Islam, a violent religion?

Queen Rania of Jordan has called on the Arab world to reclaim Islam as a religion of peace. Referring to Islamic State extremists, she said: “A minority of irreligious extremists is using social media to rewrite our narrative… hijack our identity and rebrand us.”

There are two stories about Islam out there. One is that it’s a religion of peace and its adherents only want to live harmoniously with other people. The other is that its fundamental aim is to take over the world, by force if necessary. There is fear, suspicion and confusion. So what are the questions that help us make sense of the different narratives?

People are just people, aren’t they?

Yes. In other words, once you’ve labelled them as ‘Muslim’, you’ve said something about them, but maybe not very much. I’m a Christian. I’m also white, British, middle-aged and a rather tepid fan of Aston Villa. I live in a pleasant spa town and enjoy country rambles and biographies of eminent Victorians. There’s a lot about religious people that the label doesn’t explain or express.

How many Muslims are there, anyway?

Islam is huge, though not as big as Christianity. According to Pew Research, 1.6 billion or 23 per cent of the world’s population is Muslim. A minority of those are Arabs: more of them live in India and Pakistan than in the whole of the Middle East and North Africa. This means that if you have a clear idea of what a typical Muslim looks like, you are almost certainly wrong.

How far back does it go?

It’s not as old as Christianity or Judaism, and nowhere near as old as Hinduism, but it’s old (622 AD). 1400 years is quite long enough for vast quantities of literature, devotional writing, scholarly rows and different schools of thought to emerge. Think of how many Christian denominations there are – not just Catholic and Protestant, but almost infinite sub-divisions within Protestantism and lots of different expressions of Catholicism too. Islam is a bit like that, if not quite as extreme.

It sounds very complicated…

You have no idea. In a nutshell: soon after Muhammed’s death Islam divided into Sunni and Shia branches. Sunnis are by far the most numerous, but each tends to dominate in particular countries – Sunnis in Egypt, Turkey and Saudi Arabia, for instance, and Shias in Iran. The split was over who should succeed the prophet. Sunnis believed that the heir should be appointed under Arab tribal tradition, whereas Shias believed it should be a descendant of the prophet. For Sunnis the leader was a political governor; Shias by contrast have an imam, a religious figure. The division was sealed in 680 with the death of the Shia claimant, Hussein, at the battle of Karbala – a key event in Shia tradition.

Does this really matter?

Yes. The different streams fought each other quite a bit, but have also developed in different ways. For instance, Shias view the sayings of Fatima, the daughter of the Prophet, and his cousin Ali (Fatima’s husband), as authoritative; Sunnis do not. There is an organised Shia clergy, but none in the Sunni tradition. The most important difference is about the interpretation of the Qur’an. The Sunni look more to the letter of the Qur’an; the Shia look more to its spirit, though both would say that in the original Arabic we are reading the literal words of God. Arguably there is more room for development in the Shia tradition, but there are extremists on both sides.

So, is Islam just one thing?

Is Christianity? The answer is both yes and no. There are different theological streams in both Shia and Sunni traditions. They argue about evil, predestination and free will, salvation and the knowledge of God – all familiar questions in Christian theology too. In the case of the Athari, they argue about whether to argue at all. There are also various types of popular devotion, such as the cults of saints, and the mystical Sufi tradition. Different schools of law have arisen from different ways of reading the Qur’an and the Sunnah (prophetic traditions). These came out of different reforming movements or political situations. Again, it’s important, with different approaches to crime and punishment, for instance.

Questions of truth aside, is it all good and helpful?

No – though on the Christian side, of course, no one should forget the Spanish Inquisition. One example is arguably the Salafi movement which seeks to return Islam to the primitive virtues of its earliest times. In its Wahhabi form it is fundamentalist and uncompromising, seeing Western innovations like democracy as dangerously un-Islamic. Wahhabism is a ‘dominant minority’ in Saudi Arabia, whose ruling House of Saud formed an alliance with its founder. Its adherents reject religious authorities from later than the first three generations of Muslims; consequently pronouncements from modern scholars and teachers have little influence on them. Islamic State has been described as “untamed Wahhabism”.

Ah, yes, Islamic State. What’s driving them?

