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Would You Die For Your Faith?
The Spectator ^ | 10 Novem., 2001 | Katie Grant

Posted on 11/09/2001 12:18:53 PM PST by Romulus

At the risk of being accused of treason and sedition - not a novel thing in my family - I admit to having a certain admiration for the young fundamentalist Muslims, with their east London or northern accents, eschewing home comforts to go off to fight for the faith of their fathers. They face the privations of cave-dwelling, the dangers of mortal conflict, and an uncertain welcome if they survive and return to Plaistow, Luton, Crawley, Birmingham or Burnley.

I'm not sure about the other places, but Burnley is no stranger to treason and sedition. My family comes from there. Our home, Towneley Hall (now owned by the Burnley Corporation), was once a centre of that other fundamentalist religion, recusant Catholicism. After the saying of Mass became illegal in 1559, we, too, were viewed with the deepest suspicion for having allegiances that ranked above Queen, country or government.

John Towneley, my ancestor, was heavily fined by Elizabeth I's Inquisition Council, and went to prison several times. Eventually, in order that his 14 children should not have the satisfaction of claiming for their father a martyr's crown, John was released from prison, mortally sick and almost blind, to be confined instead to his Towneley estates. His friend Sir Thomas Fitzherbert, from whom I am descended on my mother's side, was also stubbornly Catholic. He died in the Tower.

Ever since I can remember, therefore, the idea of dying for your faith has been held up as a pretty splendid, if not heroic, thing to do. And Towneley heroes were not confined to the Reformation. Hearing Mass in the tiny oratory built on to the end of our drawing-room at Dyneley - the house in which the Towneley bailiff used to live and where John and his family heard Mass in secret using an altar that could be folded up to look like a wardrobe - my five sisters, my brother and I often found ourselves sitting next to a small and very ancient leather frame enclosing a piece of hair. The legend reads, 'My cousin Frank Towneley's haire, who suffered for his prince August 10th 1746'. His prince was Bonnie Prince Charlie (his brother was the prince's tutor), and Uncle Frank was eventually hanged, drawn and quartered for his part in trying to restore a Catholic monarch to Britain. For many years my family kept Uncle Frank's severed head in a basket and passed it round after dinner.

So when I hear people such as the 22-year-old accountant Mohammed Abdullah from Luton saying, 'Our religious duty comes before everything else', it has a certain resonance. Of course, Mr Abdullah's religious and social history is entirely different from mine. Since Charles Martel's victory at the Battle of Poitiers in 732 - a battle that spared my family and the rest of the people on these islands the prospect of Christian martyrdom in the 8th century - Islam and Christianity have gone their separate ways. Had that battle been lost, as Gibbon tells us, 'the Koran would now be taught in the schools of Oxford and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people the sanctity and truth of the revelation of Mohammed'.

In the event it took the crisis precipitated by Henry VIII to set the English the ultimate test. When the Christian schism came, martyrs were, of course, claimed on both sides. Many, for example the Norfolks, cannily swayed with the wind. They were well rewarded. Families such as mine, who stuck willy-nilly to their guns, were derided as misguided fundies, traitors who were quite out of step with the more doctrinally enlightened and modern times in which they were living.

My family remains in many ways defined by its history. So, when I hear adjectives that once would have applied to us being applied now to keen young Muslims, it is impossible not to feel a certain frisson.

Moreover, I have found myself wondering if I, despite the recusant blood running through my veins, would rise, like 26-year-old Abu Yahya from Plaistow, to the challenge of defending my religion if called to do so. Would you? To push this question even further, if we were invaded by an Islamic state, would you, in order to save your life and the lives of your children, bow your head and perform the Salat if told to do so? Is not the fact that Muslims find this question (with appropriate reversals) easier to answer than Christians rather shocking?

It is perfectly true that Christians are specifically forbidden to seek martyrdom, something that caused Sir Thomas More mental agonies when awaiting his inevitable execution. But there is a difference between seeking martyrdom and accepting death. The 11 September hijackers (or the ones who knew the game plan) and the Muslims who are now clamouring to suffer in the service of Allah would not qualify for martyrdom under Christian definitions. Christians believe that seeking martyrdom is a wicked thing since it denotes the sin of pride.

But it is not fear of the sin of pride that would stop the British being martyrs now; it is the sin of indifference. Moreover, I have a suspicion that, faced with the threat 'convert or die', the instincts of even Catholic and Anglican bishops would be to compromise.

