The Muslim Advance and American Collaboration
by James George Jatras
At the time of this writing James George Jatras was a
member of St. Katherine's Greek Orthodox Church in Falls Church,
Virginia. He is a policy analyst at the United States Senate. The
views expressed here are his own and do not represent any Senate
member or office. A version of this article first appeared in
Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture (928 N. Main St.,
Rockford, IL 61103; subscriptions 1-800-877-5459). It is adapted
from a May 1998 speech at "Overcoming the Schism: European Divisions
and U.S. Policy," a conference sponsored by the Rockford Institute
and The Lord Byron Foundation for Balkan Studies. Reprinted with
permission.
In addressing the cultural schism between the western and eastern
halves of European, Christian civilization, marked principally by
their respective religious traditions, Roman Catholic/Protestant in
the West and Orthodox in the East, one issue stands above all others
in determining whether that millennium-old division shall eventually
prove fatal: the Islamic resurgence that has rapidly come to mark
the post-Cold War era. For the East, which borders on the Muslim
world, the problem continues to be, as it has been since Islam first
appeared in the 7th century, primarily one of direct, violent
confrontation, which today stretches from the Balkans to the
Caucasus and through Central Asia. For the West, on the other hand,
the problem today is primarily internal, both in terms of
ideological confusion (which in many instances leads to active
collaboration), coupled with demographic infiltration.
The latter factor, largely a consequence of the West's policy of
more-or-less open immigration, is typified in the following example.
A few months ago, the county board of Loudoun County, Virginia, just
a few miles down the road from the federal capital, granted a zoning
variance to facilitate construction of a new Islamic academy over
vigorous local opposition. The institution, one of a number being
constructed nationwide, will cover some 100 acres, will include
elementary, middle, and high schools, will feature an 800-bed
dormitory, and will grace the rolling hills of the Virginia horse
country with a 65-foot mosque dome and an 85-foot minaret.
County residents opposed the academy on a variety of grounds,
notably the loss of tax revenue on land that was otherwise zoned for
business uses and the security threat posed by the school, either
from Muslims that would be attracted to the county or from the
possibility that anti-Saudi Islamic groups might see the academy as
a tempting target. But the critics' central issue and the one that
highlights western incomprehension of the phenomenon in question was
the character of the Saudi regime which, according to the school's
bylaws (specifying even that the Saudi ambassador is ex officio
chairman), exercises total control, to the extent that it is
part of the structure of the Saudi Ministry of Education: an
establishment of a foreign sovereign on American soil.
Predictably, as soon as Saudi Arabia and Islam became the issues,
the only response from progressive opinion had to be that rejection
of the school would be intolerance of "diversity." Characteristic of
this viewpoint is one county resident who symbolically displayed a
crescent and star in the window of her home to show that "Islam is
welcome here." The ever-vigilant Washington Post weighed in
with an editorial blasting opposition to the school as "religious
intolerance" and "the worst kind of bigotry" on the part of
retrograde denizens of the Old Dominion. "Ugly statements that have
been made in public meetings on the issue have run the range of
mean-spiritedness," sniffed the Post , "with some residents
asserting that the school should be rejected because 'the Saudis
execute their own people who convert from Islam.'"
In point of correction to the Post's sarcastic quotation
marks, the 1997 U.S. Department of State Report on Human Rights
Practices states the following about Saudi Arabia: "Freedom of
religion does not exist. Islam is the official religion and all
[Saudi] citizens must be Muslims. Conversion by a Muslim to another
religion is considered apostasy. Public apostasy is considered a
crime under Shari'a law and punishable by death." So which
is more "ugly" and "mean-spirited"—the fact that the Saudis do
indeed behead those who abandon Islam or that Loudoun citizens had
been so tactless to take note of that fact? One witness before the
county board testified to the fact that her daughters, who are U.S.
citizens, have been kept from leaving Saudi Arabia for over thirteen
years because, as women, they may not travel, even though the elder
one is now an adult, without their Saudi father's permission. The
girls have been forcibly converted to Islam and can only look
forward to their eventual marriage, for which their consent is at
best a formality.
