What is Chrislam? As its name suggests, it is a synthesis of
Christianity and Islam. Wikipedia explains the way it is practiced in Lagos,
Nigeria:
- Chrislam uses both the
Bible and Qur'an and sees them both as holy texts. During the worship
service, verses are read from both the Bible and the Qur'an. The
Chrislamic people believe that Muhammad, Moses and Jesus were all great
prophets and we need to love them all. Worship services include singing of
Christian and Islamic hymns to praise God and attract his presence. The
people of the congregation are also free to shout out the name of Allah or
God in worship. Christmas, Easter, Ramadan and other Christian and Islamic
religions celebrations are accepted and celebrated without judgment or
hostility. Inside their place of worship there is an altar similar to
those built by Abraham where the worshipers pray and seek the face of God.
In the West, a milder, more acceptable form Chrislam is
being peddled. Rev. Dr. C. Welton Gaddy, President Interfaith Alliance (
“Faith Shared”) describes it:
- Faith Shared asks houses
of worship across the country to organize events involving clergy reading
from each other’s sacred texts. An example would be a Christian Minister,
Jewish Rabbi and Muslim Imam participating in a worship service or other
event. Suggested readings will be provided from the Torah, the Gospels,
and the Qur’an, but communities are encouraged to choose readings that
will resonate with their congregations. Involvement of members from the
Muslim community is key. We will also provide suggestions on how to
incorporate this program into your regular worship services. And we will
assist local congregations in their media and communications efforts.
- While there is a strong
preference for all of the events to happen on the same day, a number of
congregations held interfaith services in January and February giving us
wonderful examples of how communities can come together in support and
fellowship. We will be posting photos, sample programs and audio files
from these services.
- Faith Shared will collect
images and videos from these events to use in our efforts to spread this
message of respect and understanding from America.
- Brian McLaren, the leader
of the Emerging Church Movement wrote on his five-part blog entry why
Christians should join with Muslims in the Ramadan fast. As to be
expected, another leader in that Emerging Church movement is Dr. Tony
Campolo. Campolo says he is not convinced that Jesus lives only in
Christians. In his distorted view, an Islamic “brother” who has fed the
hungry and clothed the naked clearly has a personal relationship with
Christ, only he doesn’t know it.
How’s that again?
Why is Islam willing to participate in something that seems
to go directly against their faith? Their doctrine of Taqiyya authorizes
Muslims to deceive the infidel for the sake of spreading Islam. According to
the Koran, the Muslim cannot “befriend” the infidel accept for two reasons – 1)
fear of harm when the Muslims are vulnerable yet weak; 2) as a tactic to
convert the infidel:
- [Surah 5:54] O ye who
believe, take not the Jews and the Christians for your friends and
protectors. They are but friends and protectors to each other.
The following fatwa (judgment) quotes the Koran in support of
the deceptive use of friendship (www.koranqa.com; fatwa 59879):
- “Undoubtedly the Muslim is
obliged to hate the enemies of Allaah and to disavow them, because this is
the way of the Messengers and their followers. Allaah says:
•
[Surah 60:4] “Indeed there has been an excellent
example for you in Ibraaheem (Abraham) and those with him, when they said to
their people: ‘Verily, we are free from you and whatever you worship besides
Allaah, we have rejected you, and there has started between us and you,
hostility and hatred for ever until you believe in Allaah Alone’”
- “Based on this, it is not
permissible for a Muslim to feel any love in his heart towards the enemies
of Allaah who are in fact his enemies too. Allaah says”:
•
[Surah 60:1] “O you who believe! Take not My
enemies and your enemies (i.e. disbelievers and polytheists) as friends,
showing affection towards them, while they have disbelieved in what has come to
you of the truth”
- “But if a Muslim treats
them with kindness and gentleness in the hope that they will become Muslim
and will believe, there is nothing wrong with that, because it comes under
the heading of opening their hearts to Islam. But if he despairs of them
becoming Muslim, then he should treat them accordingly.”
According to Mark Durie, an Australian authority on Islam,
Islamic opposition to the infidel is embedded in their
daily prayers:
- “A prominent element in
Islamic daily prayers is the recitation of Al-Fatihah (the Opening), the
first chapter of the Koran. Often described as a blessing, Al-Fatihah has
a sting in its tail. After introductory praises, the final sentence of
Al-Fatihah is a request for guidance ‘in the straight path’ of Allah’s
blessed ones, not the path ‘of those against whom You are wrathful, nor of
those who are astray.’
- “Who are the ones who are
said to be under Allah’s wrath or to have gone astray from his straight
path? According to the revered commentator Ibn Kathir, Muhammad himself
gave the answer: ‘Those who have earned the anger are the Jews, and those
who are led astray are the Christians.’
- “Al-Fatihah is as central
to Islamic devotion as the Lord’s Prayer is to Christians: It is recited
at least 17 times a day as part of daily Muslim prayers. Yet according to
Muhammad himself, this prayer, which is on the lips of every pious Muslim
day and night, castigates Christians as misguided and Jews as objects of
Allah’s wrath.”
It is therefore not surprising that shared worship or prayer
is not practiced in Islamic nations. Even the idea of interfaith dialogue would
be unthinkable.