Islamic State is a Sunni extremist group which wants to return Islam to its original pure form. It rejects later ‘innovations’ and secular laws. In the captured city of Mosul in Iraq it has imposed a school curriculum which bans the teaching of art, music, national history, literature and Christianity. It has banned music and songs, alcohol and tobacco. Women are only allowed to go outside the house if absolutely necessary and have to be veiled. Its goal is to expand its territory throughout the region and beyond. It represents an extreme form of ‘political Islam’, which seeks to reshape society in an Islamic way. While terror is obviously an appalling perversion of any religion, there is discussion both within and outside Islam about legitimacy of this as a goal anyway. It has also been argued that political Islam is political Islam, and its goals are the same whatever the methodology. However, as we’ve seen in the UK – in the comments of former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams about sharia law, for instance – there’s a legitimate argument to be had about how far a Christian country should go in accommodating Muslim principles.

Do I really need to know all this?

Possibly not, but it is very important to realise that Islam is not a monolithic religion. They agree on the fundamentals, like Christians, but apart from that there is a great variety in thought and practice. Trying to generalise about Muslims is no more sensible than trying to generalise about Christians.

Common sense, surely?
Well, you would think so. But failure to understand this leads some people to believe that Islam is just naturally going to be at odds with other cultures, as Samuel Huntingdon argued in his notorious Clash of Civilizations. Others go even further, like Franklin Graham, who described it as a “wicked” and “evil” religion. So any evidence that it isn’t is discounted, or used as evidence that Muslims are playing a deceitful double game – Protestants (and indeed some Catholics) used to say the same about Jesuits. For instance the Common Word initiative from Muslim scholars in 2007 aimed at starting dialogue was dismissed in some quarters as a Trojan Horse; so was a recent Muslim prayer service in Washington. That is not to deny that some Muslims might have ulterior motives in dialogue with Christians, but starting from a position of trust seems like a good thing.

But a lot of Muslims really do seem to believe in violence, don’t they?

As a proportion of their total numbers, no – but they do immense and tragic harm, to Christians and other Muslims. So the real question is, why a Muslim in one part of the world would be horrified by Islamic State and someone else would be all for it. The answers include: a response to oppression and powerlessness, the breakdown of law and order, and bad theology – most scholars and teachers reject Islamic State as an abomination. Other cultural factors include the extreme introversion of some communities – in Pakistan, for instance – authoritarian social structures, and deeply embedded historical narratives. Most Muslim-majority countries can point to a history of oppression, colonialism and betrayal by Western powers which we have largely forgotten, while they have definitely not. A sense of being out of place can lead young Muslims in majority Christian countries to set their Islamic identity over against their national loyalities, which leads some to head off to Iraq or Syria to fight for Islamic State. But saying that people do terrible things because they are Muslims is just not true.

So, is Islam a religion of peace?

That isn’t quite the right question, because very few religions – including Christianity – are, in an entirely unqualified way. You can go to the Muslim sacred texts and find exhortations to peace, love, tolerance and understanding. You can also find justifications for religious warfare, the subjugation of women, amputations, stonings and goodness knows what. However, most Muslim scholars and teachers in most countries remain true to their faith and their scriptures without advocating any of these things. As ever, there is a complex relationship between scriptures, the historic tradition and contemporary culture. So the point is that the answers to Islam’s problems already lie within Islam; dismissing a whole world faith because of the actions of a minority of extremists is not very helpful.

As Queen Rania said: “For the sake of each one of us… for Islam and the Arab world… for the future of our young people, we must create a new narrative and broadcast it to the world. Because if we don’t decide what our identity is and what our legacy will be, the extremists will do it for us.”

Source and Original Content by Christian Today

Christian Refugees in Turkey likely to meet Pope During Visit

Pope Francis is likely to meet Christian refugees from Iraq and Syria during his trip to Turkey. The Holy Father is due to arrive on November 28 for a three-day trip to the Muslim country.

Although the Pope’s official agenda in Turkey does not include any meetings with refugees, Vatican spokesman Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi has said that some may be present when the Pope meets students from Catholic schools across the Middle East on Saturday.

