Posted on 09/01/2007 8:34:03 AM PDT by IrishMike
Radical Christianity is just as threatening as radical Islam in a country like America. Perhaps you remember that pearl from Rosie ODonnell, the perpetually agitated former co-host of The View. While few had put it quite so brusquely, ODonnells sentiment was hardly a novel one. A steady stream of books and films had for years demonized conservative Christians, attacking their rising influence in politics and on broader American life as heralding the establishment of a Christian theocracy.
It was against this backdrop of anti-Christian paranoia that CNN recently aired Gods Warriors, a mini-series that investigated what animates the most fervent followers of the worlds three major religions.
Ill spare you the details of the six hour mini-series and get right to the documentarys central message: Conservative Christians who pray in front of abortion centers and orthodox Jews who settle down to live in Israel pose as much of a threat to freedom-loving Americans as fanatical Muslims who preach hatred of all non-Muslims and send their children off to become suicide bombers. Gods Warriors trumpets the stale myth that what threatens America is not Islamic extremism but, more broadly, religious fundamentalism of all stripes.
But the notion that radical Christians are as much of a threat to America as radical Muslims is based on a false premise: that radical Christians should be feared.
Merriam Webster defines radical as: of or relating to the origin: fundamental and forming a basis or foundation. The foundation of Christianity is Jesus Christ and His injunction to love one another as I have loved you. In the Gospel of Matthew, a Pharisee tests Jesus with a question: Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law? Jesus replies, Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments. Love is the foundational virtue in Christians relationships with God and with other Christians and non-Christians alike.
But radical can also mean extreme, and Christians are explicitly called to an extreme, or radical, love, which, following the example of Jesus on the Cross, has at its core an authentic forgiveness that is to be extended even to our enemies. Understanding that love and forgiveness lie at the heart of Christian faith helps illuminate why Christians respond to attacks against their faith not with violent protests and murderous threats but by turning the other cheek.
Consider a recent case. When a New Jersey high school held a mock hostage emergency drill for their students, it chose to portray the terrorists as a group of fundamentalist Christians seeking justice after the daughter of one of its members had been expelled for praying before class. Students were further told that the terrorist group, called the New Crusaders, had already gunned down several students and had taken hostages in a classroom.
While the incident provoked the ire of many Christians, no violent protests were held and no death threats were issued. Instead, Christians wrote letters to the editors of their local newspapers and parents voiced their displeasure by writing to the schools principal and the citys mayor.
Perhaps the best recent example of radical Christianity was on display in the wake of the Amish school massacre last fall, when mentally disturbed milk truck driver Charles Roberts stormed the West Nickel Mines Amish School in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and tied up and shot 10 girls before killing himself.
What the nation saw in the aftermath of this unfathomable rampage was the core of Christianity, a Christ-like love and forgiveness. While undoubtedly overwhelmed with feelings of anger and sorrow, the entire Amish community immediately forgave Roberts for his crimes. How did they do it? As one Amish leader explained, We forgive because God has forgiven us. God extends his forgiveness to us in Christ, then, we must receive it. Once we do, we must share it with others.
For Christians, forgiving ones enemies is not to agree with what they do, or to be deluded into thinking they are nice people when they are not. It means hating the sin but loving the sinner. Anyone would hate what Roberts did. His actions were evil, and love does not diminish our hatred of those acts. In fact, Christians are called to hate the sin precisely because we love the person. And our hate for the sin deepens when we realize what it has done to a person whom God loves and values beyond our comprehension.
In the wake of the school shootings, many commentators seemed surprised that the family and friends of the victims were able to forgive someone who had committed such unspeakable acts of violence. Some even suggested that it was wrong for them to show such forgiveness. But the communitys response was the essence of the Christian message. When God commands us to love one another as I have loved you, He means exactly that. Is it radical? Yes. Is it a threat to America? Hardly.
Radical Christians dont saw the heads off of contractors, honor kill their female family members, and detonate their own kids for political reasons. End of story..
A “radical Christian” is a Christian who lives faithfully to the Gospel of Jesus. What comes to mind is (Blessed) Mother Teresa of Calcutia, who despite the dark nights of her soul, she lived out her faith in Christ by serving the poor and dying. Or the Rev. Billy Graham who preached the Gospel in season and out of season.
Why CNN would try to put both the Jewish/Christian faiths in a bad light is beyond me.
I think radical Christians live their life completely by the Bible. They don’t convert people by force. They try to convert people by reason.
Why... ?
Except for a few isolated incidents and terrorist acts related to N. Ireland, there has been no religious-based Christian terrorism for hundreds of years. Contrast that with daily, ongoing Muslim terrorism and decide which is the religion of peace.
I dunno, I thought she looked much better before she had the beard shaved off...
Northern Ireland is even a little more complicated than that. English (protestants) versus Irish (Catholics).
The religious aspect is secondary to the nationalistic aspect.
The one on her back?
And neither the Irish or the English acted “christian”; that is they did not live the commands of Christ. There are RINOs
(Republican in name only) and CINOs (Christian in name only)
And even those Irish Catholic/Protestant clashes were mostly about politics, not religion.
Now you can see why they're nicknamed the "Communist News Network." To state it in simple terms, they're in rebellion against God.
Not that it’s equivalent in any way to islamic irrational hate-
but many admirers of the peacable Amish fail to recognize their problems and peccadillos-
like forgiving murderers - but shunning and expelling from the Amish community their own family members who choose to abandon the simple life
CNN was formerly owned by Ted Turner, a bigoted atheist who would openly ridicule CNN staffers who showed up at work with Ash Wednesday ashes on their foreheads.
CNN is also the same so called "news" network that covered up torture and abuse under Saddam's regime so that they could maintain their Baghdad bureau in the 1990s.
They have an agenda that is quite contrary to in the interests of the US government and its citizens.
Now I can fully understand why that had long ago earned that title.
“They dont convert people by force. They try to convert people by reason.”
I think a simplier explanation than this is possible. The “conversion” of a person to “saving” belief in Jesus Christ is an act of God. It is God, in the person of the Holy Spirit, that brings this about. Belief or non-belief is between the individual and God. My only real function as a Christian in the “conversion” of others is to proclaim the message (as commanded in scripture) and then leave it in God’s hands to do the converting. “I” can’t “convert” anyone - only God can.
That’s exactly right. Only God can save. We can present but the Holy Spirit convicts them of the truth and their need for Christ.
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