Tag: Crusades

  • Reconciliation of Christians and Muslims

    Reconciliation of Christians and Muslims

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    In April, 1096 AD, Christians left from the cathedral in what is now Cologne, Germany and walked across Europe bringing many tears of sorrow to the eyes of many Muslims in their path. They called it a Crusade. Exactly 900 years later, on Easter Sunday, 1996, about 150 Christians left from the same cathedral to begin a second walk across that same route, but this time they brought wide smiles and tears of joy to many Muslims.

    Their first stop was a Turkish Mosque. The leader, Lynn Green of YWAM (Youth With A Mission) read an apology to the gathered Muslims apologizing for the atrocities of the Crusades.

    The Muslims broke into spontaneous, load applause for a long time. The leader of the mosque, the Imam, joyfully exclaimed, “When I heard the nature of your message, I was astonished and filled with hope. I thought to myself, ‘whoever had this idea must have had an epiphany, a visit from God himself. It is my wish that this project should become a very great success.”

    That same Imam later told a participant that many Muslims were beginning to examine their sins against Christians and Jews. He said that their example would encourage them how to act in a similar way about the sins of the past. He promised to tell the other 250 mosques in Europe.

    One participant told this writer that as they came into Istanbul, the chief imam of the city came out to greet them with open arms. In an excited voice, he shouted, “Welcome! No Christian has ever come to apologize to us in 1000 years! You are the first. We welcome you!

    Others report Turkish policemen weeping when they heard of this apology. This was a common reaction by many Muslims to this request for forgiveness from the itinerant Christians who walked the entire route of over 2000 miles in rotating shifts of several dozen at a time. About 2,000 Christians from 27 countries participated in this walk wearing T-shirts and caps that say “I apologize” in Arabic or Hebrew.

    About 500 participants reached Jerusalem on July 15, 1999, the 900th anniversary of the killing of about 60,000 Jerusalem residents and the destruction of the city.

    Here is the text of that historic apology:

    Nine hundred years ago, our forefathers carried the name of Jesus Christ in battle across the Middle East. Fuelled by fear, greed and hatred, they betrayed the name of Christ by conducting themselves in a manner contrary to His wishes and character.

    The Crusaders lifted the banner of the Cross above your people. By this act, they corrupted its true meaning of reconciliation, forgiveness and selfless love.On the anniversary of the first Crusade, we also carry the name of Christ. We wish to retrace the footsteps of the Crusaders in apology for their deeds and in demonstration of the true meaning of the Cross.

    We deeply regret the atrocities committed in the name of Christ by our predecessors. We renounce greed, hatred and fear, and condemn all violence done in the name of Jesus Christ.Where they were motivated by hatred and prejudice, we offer love and brotherhood. Jesus the Messiah came to give life.

    Forgive us for allowing His name to be associated with death. Please accept again the true meaning of the Messiah’s words:”The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because He has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.” As we go, we bless you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ

    font – http://www1.cbn.com/reconciliation-christians-and-muslims

  • ARE MUSLIMS THEIR OWN WORST ENEMIES?

    ARE MUSLIMS THEIR OWN WORST ENEMIES?

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

    Okay, so I am writing on a subject that has been written on by journalists and academics all over the world.  Still, I think I have some helpful things to say.

    Anyone who knows me knows that I have Muslim friends, have advocated on their behalf, have apologised to Muslims for the atrocities of the Crusades and the way Christianity has misrepresented Jesus, and have pointed out that the extremists do not represent the majority or even a statistically significant minority.  I do not believe that they are a true representation of Islam today.

    However, the Muslim community does have a problem.  They are being represented by that very small minority; at least partly because our press trains the cameras on them and holds the microphones to their mouths.  But it is not all the fault of our press; Muslims have also failed to understand and implement their most important priority in this time of great danger.