It is believed that Pope Francis will repeat previous calls for protection of minorities in the Middle East. More than 100,000 Christians were forced out of their homes in Nineveh, northern Iraq, this summer by ISIS. Many in the region have accused Turkey, as well as Saudi Arabia and Qatar, of supporting the terrorist group in its war against Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria. ISIS are also at war with Kurdish fighters, who the Turkish government regard as terrorists.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is also a controversial figure for pushing back some of the secularisation programme of Mustafa Atatürk, the founder of the Turkish republic.

This year he reversed the ban on women wearing headscarves in universities, and he has also claimed that Muslims discovered America centuries before Christopher Colombus, and that Islam has only ever fought wars of defence.

In August, the Holy Father said the use of force against ISIS could be justified, breaking recent Vatican policy of opposing all intervention in the region.

The Pope will most likely praise Turkey for the number of Syrian refugees it has looked after, with over one and a half million refugees currently in the country.

Source and Original Content by Catholic Herald

Young Christians in a fix Over Meeting Point of Their Faith and Sexuality

Young Christians continue to grapple with how to reconcile traditional and restrictive church teachings on sexual ethics with the intimate relationships they experience and witness in their social circles, according to a religious studies professor and recent surveys.

The traditional Christian view that sex is only to be experienced in heterosexual marriage has been shared by less and less Americans over the years. A 2013 Gallup poll indicates that Millennials (those 18 to mid-30s) are least likely to hold the same view. Americans who claim to be Christians can also be counted among those with liberal views on premarital sex. One could ask if this means that Christian doctrines on sex and sexuality need to be loosened or revised to meet the needs and concerns of the present culture.

Dr. Teresa Delgado, associate professor in the Religious Studies department at Iona College since 2005, appeared on “CP Newsroom” to comment on the changing attitudes of some Christians on matters related to human sexuality. The Theology and Ethics professor noted some of the particular concerns her undergraduate students have shared with her over the years, in terms of conflicted feelings when it comes to their faith and sexuality.

Many young Americans, predominantly white and under the age of 30, have become disenchanted with, or even hostile toward religion. The Pew Research Center, which has reported an increase in religiously unaffiliated Americans, explained that “the unaffiliated are concentrated among younger adults, political liberals and people who take liberal positions on same-sex marriage.” The Public Religion Research Institute reported earlier this year that its survey found Millennials to be the most supportive of same-sex marriage.

The PRRI also pinpointed a particular trend in their findings among Millennials in regard to their childhood faith.

“Nearly one-third of Millennials who left their childhood religion say unfavorable church teachings about or treatment of gay and lesbian people played a significant role in their decision to head for the exit,” said PRRI CEO Dr. Robert P. Jones of the survey’s findings.

The Christian Post reported previously in an article questioning whether evangelical churches need to accept gay marriage to attract Millennials…Read More

Source and Original Content by Christian Post

L3D Cube: Light up The Holidays

Want to turn your living room into a rave for the holidays? All you’ll need is a $300 L3D Cube and about half an hour.

The L3D Kickstarter project delivers a crude 3D display in a DIY kit, allowing you to build what the L3D Cube team calls a “volumetric” display. It looks like an animated 3D lightboard. After you construct the box, you can then download visualization apps to it or program your own. Less than 24 hours after it launched, the Kickstarter campaign is more than halfway to its goal of $38,000.

The standard kit takes about 30 minutes to build, says Shawn Frayne, president of Looking Glass Factory, makers of the kit. Each L3D Cube comes with 64 7-inch-long “reeds” with eight multicolor LEDs embedded in each, or 512 lights total. Plug the reeds into a Spark system board, cover it with the cube-shaped acrylic case, and then use an app to connect the device to your Wi-Fi network.

You program the Cube by downloading visualization apps to it via Wi-Fi. Each cube comes with a microphone, so it can change patterns and colors based on the volume and frequency of music or your voice. It can also work with motion sensors such as the Microsoft Kinect and the Leap Motion 3D Controller…Read More

Source and Original Content by Yahoo

Amazon Appstore Offers Over 30 Android Apps for Free

Amazon has announced its Free App of the Day bundle again for Android and Kindle users worldwide. This time the company has stated that it will make over 30 paid apps and games worth more than $130 free to download as a part of the programme.

