Some years ago at a different church in a different state, I had the misfortune of being part of a group discussion about whether to allow folks who attended a mosque, located down the street and undergoing renovations, to use our church parking lot until the work was finished on their building. This was well prior to the 911 hysteria surrounding Muslims, but still some in the group feared what they didn’t understand.
In fact, the wife of the pastor unequivocally stated, “Why should we let them use our parking lot? Their religion is the exact opposite of ours!” Exact opposite? I have no idea what that meant, but I’m certain it doesn’t accurately describe Islam.
Yes, there are fanatical, extremist fundamentalists in Islam. Christianity has our share. There are violent hateful Muslims. Some Christians fit the same description. In fact, anything negative that is said about Muslims could apply to many Christians, as well, and probably already has been said about us.
When I worked at William Penn House in Washington, I would on occasion take student groups to visit the city’s Islamic Center. Visitors always were warmly welcomed, briefed on Islam, and given a tour of the mosque. While the guides were clear they did not consider Jesus to be the Messiah, they expressed high regard for him as a teacher and prophet.
But, Islam is associated with violence, terror and anti-US sentiments in the minds of many people. This perception is providing difficulty for Barack Obama as he campaigns for president. Opponents are linking Obama to Islam through his Kenyan father. Some emphasize his middle name, Hussein. Others purposely mispronounce his name as “Osama.”
The senator is trying so hard to prove he isn’t a Muslim that not only is he continually expressing his Christian convictions and commitments, he also has declared that his father actually was an atheist. Better even to be an atheist than a Muslim, it would seem, according to this strategy.
Obama may be fighting an uphill battle with ignorance (and losing a lot of potential Muslim votes). A person named Jim Peterson from Ohio, a critical state in the campaign, actually went on record as saying, “I’ll admit that I probably don’t follow all the election news as probably I should. I haven’t read his books or studied up more than a little bit. But it’s hard to ignore what you hear when everyone you know is saying it. These are good people, smart people, so can they really all be wrong?”
It is entirely possible, my friend.