Since Vatican II, Catholics could certainly do so. Indeed, some commentators, such as the French academician Jean Guitton, appear to believe that Catholicism has no specific doctrine to advance; it should merely assist in deepening individual perceptions of God. The days of exclusivity are gone. What all contemporary Christians should be working towards is a relativist interpretation of religion in which the form of your worship matters less than the depth of your spiritual experience. In times in which, according to the Vatican II Decree on Missions, Ad Gentes, 'nova exsurgit humanitatis conditio', Christians should play down uniqueness.

I think it was this new emphasis on syncretism that inspired Cardinal Lustiger, then Archbishop of Paris, to declare in 1981, 'I am a Jew. For me the two religions are one.' He was, naturally, immediately contradicted by the Chief Rabbi, but you cannot say that the cardinal was not trying. Who knows what Monsignor Georges Darboy, one of his predecessors in the archiepiscopal chair would have thought? It is little more than a century since his martyrdom in the Paris commune.

And where does this kind of thinking leave me and my fundamentalist sympathies? Out of kilter, it seems, with the Christian world. For, while I have no wish to be martyred or to engage in religious wars, it seems an enviable thing to have something beyond worldly considerations for which you would be prepared to lay down your life.

Of course, some of those young men rushing off to Afghanistan are full of nonsense. Of course, some are using Islam as a peg on which to hang rather less noble ambitions than to die for Allah's sake. But Islam has retained something that Christianity has lost: an ability to summon people to its support and not have them ask, 'What on earth for?'

Some people may feel that what I deem a loss is actually Christianity's gain; that indifference is better than fundamentalism. But, as I watch the Abduls and Aftabs go to meet their fates, I think about John Towneley and Uncle Frank. It is probably a treasonable thought, but it may be that, although I disagree with the causes that would-be Muslim martyrs are espousing, in the fibre of my being I have more in common with them than with many of my apparently more sophisticated friends and neighbours.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: michaeldobbs
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Ladies and Gentlemen: The King over the water!
1 posted on 11/09/2001 12:18:53 PM PST by Romulus
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To: Romulus
Die for my faith? No. Live for my faith! Yes.
2 posted on 11/09/2001 12:26:19 PM PST by svcw
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To: svcw
If these young Muslims would live their faith, the world would be a better place.
3 posted on 11/09/2001 12:27:55 PM PST by TheDon
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To: Romulus
BTTT
4 posted on 11/09/2001 12:29:57 PM PST by Hail Caesar
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To: Romulus
Many Americans would die for Christ just as readily as many Muslims would die for Muhammad.

It's not dying for the faith which is really the issue - it's killing for it: a duty the faith does not require.

The author's ancestors, the recusants, were truly noble because they died for assisting at the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, not for assisting at the unholy sacrifice of innocent civilians.

5 posted on 11/09/2001 12:36:24 PM PST by wideawake
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To: Romulus
What do you think, Romulus? Maybe 25% of American Christians who would SAY they would die for their Faith and maybe 10% who actually WOULD?

I'd like to think I'd be in that 10%, but I don't think any of us really knows until the summons comes.

6 posted on 11/09/2001 12:37:32 PM PST by Dominus Vobiscum
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To: Romulus
My objective would be to make others die for their faith,as for myself Id accept Allah and make any apologies later and join a resistance movement,people have a habit of being more useful alive.
7 posted on 11/09/2001 12:38:30 PM PST by Governor StrangeReno
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To: Romulus
If you will remember,Christ lamented for the Zealots. He loved them but was sad at their futility. The problem with fundamentalist is that they have become PART of the world. And in some cases (Taliban etc etc) actually pervert the meaning of God and his benevolence.

I'm still waiting for a follower of Islam to tell me if the religion follows the 10 Commandments. My guess is no, since Moses was a Jew and led the Jews to Israel. ( With a lot of complaining by the people) A perfect example of how even when GOD fed the people they were not happy. And we are suppose to believe all the USA has to do is feed clothe and house all Arabs and everything will be hunky dory. Yeah right!

8 posted on 11/09/2001 12:40:56 PM PST by marty60
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To: Romulus
That's already been posted & hashed over.

The problem is that the author confuses dying for one's faith with making someone else die for theirs. BIG difference.

9 posted on 11/09/2001 12:41:45 PM PST by ctdonath2
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To: wideawake
It's not dying for the faith which is really the issue - it's killing for it: a duty the faith does not require.