Some of the paid apps that will be offered free include Bejeweled 2, Sonic Jump, Bike Race Pro, Docs To Go Premium, and Edge Extended. Notably, the US version of the Amazon Appstore for Android page leads users to the bundle with a Black Friday banner.

Notably, Amazon will only be making its Free App of the Day bundle live starting November 27, and it will extend up to November 29. You can follow the instructions here to install it on your Android device. To download these paid apps for free, head to this Amazon Appstore page.

As for the Kindle users, Amazon will be offering apps including Fairway Solitaire (Full) ($0.99), Splashtop Whiteboard ($34.99), and Angry Birds Seasons HD (Fire Edition) ($2.99) free to download from the App store.

Here’s the full list of Android apps available through this deal (list may change, as Amazon seems to be updating adding for to the list).

1. Alarm Clock Pro ($1.99)

2. Angry Birds Seasons ($Ad-free) ($0.99)

3. Bejeweled 2 ($2.99)

4. Bike Race Pro by Top Free Games ($0.99)

5. Charlie Brown Thanksgiving ($4.99)

6. Cooking Dash: T&S Deluxe ($1.99)

7. Dark Guardians ($2.39)

8. Dictionary! ($3.99)

9. Document To Go Premium Key ($9.99)

10. Dr. Panda & Toto’s Treehouse ($2.99)

11. EDGE Extended ($2.99)

12. Einstein’s Challenge Full ($1.99)

13. Excel Contacts ($2.99)

14. Forest Legends: The Call of Love ($2.99)

15. Hidden Objects Thanksgiving & 3 Puzzle Games ($1.99)…Read More

Source and Original Content by Ndtv

A.D. – Official Trailer: A.D. the Series

From Mark Burnett and Roma Downey, executive producers of “The Bible,” the next installment of the epic story comes to NBC, Easter Sunday 2015. Trailer soundtrack: “Dangerous Man” by Little Dume.
The Series covers the events as they happen in the Synoptic Gospels and goes futher into the Acts of the Apostles,definitely a must watch

http://youtu.be/dSoFbndq0xs

Gospel Singer Kirk Franklin Calls on Men to Mentor Youth in the US

Reflecting on the growing racial tensions in Ferguson, Missouri, Grammy Award-winning gospel artist Kirk Franklin took to Twitter to call on men to mentor troubled youth.

Franklin tweeted that he has struggled to respond to the news that St. Louis County prosecutors would not be trying Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson for the August shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown. But he finally broke his silence on the matter Tuesday evening.

In a series of tweets, the gospel recording artist urged men in Ferguson and nationwide to take a troubled child under their wings. “Imagine,” he wrote “In Ferguson and across the country if every successful male embraced a young man from a less fortunate community (two times) a month (and) showed him what success looks like, smells like, checked on his grades, went to his game.”

He also urged police officers to mentor troubled young men saying, “let him ride in the front of a police car.”
Franklin said such actions show boys ages 14 and 15 that they have options. He also said that spending time with young men gives them the love and attention they need so desperately.

Monday evening St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch announced that the 12-member grand jury decided not to indict officer Wilson. Comprised of nine white and three black St. Louis County residents, the grand jury heard 70 hours of testimony from 60 witnesses, including three medical examiners, and experts on blood, DNA and firearms before reaching their decision.

Nine of the 12 jurors had to agree on the indictment in order for the case to proceed in criminal court where Wilson would’ve be convicted or acquitted…Read More

Source and Original Content by Christian Post

Pastor Reportedly Declined to Host Funeral for Member due to Inconsistent Tithing

The pastor of a Houston, Texas, church reportedly refused to host the funeral of a 93-year-old woman who had been a member of his congregation for 50 years because she was not current with her tithing to the church.

According to a My FOX Houston report, Pastor Walter F. Houston of Fourth Missionary Baptist Church refused to bury longtime member Olivia Blair after she died because her lack of financial contributions made her ineligible for the courtesy under the church’s bylaws.

The Christian Post reached out to the church for comment on the situation on Wednesday but did not receive a response at the time of publication.According to Blair’s daughter, Barbara Day, however, the church’s refusal to bury her mother was devastating.

“It was like the last insult in the world, there was nothing else that I could do for my mommy but funeralize her in the church that she loved and worshiped all of her life, even as a little girl,” Day told My Fox Houston.
She said the pastor told her that her mother “had not paid her dues, and she had not attended the church in recent years.”

