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A Public Discussion of Islam and Christianity is scheduled for April 15-16 on the campus of West Virginia University in Morgantown, WV. The participants are:

  • Sohail Chaudhry, an Imam of the Islamic Center of Morgantown
  • Andrew Roberts, a minister of the gospel who labors with the Jackson Heights church of Christ in Columbia, TN

The scheduled topics are:

  • April 15 (6-8 PM) – Two World Religions, Two Books (the Bible & the Qur’an)
  • April 16 (6-8 PM) – The Christian View of Jesus & the Islamic View of Jesus

The discussion is free to attend, Q & A will follow the presentations, and spreading the word is encouraged. Click the graphic above for a larger (more print-friendly) view.

I highly recommend Andrew Roberts’ book Night and Day: A Comparative Study of Christianity and Islam. You can read more about it here.

Around the Web

“[God] has set a tent for the sun, which comes out like a bridegroom leaving his chamber, and, like a strong man, runs its course with joy. Its rising is from the end of the heavens, and its circuit to the end of them, and there is nothing hidden from its heat” (Psa 19:4-6).

What Exactly is Islam?

January 17, 2013 — Leave a comment

What Exactly is Islam?

In many ways, Islam has the attention of the Western world. News outlets regularly feature reports of the spread of Islam’s influence beyond the Middle East. As a result, Christians have questions about Islam. Valid questions. But our knowledge of this world religion must be shaped by more than the political commentary of Fox News and the frequent misinformation that is forwarded via email.

In this short series of sermons, two fundamental questions are addressed.

WHAT EXACTLY IS ISLAM? (8/19/12)

WHAT ARE THE FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ISLAM AND CHRISTIANITY? (9/2/12)

For more in-depth study of Islam, I would highly recommend Night and Day: A Comparative Study of Christianity and Islam, by Andrew Roberts.

For more sermons, visit the sermons archive or subscribe to the podcast.

Around the Web (9/14)

September 14, 2012 — Leave a comment

Around the Web

Night and Day - A Comparative Study of Christianity and Islam (by Andrew Roberts)In many ways, Islam has the attention of the Western world. The daily news in the United States almost always features some story about the spread of Islam’s influence. This week, it was the emergence of Mohammed as the top English baby name. Last week, the controversial opening of a mosque in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

As a result, Christians have questions about Islam. Valid questions. But our knowledge of Islam must be shaped by much more than the political commentary on FoxNews and the misinformation frequently forwarded via e-mail.

I’ve been researching for weeks with the aim of kicking off a short series of sermons on Islam tomorrow night. Next month, I’m scheduled to deliver a lecture on Islam in another setting. Needless to say, I’ve looked at a lot of books and tapped a lot of resources. If I were to recommend one book to those who want to grow in their knowledge of Islam, it would be Night and Day: A Comparative Study of Christianity and Islam by Andrew Roberts.

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In The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism, Tim Keller provides a Biblical answer to these common objections:

  • There can’t be just one true religion
  • How could a good God allow suffering?
  • Christianity is a straightjacket
  • The church is responsible for so much injustice
  • How can a loving God send people to hell?
  • Science has disproved Christianity
  • You can’t take the Bible literally

After devoting a chapter to each objection, Keller concludes with these powerful words:

If we let our unexamined beliefs undermine our confidence in the Bible, the cost may be greater than we think.

If you don’t trust the Bible enough to let it challenge and correct your thinking, how could you ever have a personal relationship with God? In any truly personal relationship, the other person has to be able to contradict you. For example, if a wife is not allowed to contradict her husband, they won’t have an intimate relationship. Remember the (two!) movies The Stepford Wives? The husbands of Stepford, Connecticut, decide to have their wives turned into robots who never cross the wills of their husbands. A Stepford wife was wonderfully compliant and beautiful, but no one would describe such a marriage as intimate or personal.

Now, what happens if you eliminate anything from the Bible that offends your sensibility and crosses your will? If you pick and choose what you want to believe and reject the rest, how will you ever have a God who can contradict you? You won’t! You’ll have a Stepford God! A God, essentially, of your own making, and not a God with whom you can have a relationship and genuine interaction. Only if your God can say things that outrage you and make you struggle (as in a real friendship or marriage!) will you know that you have gotten hold of a real God and not a figment of your imagination. So an authoritative Bible is not the enemy of a personal relationship with God. It is the precondition for it.

- The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism, 117-118

Some powerful words below from John Piper in light of the escalating violence in the Middle East over the burning of the Qur’an:

The burning of the Qur’an and the murder of human beings are not morally equivalent. That’s true. And it is, frankly, outrageous the way some commentators speak with more moral indignation about the burning of holy books than the butchery of human bodies. In the western media this seems to me to be sheer fear.

But, of course, my conviction stems from a certain view of the world that is not shared by Muslims.

Andrew Walls, founder of the Centre for the Study of Christianity in the Non-Western World, and retired professor at Edinburgh University, gives us an insight that may carry more explanatory power than even Muslim rage realizes.

Mark Noll says, “No one has written with greater wisdom about what it means for the Western Christian religion to become the global Christian religion than Andrew Walls.”

