply about this. I can respect your difficulties with Christianity, but I can’t respect your failure to recognize that brilliant and sincerely devout people have been Christians. (Similarly, I find Islam as a whole to be remarkably unconvincing and unappealing, but I am not going to say that Islam “only survives as long as” one doesn’t ask the kind of questions that naturally occur to an intelligent undergraduate.)

It is precisely the “totality of the concept” that I find convincing. It is the one Christ who dies, and the one Christ who rises from the dead. The one Christ who conquers death, and the one Christ who submits to it. The one Christ, human and divine, who offers the sacrifice, and the one Three-Personed God who accepts it. It is precisely this set of paradoxes that I find intellectually satisfying. But I guess our mileage differs.
Thank you for reading the confused ramblings of a Uni Freshman:shrug:
Are you in America or Britain? You referred to having grown up in America, but I’ve never heard an American use the term “Uni” before. Are you an American studying in Britain? (I’m curious because I was born in Britain and am actually a British subject–also because it seems that conversions to Islam are a lot more common in Britain than in America, and if you’re studying in Britain that would bear out my generalization!)

Edwin
 
Hear HEAR!!

Dead-on as usual, Edwin! 🙂

It is the religion of the simple minded.
I would like to distance myself from this phrase and from the rest of your rhetoric, ungracious as this may seem given your approval of what I said.

Edwin
 
I would like to distance myself from this phrase and from the rest of your rhetoric, ungracious as this may seem given your approval of what I said.

Edwin
I rather thought you might, cosidering you can’t go along with my “rhetoric” due to your proven valuing of false ecumanism over truth.

That the truth is objectionable to those who RELY on being seen as victims of “mean-ness” instead of subjects of description, and their “appeasers”, is not pariculary suprising, is it?

Where is my “mean-ness”? Where is my description not accurate?
 
I rather thought you might, cosidering you can’t go along with my “rhetoric” due to your proven valuing of false ecumanism over truth.
Balderdash. I don’t value anything over truth. I value ecumenism because I believe it to be mandated by the truth of the Gospel.
Where is my “mean-ness”? Where is my description not accurate?
There are lots of Muslims who are not “simple-minded.” The rest of your “rhetoric” was not of a sort that can be either true or false. It was simply offensive. Rather reminiscent of Luther. But he did it better, perhaps because he wasn’t restrained by the rules of decency prevalent on this forum!

Edwin
 
To the op, If I were you, I would study the theology of Christ, sin, God and man etc.

It is obvious from your post that you don’t know Christian theology yet.

two very good choices and hard to put down page turners…

Frank Sheed’s Theology for beginners, and Theology and sanity.

It is the uninstructed Catholic who converts to other ideas of man. Then reverts to Catholicism once he undertakes an honest study of his faith.
 
Consider the two main problems with Islam that you posted.

Not knowing who Christ is makes it very hard to know God,

Denying that Christ’s sacrifice was for the reconciliation of God and man makes it very hard to receive God.

From talking with Muslims I have met, I can tell you Christians, more specifically Catholics have an enormase privilege in their relationship with God.

Those two theories of Islam, are they not anti-Christ? A work of the wicked Spirit? To separate man from knowing and receiving God?
 
Dr. Peter Kreeft, Catholic apologist and professor of philosophy, has some things to say that may help answer the questions and resolve doubts you are having about the one true Church. You can read and/or listen here:

The best quote I’ve seen about what’s wrong with Islam is this one:
:confused: I looked all over Dr. Kreeft’s website and did not see the lengthy piece on Islam which you quoted. Would you please provide the link?

Or, if was it written by someone other than Dr. Kreeft, would you please clarify that? Thanks.
 
Wth,

we do not understand ourselves…how can we grasp God? he who gives yu an easy version of a one sided God is sketching Him accordng to human understanding…an easy God is not God…we are very complex, how will God be easy to grasp?

regarding the Trinity. The OT talks about the Father’s omnipotent and omnipresent Spirit. The NT as well. The OT talks about the Father’s eternal Wisdom personnified. The NT says the same about the Logos/Jesus who was born to no biological father. What does Islam teach? that the virgin birth is nothing but a miracle…yet it is neither seen, nor proved, nor does it serve any purpose in Islam…it can hardly be called a miracle in that context. Christians, however, do not believe it is a meaningless miracle as Muslims believe…Christians know about the Incarnation of the Logos as a true man born to Mary but no biological father for obvious reasons.

the Father, His Word and Spirit is One God. There was no time when God was Wisdomless or Spiritless.