Day explained the reason for the lapse was illness and the church knew that her mother was sick.
“For the last two years, my mother has been in either a nursing home or she’s been in a hospital. … And the last few months, she was in a coma!” said Day who was forced to get help from another church.

There’s no explanation for anybody that has been paying dues for a church that long, for him to make me have to roll my mother’s body around town, and somebody finally picks her up and says, ‘Yeah, we’ll do the best we can,'” said Day. “They knew she was ill! They don’t care! All they care about is getting money, money, money, money, money!”

“Even retail stores give people more respect than that,” she continued. “I don’t understand why we’ve become so commercialized with religion! What does this have to do with God? Why can’t I give my mother her last wish to be funeralized in a church that she loved so much…Read More

Source and Original Content by Christian Post

Christian Group Raises Funds to open Mcdonald’s in Church

If you’ve ever suddenly realised you’re hungry halfway through a sermon and wished you could nip out for a quick burger to keep you going, you could be in luck. A Christian group in New Jersey is raising funds to buy a McDonald’s franchise and is hoping to open it in an unusual location – a church.

It’s part of what the McMass Project sees as a need to “revitalise churches as centres for conversation and cultural engagement”.

A promotional video for the campaign notes that 3 million people leave the Church each year in the US, and as many as 10,000 churches closed down across the country in 2013.

Many churches are struggling financially, and aren’t bringing in new worshippers.

“It’s time for churches to engage with entrepreneurship. The McMass Project is helping churches keep pace in the modern world. We can solve all of these problems and become more present in culture by establishing McDonald’s franchises in churches!” the group says.

Paul Di Lucca, one of the founders of McMass, told NBC that “Christianity is unable to capture modern audiences,” while McDonald’s restaurants serve 70 million people every day. The group therefore sees it as the perfect partnership.

“Churches are community centres, but need to attract people and support themselves financially. McDonald’s are profitable, draw constant crowds, but need great, centrally-located spaces,” the website says.

“Together, a McDonald’s Church will support itself and become increasingly active in its community.”

“There’s a lack of innovation and lack of design thinking in Church communities,” Di Lucca said, though he also added: “We are aware a lot of people will think this is an insane idea.”

The group is looking for $1 million, and has set up an online fundraising account, but it’s still got a way to go – so far it has amassed just $78.

Source and Original Content by Christian Today

US Faith-Based Organisation Hosts 135th Thanksgiving Day Tradition of Feeding Homeless

For the 135th year in a row, New York City’s Bowery Mission will provide thousands of meals for city’s homeless residents on Thanksgiving Day at their Bowery street location and other sites.

“More than 600 volunteers will prepare these meals and serve guests in the mission’s century-old chapel, with music and festive decorations for the holiday,” James Winans, chief development officer at the Bowery Mission, told The Christian Post.

“Meals will be served at 227 Bowery at 8 a.m., 10 a.m., noon, 2 p.m., 5 p.m., and 7 p.m. Additional meals will be added throughout the day, based on the demand,” he said. “Each meal will be a traditional Thanksgiving meal, with turkey, potatoes, stuffing, green beans, gravy and all the fixings, and with pie for dessert.”

Last year, Bowery Mission served 7,900 meals for New York City’s homeless, with nearly 1,800 meals provided at their Bowery Street flagship site.

“Rather than determining a person’s eligibility for services, investigating their immigration or housing status, assigning them a number or taking fingerprints, we simply seek to meet their specific need, no questions asked,” Winans said in a previous nterview with CP.

“We do this based on our conviction that each person is God’s creation and has infinite worth to God,” he added.

Winans told CP that various “generous Thanksgiving sponsors” donated the necessary food supplies. These included Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, The Hain Celestial Group, the Judith C. White Foundation, Le Pain Quotidien, and Whole Foods Market.

Past sponsors for the privately funded charity have included Deutsche Bank, EMM Group, Heart of Tea and Toys For Tots.

Founded in 1879, Bowery Mission boasts of having provided over 390,000 meals to the needy so far this year, as well as 98,000 nights of shelter and 45,000 items of clothing.

Source and Original Content by Christian Post