Fawning by county authorities extended even to a blatant
disregard of the county's own laws. A Loudoun ordinance defines a
private institution as one that is neither funded nor controlled by
any government, on both of which counts the Loudoun Islamic academy
fails. Yet the county board even rejected testimony to that effect
by a former board member, who himself was the author of the
relevant ordinance, that the academy was not a private
institution. No matter. Today, neither Loudoun County, nor the
Commonwealth of Virginia, nor the United States would be able to
create and run an educational institution based on any religious
doctrine. But a foreign government, a government that is every bit
as bigoted, intolerant, and ugly as the Post wrongly tagged
the school's critics not only may do so but is seen as having a
positive right to do so.
Especially illuminating in the Loudoun controversy was the
position of local Christian social conservatives, who stayed neutral
or even supported the academy. In the dimmer recesses of the
American Christian mind, the only circuits activated were those
questioning what precedent denying the variance might set for
private Christian schools, the availability of public voucher funds,
and so forth. The importation of Shari'a into a
once-Christian commonwealth seemingly registered not at all in
evangelical minds blissfully unaware of Islamic aims:
"The Islamist movement makes no secret of its
intentions to convert the West. Its propaganda, published in
booklets sold in all European Islamic centers for the last thirty
years, sets out its aim and the methods to achieve them. They
include proselytism, conversion, marriage with local women, and,
above all, immigration. Remembering that Muslims always
began as a minority in the conquered countries ('liberated,' in
Islamic terminology) before becoming a majority, the ideologists
of this movement regard Islamic settlement in Europe, the United
States, and elsewhere as a chance for Islam." [ Bat Ye'or, The
Decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam, p. 217, emphasis
added]
The element of willful blindness in western perspectives on Islam
cannot be overestimated. So deeply imbedded is the notion that all
religions are in their fundamentals the same, evidence to the
contrary is simply wished out of existence. When the Ayatollah
Khomeini states that -
"...Muslims have no alternative...to armed holy war
against profane governments,...the conquest of all non-Muslim
territories...It will be the duty of every able-bodied adult male
to volunteer for this war of conquest, the final aim of which is
to put Koranic law in power from one end of the earth to the
other..."
...and so on in the same vein, such utterances are as little
heeded as were similar statements by Lenin during the Cold War.
After all, Khomeini is a known "fundamentalist." Surely,
his statements can't be held against the moderates, the
"mainstream," who represent " real Islam," whose beliefs
and values are not so different from ours, right? The contention
that Khomeini and his ilk are in fact Islam's historical
"mainstream" not only is dismissed but is itself considered evidence
of a dangerous "Christian fundamentalism," which is every bit as bad
as the Muslim variety, probably worse. Together with the growing
number of Muslims in America (who, according to some claims, already
have overtaken Judaism as the nation's largest non-Christian
religion), the irrebuttable presumption of Muslim peaceableness has
set the stage for Islam to become both a social and political force.
Particularly under the Clinton Administration, Islam has made major
strides to join denatured, humanized Protestantism, Catholicism, and
Judaism in their semi-established status as kindred denominations of
a single American civic creed, symbolized by Hillary Rodham
Clinton's recent sponsorship of the Eid al-Fitr
end-of-Ramadan celebration at the White House.
Likewise, the idea that Islam shares with Christianity and
Judaism an Abrahamic pedigree, that we are all, in the Islamic
phrase, "peoples of the book," is now almost universally accepted.
To see how flimsy this idea is, suppose that during the early
Christian era a pagan philosopher from Athens had claimed to have
received a vision from a divine messenger ( angelos ) to
the effect that Zeus/Jupiter ( diu pater), the Greco-Roman
"father god," was the one and only God and in fact was the same God
the Father preached by the Christians; that the Christians had
corrupted their own Scriptures to hide the fact that Jupiter had
been worshiped by Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, and Jesus, while only
the self-proclaimed prophet's recitation of his own vision was
authoritative; that the rites and sacred places of the Olympian gods
(the Eleusinian Mysteries, the Delphic Oracle) had always pertained
to Jupiter alone and indeed had been established by earlier
Abrahamic prophets; and that those who had surrendered their will to
Jupiter were commanded to wage holy war under his thunderbolt symbol
on "infidels" who resisted the divine will. Is there any doubt that
Christians then would have rejected the supposed kinship of the new
teaching to their own faith as unanimously as today's Christians
rush to accommodate Islam?
