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With Missionaries Spreading, Muslims' Anger Is Following (NYT sees missionaries deserving of death)
New York Times ^ | Dec. 31, 2002 | SUSAN SACHS

Posted on 12/31/2002 12:53:44 AM PST by twntaipan

As evangelical Christian emissaries have spread throughout the Muslim world, their presence has increasingly proved to be a lightning rod for anti-American sentiment while provoking the anger of native Christian sects and Islamic clerics.

The murder of three American missionaries yesterday at the hospital where they worked in Yemen, and the killing of another American missionary in southern Lebanon in November, underscored the dangers of working at the intersection of religion and politics.

The negative reaction is not limited to Muslim countries, but has been seen in Hindu-dominated nations like India, where a Christian missionary family was burned to death in an attack three years ago.

"With the rise of religious politics, missionaries come into the cross hairs of Muslim and Hindu fundamentalists," said Bernard Haykel, an assistant professor of Middle Eastern studies and history at New York University. "Certainly as the Arab and Muslim world has become more radicalized Islamically, people have become more aware of missionaries and more irritated by them."

Christian missionaries have been active across much of the Muslim Middle East for hundreds of years, at least as far back as the Crusades.

But successive generations of missionaries found that proselytizing to Muslims was a dangerous business. Under Muslim law, conversion from Islam is punishable by death.

Rather than enrage local authorities and risk their own deaths or expulsions, missionaries aimed for softer targets. American Protestant missionaries in the 19th century, for example, built universities and hospitals and tried to convert Coptic Christians in Egypt and Greek Orthodox Christians in Lebanon.

The Orthodox and Coptic churches, which have lived among Muslims for centuries, know how to cultivate their own flocks without threatening the political territory of Muslim rulers and clerics. The newly arrived evangelical Christian groups, in the view of these older indigenous churches, trample the unwritten rules.

In Lebanon, the Roman Catholic diocese and Muslim groups have accused the evangelical Christians of trying to convert Muslims. One bishop said Bonnie Penner Witherall, the missionary killed by a gunman last month, combined preaching about Christianity with the distribution of toys and food to Muslim children.

When the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan arrested eight Western evangelical Christian aid workers in 2001, they made similar accusations, saying the workers had been distributing Christian literature and should be killed. The eight were freed during the American attack on the Taliban, and later one acknowledged that they had shown Afghans a film about Jesus.

Proselytizing sects like the Southern Baptist Convention, which owns the hospital in Jibla, Yemen, where the missionaries were killed, have said they do not actively seek to convert people if prohibited by government authorities.

Jerry Rankin, president of the International Mission Board, which runs the missionary activities of the Southern Baptists, asserted that the missionaries in Jibla promoted Christianity by example.

"Our people naturally do respect the religious beliefs of others," said Mr. Rankin, "and they try to relate to people in a loving way through friendships and relationships."

Still, the hospital has not avoided entanglement in Yemen's religious politics. In 1995 it was accused by Islah, an opposition political party, of defaming Islam and proselytizing among Yemen's Muslims.

Although a court dismissed the charges, the incendiary message of the lawsuit was not lost on some of its local backers. The State Department, in its reports on human rights in Yemen, said Muslim hospital employees continued to be harassed by Islah members for several years.

More recently the number of volunteer missionaries has exploded, with some 7,000 college and high school students signing up for short-term evangelical missions overseas.

The Mission Board's Web site also boasts of a record number of baptisms — 395,773 so far this year — as a result of its foreign missionary work. "There is discussion on strategy changes, to become less institutional and to work primarily in church-planting and face-to-face evangelism," said Jack Graham, a Texas pastor and current president of the Southern Baptist Convention. "When you're up close and personal with someone hopefully they will believe in you."

In accordance with that strategy, Pastor Graham said, the Baptists have already decided to turn over their hospital in Yemen to a local Muslim group and shift resources to mobile clinics that would bring missionaries into contact with more Yemenis.

The missionaries who have died are martyrs, the pastor said. "This is not a conflict between religions but a conflict between God and Satan, between good and evil," he said. "We want to be sensitive to the political climate. We certainly want to work with governments where our missions have been placed and we don't want to create a political/religious crisis. But as far as the Southern Baptists are concerned, we will continue to express our love for God."


TOPICS: Extended News; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: christian; evangelical; imb; islah; islam; mission; missionary; muslim; southernbaptist; terrorism; yemen
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To: Congressman Billybob
Nope, I'd say you about covered it all!
41 posted on 12/31/2002 7:47:39 AM PST by twntaipan
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To: twntaipan
Can you imagine a story about Muslims killed in America being phrased in this manner by the Times?

As [Muslim immigrant] emissaries have spread throughout the [Western] world, their presence has increasingly proved to be a lightning rod for anti-[Muslim] sentiment while provoking the anger of [secular Muslims and Christian clerics.]

The murder of three [Muslims] yesterday at the [mosque] where they worked in [America], and the killing of another [Muslim] missionary in southern [England] in November, underscored the dangers of working at the intersection of religion and politics.

I don't think so. I think we can write the way that particular story would be written.

42 posted on 12/31/2002 8:03:50 AM PST by denydenydeny
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To: xm177e2
Islam-The Bridge to the Turd Century

Pray for W and the Truth

43 posted on 12/31/2002 8:04:17 AM PST by bray
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To: twntaipan
The NYTimes is the house-organ for the Left, always has been. And the Left is nothing more, really, than a religious cult. That is why it hates Christianity -- it's most powerful competitor. Which Islam certainly is not.
44 posted on 12/31/2002 8:16:07 AM PST by WaterDragon
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To: twntaipan; aristeides
Thank you for posting this. Yes, it is journalistic swill. Drinkable only by those oblivious to the smell, taste and substance of the internalized and putrid lies of the Left.