Islam teaches that the Quran is the eternal and uncreated word of Allah, yet only Allah is uncreated and eternal. Ever gave this teaching a thought?

regarding the crucifixion of Jesus, one must not be legalistic and give it a one side interpretation. Jesus accepted His death, and by it ransommed us out by His choice, proved He is who He said He is, proved that no mattr what people do, truth will be revealed…taught what real power is…taught trust in Him…taught He is the resurrection and life …taught that He is serious about us til the point of giving His life to prove His seriousness and immense love.

what does Islam teach? what does it “it appears as such” means? why forsake history and tradition the people who were fed to lions, to believe in a man who did not even say what happened?

if you have issues with some Catholics or Church misakes, remember what would have happenned if people criticized the 11 apostles because of Judas…we have many Judas…and we have many saints…by the way, this 22 we have the beatification of Fr. Yaacoub, the Maronite…it is these people we must look at, not Judas.
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by beckycmarie
Dr. Peter Kreeft, Catholic apologist and professor of philosophy, has some things to say that may help answer the questions and resolve doubts you are having about the one true Church. You can read and/or listen here:

Blah blah…

The best quote I’ve seen about what’s wrong with Islam is this one:

I looked all over Dr. Kreeft’s website and did not see the lengthy piece on Islam which you quoted. Would you please provide the link?

Or, if was it written by someone other than Dr. Kreeft, would you please clarify that? Thanks.
saint-mike.org/spcdc/bbs/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=855

…do a “find” for “There’s the rub. Jews (historically anyway)

Also: peterkreeft.com/topics-more/religions_islam.htm
 
No post that I made is anti-Islamic, the only thing close to that was my protests regarding global Shariah Law. Those protests had much more to do with human nature than Islam.

You have claimed I am a liar and have again dropped half articulated accusations, if you have one shred of evidence I am lying about my past then please present it.
Ok, man, don’t have a cow. My impression from your original post is that you don’t understand Trinitarian concepts at all. As for the anti-Islamic comments you made on the other board, you (rightfully) condemned binLaden. That, however, gets you into hot water with the Wahhabists. I really don’t want to see your Facebook stuff, or know anything else about you. You still have taken different positions at different times on different boards. If you’ve changed opinions, just say so. Oh, BYW, do you read Latin or did you Google it?
 
To wth1257:

I think I’ve been too hard on you and I apologize. You are pleading for help in your faith and instead of support, I offered nothing but hostility. I respect the fact that you’ve aired your feelings on a Catholic board; I suspect that you really have a desire to remain faithful to the Church, and that you’re looking for support - which I failed to supply.

Your posts evidence a difficulty in belief in a Triune Godhead. I understand your bewilderment because the concept of “One God in Three Divine Persons” is hard to conceptualize. I have a number of resources to help you in this regard, though it will take time for me to retrieve them. When I can, I will post them to this thread.

I mentioned before that you’re looking for support by posting here. Right now, the only advice I can give you is to seek support in a much higher forum - the Holy Spirit. Even if you’re not particularly convinced of the Spirit’s existence in actuality, you can invoke his grace, blessings, wisdom and guidance simply by praying to God.

You’re apparently a young man with your life yet to be lived. I’m older, but when I was young, I, too, had doubts about the Trinity, the Church and just about everything else. Thankfully, my prayers were answered, and I remain a devout Catholic.

I think, that after careful contemplation and the grace of the Holy Spirit, you’ll recognize the truth of Holy Mother Church.
 
That’s a very good reason to “go slow” with regard to conversion. When you have had negative stereotypes of a religion, it’s easy to go to the other extreme. That was my experience with regard to Catholicism. (I did not convert to Catholicism, but I almost did. Sometimes I wish I had. But one valid reason why I didn’t was that I wanted to be sure that I wasn’t simply overreacting to my anti-Catholic background.)
I would never rush into converting
The question is whether we can ever adequately describe God in words. All our language about God is “linguistic acrobatics” in a sense.
Perhaps
It certainly does not. It is rather rude to generalize from your own experience to that of others.
I’ve been pretty clear this is just a cathartic outburst on my part and not intended to be an intelligent critique, I have never really seen someone ask to have the Trinity explained to them, and then saying, “oh yeah, makes loads of sense”. Generally the question is moved from rational discourse to faith, as the question is removed from rigorous analysis and raised to the plane of faith and emotional trust in God I felt it was fair to appeal to emotion and intuition in the opposite direction. If that struck you as rude that’s fine, as I said I wrote this quite late and later reading it was embarrassed by the rather harsh tone I used in the OP, but offense was never my intent.
It is “simple monotheism” that seems intuitively false to me. (Whether Islam is really as simply and logical as all that I’m not sure–and I say that out of respect to Islam, not as a criticism. The Sufis, who seem to me to be by far the most profound and interesting Muslims, certainly have a rather wacky view of God themselves.)
I like the Sufi’s fine, my signature is from a Persian Sufi.
The wackiness of Christian theology seems to me to correspond well to the weirdness of the world in which we live. If there is a God at all, of course He’s going to be a God of mystery and paradox.
That’s your intuition, I have no right to oppose it:shrug:
Why would I want to use that particular rather frigid and legalistic formulation? It has its merits, but it’s hardly the central Christian tradition. I would urge you to read Athanasius *On the Incarnation. *That’s a view of the Atonement on which almost all Christians can basically agree. The basic idea there is that we are enslaved to the powers of sin and death–but we were justly enslaved because we chose to disobey God and listen to Satan instead. That’s why the sacrifice of Jesus was necessary. Jesus submitted Himself to death in order to free us from it and break its power over us. (Read Athanasius–he puts it much better than I do!)
That’s my understanding, basically, of the Crucifixion
 
Are you in America or Britain? You referred to having grown up in America, but I’ve never heard an American use the term “Uni” before. Are you an American studying in Britain? (I’m curious because I was born in Britain and am actually a British subject–also because it seems that conversions to Islam are a lot more common in Britain than in America, and if you’re studying in Britain that would bear out my generalization!)
I’m just Lazy:p

A good friend of mine is from Manchester, so I may have picked it up from him(that and "liquor before beer you’re in the clear, beer before liquor and you’ve never been sicker:blushing: )
 
Actually the doctrine of Trinity is the one that make sens. And eventually a basis to reckognize the true religion…
Consider this?