There is little doubt that Islam's "God" is none other than the
former chief deity of the polytheistic Arab pantheon - a variation
on the moon god common throughout the ancient Middle East, among the
Babylonians known as Sin (the Sinai peninsula is probably named
after him) and among the Sumerians as Nanna - stripped of his
consorts and offspring. Among the pagan Arabs he was usually called
simply "the god," al-ilah: Allah. The moon god Allah, whose
crescent symbol today caps mosques the world over, headed a pantheon
of over 300 lesser divinities, including three daughters called Lat,
Uzza, and Manat; in fact, the controversy over The Satanic
Verses by Salman Rushdie centers upon an embarrassing (and
historically documented) episode during Muhammad's evolving
"revelation" (after his death collected as his Qur'an,
"recitation") in which he admitted the possibility of retaining
under his new dispensation the three daughter-goddesses but later
rescinded it as having been of false, "satanic," inspiration.
Muhammad (the son of Abdallah, "slave of Allah," a further
attestation of the god's pre-Islamic origin) was of the Quraysh
tribe, the custodians of the Meccan shrine to the pantheon known as
the Ka'bah ("cube"), which then as now houses a black
stone, probably a meteorite, which Muslim pilgrims today continue to
venerate, along with performance of other pre-Islamic pagan rites
such as stoning the devil at Wadi Mina and partaking of the waters
of the Zamzam well.
In short, Islam is a self-evident outgrowth not of the Old and
New Covenants but of the darkness of heathen Araby. Beside ludicrous
historical suggestions to the contrary (such as the idea that the
Ka'bah was built by Abraham, which would have been big news
to him), Muslim apologists have strained to find in the Bible
evidence that a new prophet would arise after Jesus, seeing
Muhammad in obvious prophecies of the Holy Spirit (that were
fulfilled on Pentecost) or of the Second Coming of Christ. One could
find no better refutation of Islam's efforts to appropriate
Christian Scriptures (here, Matthew 24:27) than that of the
14th-century Byzantine saint, Gregory Palamas, to his Turkish
captors:
"It is true that Muhammad started from the east and
came to the west, as the sun travels from east to west.
Nevertheless he came with war, knives, pillaging, forced
enslavement, murders, and acts that are not from the good God but
instigated by the chief manslayer, the devil."
St. Gregory's answer is no less devastating to Islam's fraudulent
self-depiction as a pacific creed. Islam was born in violence, from
Muhammad's sanction of raids of pillage and plunder (starting with
attacks against his own Quraysh tribe, which initially rejected his
revelation) to his savage execution of hundreds of men of the
Qurayzah clan (which professed Judaism) and the enslavement and
forced concubinage of their women and children. (Muhammad himself
took as his unwilling consort the Jewish 17-year-old Safiya on the
very day of the murder of her menfolk.) From its inception, first
within Arabia and then against all unbelievers, Islam has been
unthinkable without its mandate for violence, war, terror - in a
word, jihad - itself codified in Muhammad's Qur'an (notably Sura
9:29). Today, Islamic apologists in America have been quick to latch
onto the vocabulary of grievance, denouncing as "stereotyping,"
"bigotry," and "ignorance" association of Islam with its violent
past and present. Even American elementary school texts have been
rewritten to suggest that once-Christian Egypt, Syria, and Palestine
became Muslim because their conquerors were "invited" in; Muslims
are quick to remind Christians of the Crusaders' later "aggression,"
but they don't consider as aggression their own unprovoked seizure
of the Christian Middle East.
In the application of jihad, as documented by Bat
Ye'or and others, Islam understands the world in terms of two
domains, or "houses": the House of Islam ( Dar al-Islam ),
where Islam rules and Shari'a , the law of Allah, has been
realized; and the House of War (Dar al-Harb), where the
rebellious unbelievers persist in their (or rather, our)
lawlessness. (The parallels are unavoidable to the similarly
Manichaean communist concepts of the "socialist camp" as the zone of
peace and the "capitalist camp" as the zone of war. I will leave it
to the specialists to calculate which - Islam or communism - can
claim the greater achievement as gigantic Christian-killing
machines.) In Islamic terms, we unsubdued Christians are harbi
, and as such we have no legitimate right to our lands, our
property, or even our lives, which by right belong not to us but to
the Muslims; that which we now have we enjoy only as long as Islam
has not (yet) become strong enough to impose Shari'a . As
the highly respected and influential 14th century authority Ibn
Taymiyya explained:
"These possessions [i.e., the things taken away from
the non-Muslims upon their conquest] received the name of fay
[war booty] since Allah had taken them away from the infidels
in order to restore (afa'a, radda) them to the Muslims.