Exactly! My own grandfather died for his faith. He was mrdered by the Stalinist regime for being a Rusian Orthodox preist. HE was a true martyr for the Faith. Those that murder others in the name of God are frauds and only worship the Evil One...(even if they do not realize it).

10 posted on 11/09/2001 12:42:26 PM PST by ninachka
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To: Dominus Vobiscum
I have fond memories of the late Harold Cohen, SJ. He was a frail and soft-voiced priest who sometimes expressed a desire for martyrdom. When his friends objected -- "Harold, you don't have the constitution for that! You could never be tortured!" -- he was quick to respond: "Oh, I don't want to be tortured! I just want to be shot!"


11 posted on 11/09/2001 12:47:13 PM PST by Romulus
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To: marty60; ninachka
I have a theory that, for hatred of Abraham, the evil one persecutes his children by tempting them to defective faith (Jews and Christians), or else to disordered, irrational faith (Arabs).
12 posted on 11/09/2001 12:52:16 PM PST by Romulus
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To: svcw
Die for my faith? No. Live for my faith! Yes.

But now put yourself in the place of a person who's confronted by a Moslem with a sword, and you've got the choice to convert or die (or worse, watch your children die).

Would you "convert" to Islam, or die a Christian?

Harder question: come Judgement day, how would it go over with Jesus if you pretend to publicly convert while remaining a Christian at heart?

I've been asking myself those questions, and while it's easy to say I'd die, like the author I have my doubts. Not about Christianity, but about my own strength of faith.

I find myself leaning on "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil...."

13 posted on 11/09/2001 12:55:18 PM PST by r9etb
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To: Romulus
y e s
14 posted on 11/09/2001 1:06:51 PM PST by 1 FELLOW FREEPER
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To: Romulus
"Let us here observe, that a religion that does not require the sacrifice of all things never has power sufficient to produce the faith necessary unto life and salvation; for, from the first existence of man, the faith necessary unto the enjoyment of life and salvation never could be obtained without the sacrifice of all earthly things. It was through this sacrifice, and this only, that God has ordained that men should enjoy eternal life; and it is through the medium of the sacrifice of all earthly things that men do actually know that they are doing the things that are well pleasing in the sight of God. When a man has offered in sacrifice all that he has for the truth's sake, not even withholding his life, and believing before God that he has been called to make this sacrifice because he seeks to do his willl, he does know, most assuredly, that God does and will accept his sacrifice and offering, and that he has not, nor will not seek his face in vain. Under these circumstances, then, he can obtain the faith necessary for him to lay hold on eternal life."
-- Joseph Smith, Lectures On Faith 6:7

15 posted on 11/09/2001 1:07:46 PM PST by CubicleGuy
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To: r9etb
Would you "convert" to Islam, or die a Christian?

Once a Christian always a Christian; I could no more lose my salvation than I could give it back to the One who gave it to me. Therefore, "conversion" to Islam would not be possible.

We should follow the example of the teen girl (I don't recall her name) in Littleton, Colorado, who was asked by one of the two shooters, "Do you believe in God?" She stood facing them and said, "Yes!" Then they shot her dead.

Whatever happens, I will die a Christian, and in that instant I will forevermore be present with the Lord.

16 posted on 11/09/2001 1:12:06 PM PST by Florida native
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To: Romulus
...if we were invaded by an Islamic state, would you, in order to save your life and the lives of your children, bow your head and perform the Salat if told to do so?

Of course a Brit would answer "Yes."

Speaking as an American who is not altogether unhandy with a high-powered rifle, I believe I would have a different response.

17 posted on 11/09/2001 1:26:53 PM PST by brbethke
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To: brbethke
I see. So your view is that there's no such thing as a martyr -- only apostates and unsuccessful resistors?
18 posted on 11/09/2001 1:38:38 PM PST by Romulus
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To: Romulus
I have heard that one of the kids that was killed at the high school tragedy in Colorado was asked if she were a Christian. One of the punk kid murderers shot her when she said yes. i and many have thought if in the same situation I'd say no to save my life. NO I am a Christian. I will not abuse you for your beliefs, but I will defend my right to have mine. I am a proud Christian.
19 posted on 11/09/2001 1:41:05 PM PST by Joe Boucher
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To: Romulus
Already posted, FWIW.
20 posted on 11/09/2001 1:43:24 PM PST by untenured
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