Walls draws our attention to the fact that one of the differences between Islam and Christianity is how translatable Christianity is by its incarnational nature, and how resistant Islam is to translation:

Christian faith must go on being translated, must continuously enter into vernacular culture and interact with it, or it withers and fades.

Islamic absolutes are fixed in a particular language, and in the conditions of a particular period of human history. The divine Word is the Qur’an, fixed in heaven forever in Arabic, the language of original revelation.

For Christians, however, the divine Word is translatable, infinitely translatable. The very words of Christ himself were transmitted in translated form in the earliest documents we have, a fact surely inseparable from the conviction that in Christ, God’s own self was translated into human form.

Much misunderstanding between Christians and Muslims has arisen from the assumption that the Qur’an is for Muslims what the Bible is for Christians.

It would be truer to say that the Qur’an is for Muslims what Christ is for Christians.

(The Cross-Cultural Process in Christian History, 29)

Did you catch that last line?

The parallel between Christianity and Islam is not that Christ parallels Mohammed and the Qur’an parallels the Bible. The parallel is that the Qur’an parallels Christ. The giving of the Qur’an is in Islam what the incarnation of Christ is to Christianity.

If this is so, then Qur’an-burning is parallel to Christ-crucifying.

But ponder the implications of this. On the one hand you might say this goes a long way to explaining Muslim rage. Yes. But more importantly it goes even farther to show the deep differences between the two religions.

In the process of being crucified, Jesus rebuked the use of the sword (Mat 26:52) healed his enemy’s amputated ear (Luke 22:51), prayed for the forgiveness of his murderers (Luke 23:34), and sent his followers out to love their enemies and do good to those who hate them (Luke 6:27).

So the Qur’an has been burned and the Christ has been crucified—and continues to be crucified.

The test is in the response.

Hard Core: Defeating Sexual Temptation with a Superior Satisfaction (by Jason Hardin)Jonathan Caldwell’s review of Hard Core: Defeating Sexual Temptation with a Superior Satisfaction:

This is a timely book.   The amount of pornography on the Internet is unbelievable.   Furthermore, sexual immorality is creeping into television shows a little more every week.   Addiction to pornography is now as much a problem as alcoholism and drug abuse.   And just like those addictions, pornography will destroy the relationships you have with others.

What I like most about this book is its focus on changing your desire.   Hardin does not spend a great deal of time explaining how watching pornography is a sin.   There is no need to explain that.   If you are reading the book, you already know that and are probably looking for help, not condemnation.

He does take some time to talk about the consequences.   Chapter 10 is entitled “Counting the Cost” and Hardin lists two pages worth of his personal consequences should he let his life be consumed with such sinful activity.

Most people enjoy stats and this book does not disappoint.   Chapter 4 goes through the various stats associated with the pornography industry.   These stats range from income for the companies to the percentages of people who are actively looking for porn.   The numbers on Christians and pornography may surprise you.

He encourages those who struggle with this to emulate the behavior of Joseph, to learn from David’s sin, and to follow Samuel’s example in “hacking [sin] to pieces.”   This book is not just what Hardin thinks should be said about addiction to pornography, but an explanation and organization of what the Bible says about purity, righteousness, and a desire to serve God above all other things.   He turns to Psalm 51 and Psalm 32 for their practical advice in dealing with sin, repentance, and forgiveness.

The main focus of the book is learning to crave God the same way we crave sexual satisfaction (or any other addiction).

One of the greatest tools in this book is the poem included on page 89 entitled, “There’s A Hole in My Sidewalk” by Portia Nelson.   It is a great wake-up call!

The scriptures that are used in this short, but useful book are in the text, making this a more convenient read.   This book can be read in about an hour or two, but it can help for a lifetime.

I highly suggest this book to anyone who is tempted to watch, addicted to watching, or knows anyone who is fighting this battle.   This book can help.

Click here for more info on Hard Core: Defeating Sexual Temptation with a Superior Satisfaction.

Genesis 4:9 contains one of the Bible’s most famous questions.   When faced with the consequences of the first murder and asked by the LORD, “Where is Abel your brother?” Cain responded by inquiring “I do not know; am I my brother’s keeper?”

What about us?   There are certainly ways in which we are NOT “keepers” of one another.   There are distinct aspects of your relationship to God and other people in which you will be individually accountable.   Period.   But are there any ways in which we are expected by our heavenly Father to be interconnected?   And if so, what are they?

SERMON AUDIO :

One of Jesus’ favorite ways of teaching was to use agricultural illustrations.   He spoke of sowing seed, grains springing forth, harvest time, laborers in the vineyard, different kinds of soils, tares being mixed with wheat, and so on.   The inspired writers of the New Testament certainly seem to have picked up on the theme as well (Galatians 6:7-8;   1 Peter 1:22-23).

The point is a simple one. Every Christian in the New Testament was a result of spiritual seed having been sown in a good and honest heart, which in turn produced a belief-based response (John 20:30-31).   Churches were planted in the first century when the seed of the kingdom was sown and people responded to the call of the gospel.   The New Testament contains a beautiful picture of simple, pure, unadulterated Christianity.

And so why is there so much religious division and confusion today? What has changed?   How is twenty-first century “Christianity” different than that simple, pure, unadulterated New Testament pattern?   Most importantly, can anything be done to bring us closer in our conformity to the original?

SERMON AUDIO :