In principle, Allah has created the things of this world only in
order that they may contribute to serving Him, since He created
man only in order to be ministered to. Consequently, the infidels
forfeit their persons and their belongings which they do not use
in Allah's service to the faithful believers who serve Allah and
unto whom Allah restitutes what is theirs; thus is restored to a
man the inheritance of which he was deprived, even if he had never
before gained possession."
It is worthy of note that this Ibn Taymiyya is
particularly revered by the Wahabi sect, which is the ruling
doctrine of Saudi Arabia; students at the Saudi-controlled Loudoun
Islamic Academy will no doubt receive benefit of such wisdom. But it
should not be thought that Ibn Taymiyya's sentiments are unique to
him. On the contrary, Bat Ye'or multiplies comparable passages from
Islamic sages of many times and locales, from the time of Muhammad
to the present day.
In the sweep of the long history of the Islamic assault on the
Christian world, it is sobering to consider how close the latter has
come to annihilation on more than one occasion. In the initial
offensive during the first decade after Muhammad's demise,
Christendom lost its birthplace in the Levant, with the front of the
East Roman Empire only being stabilized at the approaches to Asia
Minor. Meanwhile, the Arab armies swept west from conquered Egypt,
subduing the whole north coast of Africa and crossing into
Visigothic Spain in 711. They were finally stopped by the Franks
under Karl the Hammer at Poitiers in 732, the centenary of the
pseudo-Prophet's death. The conversion of the Turkish tribes to
Islam in the 9th century lent jihad renewed impetus; the
erosion and final collapse of East Roman power opened the eastern
door to Europe in the 14th century, and the Ottomans were turned
back only at the gates of Vienna in 1683. The site of the first high
water mark at Poitiers and the later one at Vienna are only some 700
miles apart - so narrow has been Christendom's brush with
extinction!
The Turkish defeat at Vienna marked the beginning of two
centuries of remission during which European technology,
particularly military technology, seemed to have resolved the
contest between the Cross and Crescent decisively in favor of the
former. During the 19th century, the Christian nations of the
Balkans - the only conquered Christian lands since the Spanish
reconquista in which the Muslims had not yet reduced the
indigenous population to a minority, as they had in Egypt and Syria,
or eliminated them utterly, as in the Maghreb - cast off their
Muslim masters, and by the end of the First World War, most of the
Muslim world (with the exceptions of the Arabian heartland itself
and of a truncated Turkey which had assumed the guise of the
modernizing, secular ideology of Kemalism) was subject to European
rule. But at the same time as Europe achieved its military and
geopolitical advantage, the moral and religious decline that
culminated in the autogenocides of 1914 and 1939 had become evident.
Having found in their grasp places their Crusader predecessors had
only dreamed of reclaiming - Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Antioch,
Alexandria, Constantinople - effete and demoralized European
governments made no effort to reChristianize them and within a few
decades meekly abandoned them.
The moral disarmament of contemporary post-Christian Europe in
its relations with Islam that began in the late 19th century has now
become near-universal. If in the more remote past Bourbon France had
made common cause with the Sublime Porte (the scandalous "union of
the Lily and the Crescent") against Habsburg Austria, the
arrangement at least had the virtue of cynical self-interest:
Catholic France was hardly expected to praise the sultan's
benevolence as part of the bargain. But by the 1870s, Disraeli's
obsession with thwarting Russian ambitions in the Balkans prompted
the Tories' unprecedented depiction of Turkey as tolerant and humane
even in the face of the Bulgarian atrocities; even so, Britain's
Christian conscience, prodded by Gladstone's passionate words, was
still sufficient to bring down Lord Beaconsfield's government in
1880.
After World War I, with the installation of nominally
"pro-Western" governments in many Muslim countries fashioned from
the wreckage of the Ottoman Empire, the West seems to have
definitively convinced itself of the existence of benign Islam.
Indeed, the promotion of "moderate" Muslim regimes, especially those
willing to make peace with Israel, and, even better, those that have
a lot of petroleum, has become a linchpin of U.S. global policy.
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Turkey, Pakistan, Morocco, the Gulf
States, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Nigeria, Indonesia and a few others have
become the darlings of U.S. policy, valued as supposed bulwarks
against "fundamentalism" of the Iranian variety (Iran itself having
lately been a member of the favored assembly).
