While
presenting on where I was headed and what I would be doing to churches and
family and friends a couple summers ago, I was surprised at the level of
fear/alarm present in the reactions of some when they heard I was going to a
region predominantly Muslim. I blame a lot of this on the American press. I also think we are scared of the things we
don’t know about or understand. Jim Denison is a pastor and founder of the
Denison Forum of Truth and Culture in Dallas, TX. He has extensively studied
Christian-Muslim relations. I receive a
devotional he writes based on world events by email. This month, he is writing
his blog based on readers’ questions. I thought this one would be good to
repost here- I hope you learn how to better pray for our Muslim friends, coworkers,
and neighbors.
Why Is Islam Growing in the
West?
The global Muslim population
will grow by 35 percent over the next 20 years, from 1.6 billion to 2.2
billion by 2030. This reader's
question seems relevant today: "Why are Westerners drawn to Islam?" Other readers ask similar questions:
"What is the contrast between salvation by grace vs. works in
Islam? And what is a true comparison
between Islam and the Bible?" How
should Christians respond?
Let's take the second
question first. "Islam" is
typically translated "submission," in this case to the will and
laws of Allah (the Arabic word for "God"). These laws are often summarized as the
"five pillars of Islam."
First is the
"witness" (shahadah), declaring that "there is no God but God
and Muhammad is his prophet."
Second are the prayers (salat), five times a day facing Mecca. Third is hajj, the holy pilgrimage to
Mecca, the birthplace of the Prophet Muhammad. Fourth is fasting (sawm) during Ramadan,
the month when the first revelation of the Qur'an was given to Muhammad in AD
610. Fifth is alms-giving (zakat), at
least 2.5 percent of one's goods to the poor.
Here's the point: no Muslim
can know if he or she has kept these laws well enough to be granted a place
in paradise. By contrast, the Bible
teaches: "by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the
gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast" (Ephesians
2:8-9). In religion, we try to climb
up to God. In Christianity, God climbs
down to us.
Why would a works-based
religion be popular in Western culture today?
Actually, the vast majority of "new" Muslims in Europe and
America are immigrants or children of Muslims. Only 20,000 Americans convert to Islam each
year, a number smaller than one of several megachurches in the Dallas
area. Since the Muslim birthrate in
Europe is three times higher than non-Muslims, it's easy to see why Islam is
growing on the Continent. But its
works-righteousness is not the primary reason why.
What about Islam and the
Bible? Muslims are taught that God
revealed himself in the Old and New Testaments, but Jews and then Christians
corrupted his revelation; so he revealed himself a final time in the Qur'an,
which is his "pure" revelation to mankind. Actually, textual scholars are convinced
that the Old and New Testaments we have today are almost identically the same
as the original manuscripts. However,
not long after Muhammad's death, so many different versions of the Qur'an
existed that Caliph Uthman ordered all but one version destroyed. As a result, no Muslim can really know if
the Qur'an he or she reads today is consistent with the original.
Let's close with my favorite story regarding
the grace of Christianity. An elderly
professor of world religions surprised his colleagues by declaring his
commitment to Christ. He explained:
"It was as if I had fallen into a deep, abandoned well. Muhammad came by and told me it was the
will of Allah that I be in this well, then he left. The Buddha came by and told me if I would
cease desire I would cease to suffer in the well, then he left. A Hindu teacher came by and told me if I
was faithful in the well I would escape through reincarnation, then he
left. Confucius came by and told me if
I'd not tripped I would not be in the well, then he left. Jesus came by, saw me, and got into the
well with me. That is why I am a
Christian."
Why do you need such grace
today?
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