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Christians Pray That Muslims Find Jesus
Evangelicals choose Ramadan
to target Islamic Nations
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, September 22, 2006
When Muslims begin the holy month
of Ramadan this weekend, Christians worldwide will be praying along with them.
But Muslims may not welcome the support. In a campaign called the ''30 Days
Muslim Prayer Focus,'' Christians will be asking God to help Muslims accept
Jesus.
The project is organized by a
loose association of evangelical groups that include Youth With A Mission, which
works in about 150 countries. In the U.S., the National Association of
Evangelicals is asking the thousands of churches and ministries it represents to
participate.
Lynn Green, international chairman
of Youth With A Mission, said organizers chose Ramadan because it is a time when
Muslims pray for God's acceptance and guidance and ''we add our prayers to
theirs,'' Green said. ''We are praying they really know God.''
Many Muslims and others consider
campaigns like these offensive in both their timing and goals, especially in
light of religious tensions over the global fight against terror. Pope Benedict
XVI is still trying to quell the violence that followed his recent speech citing
a Byzantine emperor who called some Islamic teachings ''evil and inhuman.''
Yet, Christians say they are only
doing what Muslims do.
Like Christianity, Islam is a
missionary faith, teaching that Muslims are following the true path and
directing them to introduce others to their beliefs. Christians say that instead
of trying to silence each other, both faiths should find a way to live together
peacefully despite their competing religious mandates.
''We believe on both sides from
our Scriptures that we have a message for all humankind, so that witnessing by
word and deed needs to be part of both of our ways of living and acting and
conversing with others,'' said Dudley Woodberry, a leading Christian scholar of
Islam and professor at Fuller Theological Seminary, an evangelical school in
Pasadena, Calif.
''However, we are both told to do
this in a gracious way,'' Woodberry said.
On their Web site, the evangelical
organizers write in boldface that ''it is not our intention with this prayer
focus to disparage Islam.'' Instead, they say, as Christians, they want all
people to have a chance to ''understand and consider the grace of God incarnated
in Jesus Christ.''
The National Association of
Evangelicals wrote in its Web posting that ''Christians must resist the
temptation to be caught up in generalizations, anger, hate or fear toward all
Muslims,'' and should instead learn about and pray for them through the
campaign.
A prayer booklet is used to
explain Muslim teachings and Muslim groups worldwide. Each day, participants
learn about an Islamic community -- Kazakhstan, Libya, Geneva -- then pray for
the Muslims and Christians there.
''This is a very constructive
tool, instead of hating or fearing or being angry,'' said Paul Filidis, director
of the campaign. ''It's hard to hate people you pray for.''
Yet, for many Muslims, no amount
of sensitivity can excuse what they see as a challenge to their religion during
one of its most sacred periods.
Imam Yahya Hendi, Muslim chaplain
at Georgetown University, said he believes that true followers of Jesus would
not pray for conversion, but would instead demonstrate their faith through good
works.
''Mother Teresa did not go out to
pray for people to convert to Christianity,'' said Hendi, who reads part of the
Gospels daily. ''She took care of the poor and that's what made people love
Christianity.
But Jamal Badawi, an Islamic
scholar and professor emeritus at Saint Mary's University in Halifax, Nova
Scotia, said he cannot deny Christians the right to pray for him, since he also
prays that they embrace Islam.
''I know that in many cases people
really have that sincere desire in their hearts to pray for other people who
cannot see the truth the way they see it,'' Badawi said. ''It doesn't offend me
that someone looks upon it that way.''
The prayer campaign began 15 years
ago, as Christians were focusing more mission resources on Islamic nations.
Organizers have not done much advertising, partly out of concern about Muslim
reaction.
Within the United States, the
campaign still has a very low profile among the millions of evangelicals. After
the Sept. 11 attacks, North American orders for the prayer book jumped from the
usual 25,000 to more than 80,000, then soon decreased, Filidis said.
But in the past couple of years,
interest has grown again, with about 70,000 prayer booklets expected to be
shipped this year, he said. There are no worldwide figures on participation, but
the prayer book is being distributed in local languages in more than 30
countries.
Note from Islam
For Today editor
See for yourself what they are up
to. Obviously we do not endorse the material contained in the link below.
We offer it in a "know your enemy" spirit so that Muslims who encounter these
proselytising Evangelicals may educate themselves as to their methods.
Forewarned is forearmed.
Muslim prayer campaign:
http://www.30daysprayer.com/muslim/
Turn the tables on them with these
recommended books by convert to Islam and Islam For Today contributor
Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood
The Mysteries of Jesus: A
Muslim Study of the Origins and Doctrines of the Christian Church by
Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood
Hardback; 304 pages | ISBN: 0953805662
Paperback; 304 pages | ISBN: 0953805670
A fascinating read which delves
into Christian and Islamic viewpoints on the Prophet Jesus. The author provides
a coherent and logical argument behind why much of the early 'Christian'
teachings as taught by Jesus were lost so soon after he had 'left us', and why
so much of modern Christian theology is little more than a mish-mash of pagan
beliefs and political manoeuvring on the part of the early Christians. A great
read for anyone interested in who Jesus really was and the conflicts between the
teachings of Jewish Christians (including James, the brother of Jesus), the
Trinitarian Christianity of Paul, and the Unitarian Christianity which prevailed
in much of the southern and eastern Mediterranean until the advent of Islam.
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What Every Christian Should
Know About Islam
by Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood
Of many books on Islam, few
seek to allay the misperceptions about Islam and Muslims among Christians.
As well as from filling this gap, the present work brings into sharper
relief the common background of three major world faiths – Judaism,
Christianity and Islam.
Name: What Every Christian Should Know About Islam
Author: Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood
ISBN: 0-86037-375-4
Publisher: The Islamic Foundation
Pages: 160
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