Operationally, this means not only overlooking the radical
activities of the supposedly "moderate" Muslim states, for example,
Saudi Arabia's and Pakistan's support for the Taliban regime in
Afghanistan (whom even the Iranians denounce as dangerous fanatics),
and assistance by virtually the entire club to the thinly-disguised
radical regime in Sarajevo, but a consistent American bias in favor
of the Muslim party in virtually every conflict with a Christian
nation. The most prominent exception to date has been a pro-Armenian
tilt in the Nagorno-Karabakh question, a function of
Armenian-Americans' early cultivation of Congress, but it can be
expected that this anomaly will soon shift to Azerbaijan's favor
under the combined pressure of the Turkey/Israel lobby, of residual
Cold War antipathy for Russia (seen as Armenia's main protector),
and of American oil companies fixated on an energy El Dorado in the
Caspian Basin.
It is hardly a surprise that business executives who would sell
their grandmothers to Abdul Abulbul Amir for oil drilling rights
would see the world as a reflection of their balance sheets. Neither
is the parallel inclination of secular, socially progressive
opinion, which is viscerally anti-Christian. What is not so expected
is that so many western Christians, Americans in particular, are
willing to believe the worst about their eastern Christian cousins,
who, only lately freed from Islamic (and later, in most cases,
communist) servitude, are desperately attempting to avoid a repeat
of the experience. Today, when all of the Russian North Caucasus is
subject to plunder and hostage-taking razzias staged from
Shari'a-ruled Chechnya, when not just Nagorno-Karabakh but Armenia
proper is in danger of a repeat of 1915, when Cyprus and Greece
receive unvarnished threats to their territorial integrity on a
weekly basis for the offense of purchasing defensive weapons, and
when the borders of Serbia are rapidly approaching those of the
pashaluk of Belgrade to suit America's new-found friends in
Bosnia and Kosovo, organized Roman Catholic and Protestant sentiment
in America overwhelmingly sides with non- and anti-Christian elite
opinion in its pro-Muslim, anti-Orthodox tendency.
For example, in 1993 statements were issued by a number of Roman
Catholic, Protestant, and Anglican spokesmen in the United States
urging military intervention on behalf of the Islamic regime in
Sarajevo. "We are convinced that there is just cause to use force to
defend largely helpless people in Bosnia against aggression and
barbarism that are destroying the very foundations of society and
threaten large numbers of people," wrote the chairman of the U.S.
Catholic Conference, at a time when the Muslim beneficiaries of the
called-for intervention were not only roasting alive Serb POWs
impaled on spits but were slaughtering Roman Catholic Croats by the
hundreds in an offensive in central Bosnia. "What is going on in
Bosnia is genocide by any other name," observed a prominent Baptist
spokesman: "The ghosts of Auschwitz and Dachau have come back to
haunt us. If we do nothing we are morally culpable." "Those of us
who opposed the Gulf War believed that war was not the answer,"
opined the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, "but today we
find ourselves confronted with an evil war, the sure elimination of
which may be possible only by means of armed intervention." Thus did
high-minded guardians of the West's Christian integrity give their
blessing for NATO to assist the resumption of jihad in
Europe. Granted, they were themselves to some extent victims of the
melodramatic media coverage that has characterized the Balkan war,
but that's not much of an excuse. Who told them to believe
everything dished up by CNN?
On a previous occasion, I have noted that western anti-Orthodox
bias, which I have dubbed Pravoslavophobia, rarely means antipathy
for Orthodoxy as such. Most serious Protestants and Roman Catholic
often have a fairly positive attitude toward Orthodox Christianity
as a morally conservative and, especially, liturgically traditional
bulwark within the spectrum of Christian opinion. (In fact, one
leading Roman Catholic moral conservative who has called for
Christianity to unite with not only Judaism but Islam in an
"ecumenical jihad" against secularism, a common front in
"spiritual warfare," is explicit in his favorable attitude toward
Orthodoxy. But it is beyond me what spiritual values any Christian
has in common with someone whose idea of beatific bliss is boinking
an endless parade of the well-rounded houris said to
inhabit the Muslim paradise.) Perhaps it has been so long since
western Christians have had to physically defend themselves as
Christians (as opposed to Americans, Englishmen, Germans, etc.)
that they just don't understand those for whom it is a current
concern.