We must be careful in the attribution of motives here. Ms. Sachs' hit piece is 'spreading the blame around' as aristeides notes. However, most such newspaper editorializing, passed off as 'news,' does not entirely derive from a premeditated, carefully crafted strategy to promote the agenda of the Left. IT IS THE DEFAULT POSITION OF A PROGRAMMED MIND - SUCH OUTPUT IS ALL THAT CAN COME THROUGH THAT INTERNAL TEMPLATE. The blame spreading is partly intentional, but to a greater extent a picture of her patterning. Some of the operative indentities informing her internal syllogisms are: religious conviction = dumb, unthinking mindset; right wing = evil, close-minded; liberal = caring, accepting, creative, open-minded. She can thus lump all those manifesting a religious conviction together in the same pot. Wahabbi, Baptist, Mennonite....

Sachs is aware of the basic facts of the events, but utterly unable to place them in a larger moral context. If we could sit quietly with her over a glass of Cabernet, she would confess to a 'love of humanity;' an unwillingness to even conceive that one religion might be, well, right; etc. Adrift in a sea of moral relativism, her intellectual ship will not founder until it encounters a reality storm - to wit: 9/11 did succeed in waking a few liberals from their dreams. That said, I have seen some such liberal minds go to their graves without questioning, much less escaping the matrix of such 'thought.'

All of which bodes ill for us. The republic is in deep weeds with this garbage being touted as pate-de-fois-gras. The impact of 9/11 has already faded for most. I cannot imagine the magnitude of the event needed to awaken so many of our intellectual leaders from this slumber.

Blessings on Freepers Everywhere.
45 posted on 12/31/2002 8:22:56 AM PST by esopman
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To: 2sheep; Thinkin' Gal; aculeus; general_re; BlueLancer
Jews give hospital and other care to Muslims in Israel and don't evangelize at all and they are a target of murdering Muslims just *for existing.*

Excellent point. Jews do not proselytize, and they're in the crosshairs anyway.

46 posted on 12/31/2002 8:24:08 AM PST by dighton
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Comment #47 Removed by Moderator

To: twntaipan
"In Lebanon, the Roman Catholic diocese and Muslim groups have accused the evangelical Christians of trying to convert Muslims. "

Even Catholics gang up on Christians. How sad.

48 posted on 12/31/2002 9:14:21 AM PST by nmh
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To: Z.Hobbs
The question was not concerning Christians spreading the message but Protestant Christians attempting to convert Coptic and Orthodox Christians. Since they are already Christian, any attempts to convert them serves the interests of those attempting the conversion and their interests alone.
49 posted on 12/31/2002 9:40:42 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: Destro
...the many Protestant groups do proselytize in ways that are humble and not intrusive.

But why are they attempting to convert people who are already Christian? Because they do not consider Copts and Orthodox to be Christians.

50 posted on 12/31/2002 9:42:10 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: Yehuda
No. There is a difference, however, in forms of proselytizing which seek to undermine a native culture and those which don't. For the record, no missionary deserves to die.
51 posted on 12/31/2002 10:02:47 AM PST by Reedbird
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To: FormerLib
I have said before I find that disgusting.
52 posted on 12/31/2002 10:08:08 AM PST by Destro
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To: twntaipan
This Catholic wishes his own church were as vigorous in proselytizing the faith in that part of the world as the evanegicals seem to be.
53 posted on 12/31/2002 10:16:43 AM PST by The Iguana
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To: Reedbird
I find it curious that the NYTimes uses a travel writer to comment on something as serious as this. Having Susan Sachs comment on this subject is like having me commenting on the growth of reform Judaism in Israel. There are better people to do the job.
54 posted on 12/31/2002 10:24:43 AM PST by gaspar
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To: twntaipan
Under Muslim law, conversion from Islam is punishable by death.

Under God's Law, not converting from Islam (or from any other religion) to Christ is punishable by death,... but the punishment is at His Hand, in His Time, and in His Way, not man's!

55 posted on 12/31/2002 11:14:49 AM PST by Gritty
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To: twntaipan
I wish the New Yawk Slimes would figure it out that the difference between a Martyr and a Murderer is that Martyrs don't kill people for 'the faith'.
56 posted on 12/31/2002 11:23:30 AM PST by Darksheare
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To: MarMema
"The Orthodox and Coptic churches, which have lived among Muslims for centuries, know how to cultivate their own flocks without threatening the political territory of Muslim rulers and clerics. "

I have a Coptic friend from Egypt who says he wouldn't feel safe to go back there now.
57 posted on 12/31/2002 11:48:23 AM PST by Tymesup
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To: twntaipan
Careful Susan, your racism is showing!
58 posted on 12/31/2002 12:02:47 PM PST by TheDon
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To: twntaipan
I was listening to a pastor talking about how the spread of Christianity has been prevalent in muslim countries especially because of NAFTA, and is was one reason that radicals attacked the WTC and why they want to hurt our prospects around the world. They wanted to strike out at our freedom to spread the gospel worldwide which has been made possible the past several years. Many radical muslims have been persecuting Christians in third world countries at a
rate that has surpassed what happened to the Jews under Hitler.
59 posted on 12/31/2002 12:11:00 PM PST by hope
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To: MarMema; twntaipan; Destro; FormerLib; Stavka2
EGYPTIAN POLICE 'CRUCIFY' AND RAPE CHRISTIANS
60 posted on 12/31/2002 12:12:08 PM PST by F-117A
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