Also, we must consider
whether we Christians have the liberty to participate in an interfaith service
with shared prayer. Although we have the liberty to eat food offered to
idols at a pagan temple (1 Cor. 8), we do not have the liberty to participate
in their rituals or worship. This would violate our oneness with our Lord. Paul
therefore warned:
- But I say, that the things
which the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to demons, and not to God:
and I would not that ye should have communion with demons. Ye cannot drink
the cup of the Lord, and the cup of demons: ye cannot partake of the table
of the Lord, and of the table of demons. Or do we provoke the Lord to
jealousy? (1 Corinthians 10:20-22)
We cannot relate to God in any manner we so choose. We
cannot drink from the Koran and from the Bible. Worship and the Lord’s Supper
reflect our unity and common blessedness in Christ. It also reflects the fact
that we are yoked together in the one Body of Christ. The Apostle Paul warned us
to not be yoked with unbelievers:
- Be not unequally yoked
with unbelievers: for what fellowship have righteousness and iniquity? or
what communion hath light with darkness? And what concord hath Christ with
Belial? or what portion hath a believer with an unbeliever? And what
agreement hath a temple of God with idols? For we are a temple of the
living God; even as God said, “I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and
I will be their God, and they shall be my people.” Wherefore, “Come ye out
from among them, and be ye separate,” saith the Lord. (2 Corinthians
6:14-17)
Common worship and prayer is a yoking – an intimate
attachment. Instead, we are required to be separate – to be in the world but not part of it.
We are mandated to relate to Him in truth and faithfulness,
as we would a spouse. Jesus explained to a Samaritan women that true worship is
not about the place – Mt. Gerizim vs. Mt. Zion – but about truth:
- Yet a time is coming and
has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit
and truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks. God is
spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth." (John
4:23-24)
Truth belongs to God. We are not free to distort it
according to our own purposes. “We must worship in spirit and truth.” I joint worship
service with Muslims speaks volumes. It says that we share the same God and
equally valid faiths. It tells the Muslim that their religion is as adequate as
ours.
We certainly want to engage lovingly with Muslims. However,
unity cannot be created where unity does not exist.
In His denunciation of Job’s three friends, God illustrates
that worship must be according to His truth:
- "I am angry with you
and your two friends, because you have not spoken of me what is right, as
my servant Job has.” (Job 42:7-8)
Job’s three friends had been very sacrificial. They had
spent days with the ailing Job in a vain hope of correcting him of his putative
errant ways. Yes, they had misrepresented God in their denunciations of Job.
However, it seems that they had been speaking in this manner for Job’s own
good. Nevertheless, this didn’t make up for the fact that they had not “spoken
of me what is right.”
We are not free to worship God in any manner we choose. Our
worship must also reflect truth. We cannot bow down with knees or even words
before the god of expediency. Mordechai understood this:
- And all the king's
servants who were at the king's gate bowed down and paid homage to Haman,
for the king had so commanded concerning him. But Mordecai did not bow
down or pay homage. Then the king's servants who were at the king's gate
said to Mordecai, “Why do you transgress the king's command?” And when
they spoke to him day after day and he would not listen to them, they told
Haman, in order to see whether Mordecai's words would stand, for he had
told them that he was a Jew. (Esther 3:2-4)
Mordechai was no one’s fool. He understood the price he
would have to pay for his faithfulness to his God. However, he also understood
that faithfulness to God’s truth was more important than political gain.
The three faithful Israelite young men also understood this.
All Babylon had been commanded to bow down before the golden image of the King.
However, they would not. Even after King Nebuchadnezzar gave them a second
chance to bow down and worship, they still would not, even at the threat of a fiery
death (Daniel 3).
Faithfulness trumps pragmatic gain – any consideration of
finding unity and peace among the world religions. The Apostle Peter had wanted
to keep peace with the Pharisaic believers in Christ. However, he paid a high
price for this. Paul charged that Peter’s behavior had denied the truth of the
Gospel:
- But when Cephas [Peter]
came to Antioch, I opposed him to his face, because he stood condemned
[before God]. For before certain [Jewish believing] men came from James,
he was eating with the Gentiles; but when they came he drew back and
separated himself, fearing the circumcision party. And the rest of the
Jews acted hypocritically along with him, so that even Barnabas was led
astray by their hypocrisy. But when I saw that their conduct was not in
step with the truth of the gospel. (Galatians 2:11-14)
We are not our own. We belong to God and must never betray
the truth of the Gospel, whether in word or in deed, as Peter had done. How did
Peter betray the Gospel? He acted in a way which said, “We are not all equal in
Christ.”
We also belong to our brethren. When we betray the Gospel,
we also lead others to do so! After all, if Peter could bend the truth of the
Gospel, so can we, right?
Having a mixed service with Muslims will inevitably lead to
compromise and division among the brethren. Many will correctly see it as a
violation of our marriage to our Savior. Paul warned that:
- If a man see thee who hast
knowledge sitting at meat in an idol's temple, will not his conscience, if
he is weak, be emboldened to eat things sacrificed to idols? For through
thy knowledge he that is weak perisheth, the brother for whose sake Christ
died. And thus, sinning against the brethren, and wounding their
conscience when it is weak, ye sin against Christ. Wherefore, if meat
causeth my brother to stumble, I will eat no flesh for evermore, that I
cause not my brother to stumble. (1 Corinthians 8:10-13)
By partaking in common prayer with Muslims, we are not only
communicating the wrong message, but we are also contributing to the spiritual decline
of the church.
There is nothing at all wrong with eating meat. However, for
the sake of the brethren, Paul vowed that he would abstain from all meat if
this meant placing a spiritual roadblock in their path. How then can any
Christian leader consider common prayer with Muslims!