Does Islam believe in one God? – Yes!
Does Islam believe that God is love? – according to my muslim friend - Yes!

So if God is love is God lonely or was God lonely before he created any other person?

Is love compatible with loneliness???

So people believe that God is love but as they really believe in in a kind of poetic way without stopping and noticing that this is the reality. In fact the basis of all reality.

If we were made in God’s image.
If we can’t stand loneliness and it is contrary to our dignity.
Then it easy to realize that God himself is certainly not lonely.

‘God is one’ does not mean ‘God is one person’. It means ‘God is one reality’.
  1. Q. Why can there be but one God?
    A. There can be but one God, because God, being supreme and infinite, cannot have an equal.
  • Baltimore Cathechism
God bless
 
Here is a quote from Augustine Club of Columbia.edu.
It may give a clearer idea of the Trinity:
The Most Holy Trinity: a Union of Love
It is said that a people’s values can be seen in the god they worship. For Christians, ``God is love’’ (1 Jn 4:8). But a God who is love seems like a philosophical impossibility. How can one God, who is perfect, lacking nothing in himself and possessed of no dependence on creatures, be love when love necessitates a relation to another?
The resolution of this paradox God himself has revealed to us: God is perfect unity, but a unity of three Divine Persons-- Father, Son, and Holy Spirit-- who are each equally divine. The Father, Son, and Spirit exist from all eternity. None precedes the other in time, but each are related to the others by a relationship that orders them with respect to the others.
The ever-living, all-knowing, almighty God the Father exists from all eternity and is the source of all perfection created and uncreated. The self-conception and self-expression of the perfect Being is so complete that it is another person: God the Son, the image of the invisible Father, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten from the Father before all the ages, light from light, true God from true God, begotten not made, consubstantial with the Father, through whom all things came to be'' (Nicene-Constantipolitan Creed). The love between the Father and the Son is so perfect that it too is another person: the Holy Spirit the holy, the lordly and life-giving one, proceeding forth from the Father [and the Son], co-worshipped and co-glorified with Father and Son’’ (ibid.).
But if the Holy Spirit is the love between the Father and the Son, how can God as a whole be called Love? Each person shares equally in the divine nature, so that each person shares equally in the perfections of the others. The only distinction between the persons of the Trinity is their mutual relations. None of the persons exists in respect to himself alone, but each exists relatively to the other two:
…the three persons'' who exist in God are the reality of word and love in their attachment to each other. They are not substances, personalities in the modern sense, but the relatedness whose pure actuality... does not impair unity of the highest being but fills it out. St Augustine once enshrined this idea in the following formula: He is not called Father with reference to himself but only in relation to the Son; seen by himself he is simply God.’’ Here the decisive point comes beautifully to light. ``Father’’ is purely a concept of relationship. Only in being-for the other is he Father; in his own being-in-himself he is simply God. Person is the pure relation of being related, nothing else. Relationship is not something extra added to the person, as it is with us; it only exists at all as relatedness.
…the First Person [the Father] does not beget the Son in the sense of the act of begetting coming on top of the finished Person; it is the act of begetting, of giving oneself, of streaming forth. It is identical with the act of giving. (Joseph Ratzinger Introduction to Christianity, pp. 131-132; cf. Augustine, Enarationes in Psalmos 68; De Trinitate VII, 1, 2.)
Each of the persons of the Trinity lives completely for the others; each is a complete gift of self to the others. The complete self-giving not only constitutes the individual persons of the Trinity, but also their inseparable oneness.
Thus, for Christians the very basis of all reality is the loving communion of persons that is the Holy Trinity.
See The Uniqueness of Christianity for more
 
Does Islam believe in one God? – Yes!
Does Islam believe that God is love? – according to my muslim friend - Yes!

So people believe that God is love but as they really believe in in a kind of poetic way without stopping and noticing that this is the reality. In fact the basis of all reality.

‘God is one’ does not mean ‘God is one person’. It means ‘God is one reality’.

God bless
Hi Nablaise.

You might be a good one to give your comments on the thread i (tried) to start.

forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=228197

Seems it didn’t get too far. 🙂

Sometimes we seem to talk as if we know exactly all about God but the truth is we are all trying to make sense of Him from what we think we know. For us Christians, this obviously includes the multiplicty of the one God nature understood through the incarnation of Jesus.

I think the idea that God is fundamental goodness and truth and that these are fundamental entities and not attributes as we like to define them are a wonderful view to reality and hopefully true. 👍
 
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