On the other hand, there are Westerners for whom antipathy is
based precisely on the traditional Orthodox character of the
front-line states bordering on Islam. Indeed, from this viewpoint,
the desire of these countries to not only avoid Islamization but
Westernization as well is a major count against them. For example,
one columnist, who has made something of a specialty of painting the
Orthodox as the villains in the conflicts with Islam (and who has
even made the bizarre accusation that poor, helpless Islamic Turkey
is threatened in Cyprus by the "burgeoning expansion" of an
"Orthodox Axis"!), has cast it as follows:
"The purposes of the Orthodox Church in Russia today
reflect most of its history. It wants to keep total power and
exclude from its midst any other belief systems or reflections of
conscience that might in any way threaten it. 'Through the Vatican
Council, the Roman Catholic Church came to terms with the modern
world,' the Denver-born Archbishop J. Francis Stafford, president
of the Pontifical Council for the Laity, mused with me. 'We
finally came to a willingness to test the waters of the
Enlightenment culture against the ancient traditions of faith. The
pope today is preoccupied with the relationship between freedom
and truth, which is one of the primary issues raised by the
Enlightenment.' That noble preoccupation unfortunately has not yet
traveled eastward and, indeed, there are no indicators that it
will do so. Meanwhile, it would be good for other Westerners who
still dream of rapid change in Russia to study the
Catholic-Orthodox case. It might instill in their hope a touch of
reality and also remind them that the historical Russian
propensity to protect power by remaining isolated and to keep out
all those 'foreigners' is hardly a thing of the past."
I defer to others as to what extent today's Roman Catholic
Church, as well as modern Protestantism, has indeed made its peace
with the Enlightenment's standard of what constitutes "freedom,"
which has largely translated into freedom from Christianity
altogether. (Indeed, the fruits of that kind of freedom will be
evident when the muezzin's call to prayer is heard five times a day
across Loudoun County.) But what is amazing about this passage is
that it is evidently "remaining isolated" that constitutes the
offense: Russia (and the same could be said for Greece, Serbia,
etc.) is wrong not because she wants to force her faith on the West
but because she does not want to adopt the West's "enlightened"
version of Christianity.
Though differing in the specifics, the overall attitude displayed
here is strongly reminiscent of that of the West toward the East
during the last great Islamic offensive in Europe as the dying
Byzantine, Bulgarian, and Serbian states faced Ottoman conquest in
the 15th century. The West then was explicit: we will help you only
if you renounce Orthodoxy in favor of Roman Catholicism. In today's
geopolitical context, when western churchmen join in calls for
military action by western governments against Orthodox countries to
help Muslims, Pope John Paul's calls for ecumenical dialogue and
eventual reunion of East and West, the topic of his encyclicals
Ut Unam Sint and Slavorum Apostoli , look
suspiciously familiar to eastern eyes. While this perception is
somewhat simplistic if only because the West today is no longer the
Roman Catholic monolith it once was, the larger question should not
be so easily dismissed: the Orthodox East is being told today that
unless they unquestioningly submit to the West's tutelage in
political, social, moral, and economic matters - the collective
"religion" of the Enlightenment heritage - they again will be thrown
to the wolves. In fact, the West will even help the wolves to devour
them.
The immorality, not to mention the stupidity, of this should be
obvious. Maybe Christians will never come to agreement on doctrinal
matters, maybe the East will insist on retaining its distinctive
religious and cultural heritage. But even if, broadly speaking, East
and West are never able to share a common Eucharistic chalice, does
that mean they must be enemies? Some seem to suggest: yes. Instead,
I submit that the survival of Christian Orthodox civilization in the
East should be hardly less important to the West than to the
Orthodox themselves, and indeed over the long term the West's own
fate may depend on it. The fact that the West cannot recognize this
reality is part of the same inability to recognize its own internal
vulnerability, with the forest of minarets going up mainly in
Western Europe but also now in North America.
Some Christians see the Muslim influx primarily as an opportunity
for evangelization, and indeed we should never neglect to share the
Gospel, the only real liberation, with Muslims, who should
not, as individuals, be held responsible for the violent system into
which they were born and of which they are perhaps more than anyone
else victims. At the same time, in light of the growing volume of
Muslim immigration, western Christians will soon find out - maybe
sooner than they think, given western birthrates - that confronting
the Islamic advance has become, as it has always been for eastern
Christians, a simple matter of physical survival. But by that time
it may be too late for the West as well.
This article was taken from Volume 13 of The
Christian Activist. Permission was given to the Orthodox
Christian Information to republish on the Web. |