http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2012/09/15/my-take-its-time-for-islamophobic-evangelicals-to-choose/?hpt=hp_t1
Editor's Note: Brian D. McLaren is author of "Why Did Jesus, Moses, the Buddha, and Mohammed Cross the Road? Christian Identity in a Multi-Faith World" (Jericho Books/Hachette Book Group)
By
Brian McLaren, Special to CNN
I was raised as an evangelical Christian in America, and any
discussion of Christian-Jewish-Muslim relations around the world must
include the phenomenon of American Islamophobia, for which large sectors
of evangelical Christianity in America serve as a greenhouse.
At a time when U.S. embassies are being attacked and when people are
getting killed over an offensive, adolescent and puerile film targeting
Islam - beyond pathetic in its tawdriness – we must begin to own up to
the reality of evangelical Islamaphobia.
Many of my own relatives receive and forward pious-sounding and
alarm-bell-ringing e-mails that trumpet (IN LOTS OF CAPITAL LETTERS WITH
EXCLAMATION POINTS!) the evils of Islam, that call their fellow
evangelicals and charismatics to prayer and “spiritual warfare” against
those alleged evils, and that often - truth be told - contain lots of
downright lies.
Many sincere and good-hearted evangelicals have never yet had a real
Muslim friend, and now they probably never will because their minds have
been so prejudiced by Islamophobic broadcasts on so-called Christian
television and radio.
Janet Parshall, for example, a popular talk show host on the Moody
Radio Network, frequently hosts Walid Shoebat, a Muslim-evangelical
convert whose anti-Muslim claims, along with claims about his own
biography, are frequently questioned. John Hagee, a popular
televangelist, also hosts Shoebat as an expert on Islam, as does the 700
Club.
Many Christian bookstores that (used to) sell my books, still sell
books such as Paul Sperry’s "Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and
Subversives Have Penetrated Washington" (Thomas Nelson, 2008). In so
doing, they fuel conspiracy theories such as the ones U.S. Rep. Michele
Bachmann, R-Minnesota, promoted earlier this year.
In recent days, we’ve seen how irresponsible Muslim media outlets
used the tawdry 13-minute video created by a tiny handful of fringe
Christian extremists to create a disgusting caricature of all Christians
- and all Americans - in Muslim minds. But too few Americans realize
how frequently American Christian media personalities in the U.S.
similarly prejudice their hearers’ minds with mirror-image stereotypes
of Muslims.
Meanwhile, many who are pastors and leaders in evangelicalism hide
their heads in the current issue of Christianity Today or World
Magazine, acting as if the kinds of people who host Islamophobic
sentiments swim in a tiny sidestream, not in the mainstream, of our
common heritage. I wish that were true.
The events of this past week, if we let them, could mark a turning
point - a hitting bottom, if you will - in the complicity of
evangelicalism in Islamophobia. If enough evangelicals watch or try to
watch the film trailer that has sparked such
outrage in the Middle East, they may move beyond the tipping point.
I tried to watch it, but I couldn’t make it halfway to the 13-minute
mark. Everything about it was tawdry, pathetic, even pornographic. All
but the most fundamentalist believers from my evangelical Christian
tribe who watch that video will be appalled and ashamed to be associated
with it.
It is hate speech. It is no different from the anti-Semitic garbage
that has been all too common in Western Christian history. It is
sub-Christian - beneath the dignity of anyone with a functioning moral
compass.
Islamophobic evangelical Christians - and the neo-conservative
Catholics and even some Jewish folks who are their unlikely political
bedfellows of late - must choose.
Will they press on in their current path, letting Islamophobia spread
even further amongst them? Or will they stop, rethink and seek to a
more charitable approach to our Muslim neighbors? Will they realize that
evangelical religious identity is under assault, not by Shariah law,
not by the liberal media, not by secular humanism from the outside, but
by forces within the evangelical community that infect that religious
identity with hostility?
If I could get one message through to my evangelical friends, it
would be this: The greatest threat to evangelicalism is evangelicals who
tolerate hate and who promote hate camouflaged as piety.
No one can serve two masters. You can’t serve God and greed, nor can you serve God and fear, nor God and hate.
The broad highway of us-them thinking and the offense-outrage-revenge
reaction cycle leads to self-destruction. There is a better way, the
way of Christ who, when reviled, did not revile in return, who when
insulted, did not insult in return, and who taught his followers to love
even those who define themselves as enemies.
Yes, “they” – the tiny minority of Muslims who turn piety into
violence – have big problems of their own. But the way of Christ
requires all who claim to be Christians to examine our own eyes for
planks before trying to perform first aid on the eyes of others. We must
admit that we have our own tiny minority whose message and methods we
have not firmly, unitedly and publicly repudiated and rejected.
To choose the way of Christ is not appeasement. It is not being a “sympathizer.”
The way of Christ is a gentle strength that transcends the vicious cycles of offense-outrage-revenge.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Brian D. McLaren.
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