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  • Waging Peace on Islam

    Christianity Today
    May 5 2005


    Waging Peace on Islam

    A missionary veteran of Asia proposes one way to defuse Muslim anger
    about the Crusades.

    Interview by Stan Guthrie | posted 05/05/2005 09:00 a.m.


    Months before the movie Kingdom of Heaven was to be released, critics
    lined up to lament how this big-budget film about the Crusades would
    set back Muslim-Christian relations, leading to a Muslim or Christian
    backlash, depending on whom you read. But it's not as if this movie
    is raising an issue long since dead. The question is not if the
    Crusades are a live memory for Muslims, but why? And how do
    Christians who minister to Muslims deal with this sad historical
    fact?

    Warren Larson is director of the Zwemer Center for Muslim Studies at
    Columbia International University, Columbia, South Carolina. An
    associate professor of Islam with expertise in Muslim fundamentalism,
    the Canadian-born Larson was a church-planting missionary in the
    Punjab, Pakistan's largest province, from 1969 to 1991. (The small
    church he and his wife worked in remains active in the 99.9 percent
    Muslim city of Dera Ghazi Khan.)

    Today Larson travels widely in the Muslim world. Stan Guthrie, ct's
    senior associate news editor and author of Missions in the Third
    Millennium, interviewed him.

    The First Crusade began nearly a millennium ago, and yet we often
    hear that Muslims think about those terrible events as if they
    happened yesterday. Why?

    It's a perception of ongoing Western imperialism. There's a long
    history of unsuccessful encounters. The Crusades are in there, but
    also the fact that the Muslims were booted out of Spain in 1492.
    That's also very bitter for them. And then there was colonialism.
    Nine-tenths of the Muslim world was under colonialism. They connect
    all this~Wincluding Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and other things going on
    in the Middle East.

    Why do so many Muslims continue to see the West as a Christian empire
    when, in fact, it's become highly secularized and pluralistic in
    recent decades?

    One reason is that there are a lot of Christians here in the West.
    Muslims are convinced that evangelical Christians won the vote for
    George W. Bush and that America is quite Christian. Those
    perceptions, of course, are only partly true. One would hope
    [Muslims] would understand that the West is post-Christian, but in
    many ways, it hasn't quite hit them yet.

    When we were living in Pakistan, they felt the things that went on in
    America~Wthe immorality, the immodesty, the drinking~Wwere sanctioned
    by Christianity.

    Sometimes evangelicals in North America, particularly in the United
    States, say things that are not wise. They're not helping
    Muslim-Christian relations. In some cases, they have demonized Islam
    and denigrated the prophet [Muhammad]. They've done it publicly. This
    news travels far and wide, and Muslims print it in their newspapers.
    That keeps some of the feeling alive.

    Can't we just explain to Muslims the concept of free speech and the
    open exchange of ideas?

    Yes, but saying that Muhammad was a demonized pedophile doesn't seem
    accurate or fair. Nor is it wise. We have a free press, but we have
    to use it with discretion.

    How do negative Muslim perceptions affect Christian missionaries and
    local Christians at street level?

    In some areas of Pakistan, Islam has been radicalized, and
    anti-Americanism is higher today than when I was there. Partly as a
    result, the 500 missionaries who were there have now been reduced to
    about 100.

    Christians have suffered. There have been quite a few attacks in
    places such as Pakistan. Churches have been burned. Schools have been
    attacked. Muslim converts [to Christianity], in particular, have
    suffered and feel quite vulnerable. When I was in Ethiopia recently,
    the fellow who did my translating was a Somali. He was part of a
    group of believers, formerly Muslims, who came out of Somalia in 1994
    when the U.S. military failed in Mogadishu. Islamists hunted down and
    killed 14 members of his group. He got out of there by the skin of
    his teeth.

    How should local Christians and missionaries respond to these
    historically negative associations with the Crusades in the minds of
    Muslims?

    I think an apology is in order. But having said that, I think we have
    to hold Muslims accountable, too. They might forget or not be aware
    that, starting in 1915, Turks killed more than a million and a half
    Armenian Christians. There have been unsuccessful encounters between
    Muslims and Christians for nearly the last 1,500 years, but [this
    history is] not all the fault of the West and Christians. Muslims
    have also done wrong.

    Wouldn't you say that Christians have apologized because they
    recognized that they did not live up to the ideals of their faith,
    such as turning the other cheek? A lot of Muslims might think,
    however, that the Islamic doctrine of jihad justifies certain violent
    actions. Thus, they may not be so willing to apologize.

    That's true. Islam doesn't teach you to forgive your enemies. But,
    for the sake of truth, we need to confront them. We can do it
    lovingly, but we need to do it.

    When you forgive Muslims, they recognize the difference. They say,
    "We don't forgive anybody, but now we see that you're different." On
    November 20, 1979, when the holy Kaaba in Mecca was taken over by
    unnamed insurgents, we were living in Dera Ghazi Khan. The rumor went
    out, thanks to Ayatollah Khomeini, that it was the work of Americans
    and Jews. When the false rumor reached our city, a mob formed and
    attacked us at our house and burned our jeeps, burned our literature,
    smashed furniture, and could have killed us, but for the grace of
    God.

    During this time, the American embassy was burned to the ground in
    Islamabad. A few days later, the news came out that [the perpetrators
    at the Kaaba were] not Americans and Jews, but Saudis. The police and
    the military in our city rescued us and grabbed a few of the rioters
    and put them in prison.

    We went to them and said, "We forgive you. We're not going to lodge a
    case against you." Then, neighbors, some of the people who knew me
    well, embraced me.

    They said, "Mr. Larson, we now know the difference between you and
    us. We do not forgive our enemies. When there's trouble between us,
    Sunnis and Shiites, we fight and burn one another's shops. But you
    have forgiven us."

    That was a great help, because it furthered our cause.

    I said, "We're just doing what Jesus taught us to do."

    Do you see that as a model for future interactions?

    I sure do. I think it's very much waging peace on Islam rather than
    taking a militant stance as Christians. It's a kind of spirit. It's
    doing mission in the light of the Cross, or in the shadow of the
    Cross. It's a spirit of reconciliation, and it certainly does help.
    And Muslims respond. They do.

    Seeing Christ on the Cross forgive his enemies in The Passion of the
    Christ was really quite powerful for Muslims. They may have gone to
    see the movie with wrong motives, but the fact that he forgave his
    enemies from the Cross seemed to touch them. Many, many Muslims went
    to see this movie. It was very powerful.

    Do you expect Kingdom of Heaven to have an effect on Christian-Muslim
    relations?

    I don't know. I hope it doesn't hinder them, because there's enough
    already out there to worsen conditions.
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