“Western
civilization is in a war. We should frankly test every person here
who is of a Muslim background, and if they believe in Sharia, they
should be deported. Sharia is incompatible with Western
civilization.”
– Newt
Gingrich, Southern Baptist converted to Catholicism
Are you a Christian? And,
if you are, are you a Christian who, in the name of your beliefs,
justifies hatred? For example, I have read so many religious views
that condemn Sharia, or Islamic religious law, as a growing threat to
the United States. Those who adopt this view think this is a strategy
Muslims now use to transform the United States into an Islamic state.
Even though most know this stand is a most extreme interpretation of
Sharia, these same people argue all Muslims are enemies to
Christianity.
Contrary to the right-wing
portrayal, sharia does not presume to replace American law. It agrees
with its underlying values and promotes them. The commonly held
stereotypes about Sharia are illusions of misunderstandings and
half-truths. These illusions lead to hatred.
Christians are explicitly
called to love their neighbors – people like themselves and people
who are not. Jesus’ example prioritizes the margins of society and
reaches out to those who are deeply hurting. Christians are not to
bear false witness against others, a tenet that should prompt
believers to stand against falsehoods being spread about a different
group of people.
One of the most famous
verses in the Bible is Galatians 3:28, which highlights how
Christianity is supposed to transcend barriers of race, class,
wealth, and nationality:
“There is neither Jew
nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor
female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.”
To honor their beliefs,
Christians should acknowledge how they have contributed to
Islamophobia and work to transform their repentance into collective
action.
According
to recent Pew survey data (2017), Republicans, white evangelicals,
and those with less education express most reservations about
Muslims. In January 2018, a Washington
Post/ABC poll found that a staggering 75
percent of white evangelicals in the US described “the federal
crackdown on undocumented immigrants” as a positive thing, compared
to just 46 percent of Americans overall. And according to a Pew
Research Center poll in May 2018, 68 percent of white evangelicals
say that America has no responsibility to house refugees, a full 25
points over the national average.
White evangelicals are the
only Christian group to express this level of hostility toward
refugees. Meanwhile, according to another July 2018 poll by the
Public Religion Research Initiative (PRRI), more than half of white
evangelicals report feeling concerned about America’s declining
white population.
So, what accounts for this
seeming discrepancy between biblical theology and its frequent
exhortations to care for the poor and marginalized? Diana Butler
Bass, an American church historian and scholar who focuses on the
history of the American church, says …
“The easy answer
would be that it really shows how secularized the [white evangelical]
community has become, and how it functions as an arm of the
Republican Party ... taking talking points and marching orders from
the people who have the loudest voices in the Republican Party.”
The God's Truth
Sharia does not presume to
replace American law. It agrees with its underlying values and
promotes them. America has understood this since its inception. No
less than the U.S Supreme Court affirms this. A frieze that
decorates one of the interior halls celebrates the great lawgivers of
the world. These include Moses, the Christian Emperor Justinian
(483-565), John Marshall (1755-1835, fourth chief justice of the
Supreme Court) and, yes, Muhammad the Prophet. All their teachings
inform the founding documents of the American Republic.
Hate crimes are increasing
in America at an alarming rate, and this rise corresponds with the
burgeoning white Christian nationalist movement in America – a
movement that has been emboldened by the anti-Muslim, anti-Semitic,
xenophobic rhetoric coming from President Donald Trump and some of
his advisers.
According to the FBI, hate
crimes overall were up 17 percent in 2017, rising for the third
consecutive year, and religion-based hate crimes increased 23
percent. The 1,564 crimes reported in 2017 was the second highest
number of religion-based crimes ever, surpassed only by the aftermath
of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. One out of every five hate
crimes in 2017 targeted someone because of their religion, and three
out of five targets were due to race or ethnicity.
The Southern Poverty Law
Center helps explain the current rise in religious resentment against
diversity…
“During the 1980s and
1990s, right-wing extremists were galvanized by several national
issues such as the perceived erosion of parental rights and authority
through court rulings, expanding multiculturalism, abortion rights
and the decline of the American family farm – all perceived as an
attack on their Judeo-Christian beliefs which right-wing extremists
view as a key component to America’s founding).
“These
issues were magnified because of the far-right’s perception of a
changing political climate which favored expanding benefits and equal
opportunities to ethnic minorities, immigrants and other diversity
groups. So it was no surprise that religious concepts and scriptural
interpretation played a role in the armed confrontations between
right-wing extremists and the U.S. government during this time period
— specifically, at the Covenant, Sword, Arm of the Lord (CSA)
compound in 1985, Ruby Ridge in 1992, and Waco in 1993.
“These standoffs not
only showed extremists rebelling against the U.S. government and its
laws, but also asserted what they believed were their divine
religious and Constitutional rights. These events served as
radicalization and recruitment nodes to boost the ranks of white
supremacists, militia extremists sovereign citizens, and other
radical anti-government adherents who viewed the government’s
response to these standoffs as tyrannical and overreaching”
(Daryl
Johnson. “Hate in God's Name.” Southern Poverty Law Center.
September
25, 2017.)
Conclusions
Perverted religion –
beliefs against core teachings – can be used to justify hatred and
violence. To be fair, it is not just one religion that justifies ill
will. Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs and others
have long invoked violence in the name of religion. It usually arises
when the core beliefs that define a group’s identity are
fundamentally challenged.
Anti-Muslim hate is deeply
intertwined with white supremacy and racial bias. Persistent calls
for patience, tolerance, understanding, face-to-face dialogue and
reconciliation are more important than ever given today’s spiraling
polarization and the dangerous anonymity provided by social media.
The Institute for Social Policy and Understanding's research reveals
perceived Muslim perpetrators of violence are subject to more severe
legal charges, up to three times the prison sentence, and more than
seven times the media coverage compared to non-Muslim perpetrators.
Consider popular religious
leaders who hate. In 2002, the Reverend Jerry Falwell declared the
prophet Mohammad a “demon-possessed pedophile.” In 2007,
Christian Broadcasting Network founder Pat Robertson said, “Ladies
and gentlemen, we have to recognize that Islam is not a religion. It
is a worldwide political movement meant on domination of the world.
And it is meant to subjugate all people under Islamic law.” In
2010, former Lt. General Jerry Boykin, then the executive vice
president of the Family Research Council, stated that Islam “should
not be protected under the First Amendment, particularly given that
those following the dictates of the Quran are under an obligation to
destroy our Constitution and replace it with Sharia law.”
“Yes, I
hate Islam, the Muslim Brotherhood and all terrorist organizations. I
will fight for your freedom to be ignorant and hateful to your fellow
Americans because I love America and everything she stands for even
when her own turn against her.”
– Ted
Cruz, Texas senator
I believe my initial
question is valid. “Are you a Christian who, in the name of your
beliefs, justifies hatred?”
If you answer “no,”
but still cling to Islamophobia in the light of highly suspect
Judeo-Christian understandings, to me, you deny that acknowledging
the very existence of different religions is the spiritual human
realm.
Mr. and Ms. American, you
don't do that, do you? Are you also Buddhism-phobia and/or
Hinduism-phobia? I doubt that. Instead, I believe you fear that
one religion – Islam – will seize control of “your”
nation. You likely base that fear on terrorists who committed
unspeakable violence on 9/11 and on the religious idea that Muhammad
is a false prophet. And, I believe those tenets are highly, highly
suspect when employed to foster hate for Muslims, about 1.8 billion
people in the world – the world's second largest religion after
Christianity – together, making up nearly one-fourth of the world's
population.
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