    Muslims turned out in their hundreds of thousands in many nations to demonstrate against the cartoons of Charlie Hebdo. At the same time, in the week or so that elapsed between the massacre at the offices of the satirical newspaper and its next edition, a number of horrific and highly offensive events occurred:  Muslim extremists executed, by stoning, women accused of adultery—and videoed it for the world to see.  They threw two men accused of being homosexuals from the top of a building, with a baying crowd watching below.  They cold-heartedly executed more prisoners of the war they initiated and, in at least one case, the executioner was a child.  The Saudi Arabian authorities continued with the weekly instalments of lashes of a cane to the back of a man who dared to criticise Islam and the Saudi Royal Family.  His sentence was prison and 1,000 lashes!

    But there were no demonstrations against any of these acts of terror.

    So what incensed them so much against the cartoons of Charlie Hebdo and the Danish cartoons published a few years ago?  They have a very strong aversion to any depiction of Mohammed.  It is very similar to the Jews and the Old Testament commandment that they should make no image of God.  This is very important to them.  It is a sin as heinous as making an idol was to the Jews.

    I understand that as a Christian.  I was very offended quite a long time ago when play writes and film-makers seemed to be doing their best to offend Christians by depicting Jesus in various degrading ways.  At the time, we had blasphemy laws in the UK, but the “entertainers” seemed to know that they had powerful figures in the establishment on their side so they fought their indictments for blasphemy right up to the highest courts and had the result they had aimed for from the start—the blasphemy laws were struck down.

    I wrote letters, I contacted my elected representative, I signed petitions, but we lost.  Part of me is now okay with that because it is very hard for the law to define what language is acceptable and what is not.  When the law begins to describe what we can say and what we can’t, we are liable to lose important freedoms and to give more power to the state than we should.  Of course, there are some words and subjects that “the powers that be” have decided are currently off limits.

    For example, when I was a child we had a little saying when we were playing a game that needed someone to be “it”.  Eenie meanie, minie mo, catch a ni***r by the toe….  It was all very innocent and actually did not affect our attitudes towards African Americans in our school.  Notice that I can’t write that word now.  (I can write the F-word, which I could not write then, but I would rather not.)  Political correctness changes constantly because….well, that will have to be saved for another blog.

    So, should there be laws against depicting Mohammed?  If so, surely we should reinstate the blasphemy laws that applied to the Christian faith. But, with the benefit of hindsight, I would rather we did not have blasphemy laws, so I don’t want a law against depicting Mohammed.  In the effort to stop offensive speech, we can easily create laws that end up giving away precious freedoms.

    There are, however, many things that we are wise to avoid, even though they are legal.  I do not approve of this current issue of Charlie Hebdo, with its drawing of Mohammed.  It exacerbates already strained relations between Muslims and most citizens of Western nations.  In a civilized society, those who have the privilege of a public voice should not use it to intentionally offend a large segment of society that already feels marginalised.

    But, I said that Muslims have a problem.  Indeed, they do.  Though the majority deeply disapprove of the violence being done in the name of Islam, they have not managed to get their voice heard.  That is partly the fault of the press that we all read, listen to and watch.  But it seems to me that it is also a case of misplaced loyalty.  There is a deep sense of commitment that Muslims should stand with Muslims whenever there are accusations or attacks from outside the Ummah (the global Muslim community).

    But Truth trumps loyalty, at least it should do.  When we are loyal to those whom we know to be wrong, we become promoters of wickedness.

    My hope and prayer is that non-violent Muslims all over the world will face the fact that their failure to get their voice heard is not only too bad, but it is a great threat to them.  I deplore the idea that Western citizens should rise up against Muslims, but voices like mine can’t really accomplish very much.  We need to see hundreds of thousands of Muslims taking to the streets all over the world to demonstrate in condemnation of Islamic State, of Boko Haram, of Al Shabbab, Al Qaeda and all the other splinter groups whose violent depravity, expressed in the name of Allah is causing so much pain, loss and global anxiety.

    When they do, our press must cover it and make it high profile news!

  • Reconciliation Walk: The Inside Story

    Reconciliation Walk: The Inside Story

     

    **This is a personal website and reflects my thoughts and convictions. It does not represent any official position held by Youth With A Mission.**

     

    The “Reconciliation Walk” was one of the greatest adventures of my life and I love telling the story. Here it is in three twenty minute segments…