
GUEST SPEAKER AT A MUSLIM CONFERENCE IN
HARTFORD
By Charles E. Carlson
WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS
www.whtt.org
Strait Gate Ministries
P.O. Box 14491
Scottsdale, AZ 85267
Phone 480. 947 3329
I was honored to be a weekend guest and speaker at the
Islamic Circle of North America/Muslim American Society
Conference on July 1-3. It is one of the larger
Islamic family events with several thousand in
attendance, including many children and youth. I
was one of three speakers and panel members on the
general subject of community activism.
Dr. Anwar Kaznie, who moderated, stated that community
activism for Muslims is no longer an option and called it
a matter of survival.
Here is my introduction:
At this Independence day celebration time for Americans
we must recall the Declaration of Independence that made
56 fair skinned and English surnamed men enemies of the
state and capital criminals for the act of signing a
paper that begins: "We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life..."We can stop
right there because without the right to life there can
be no other rights. Many do not know that fully a
third of those who signed were either killed or
imprisoned and some died in prison, others including
Samuel Morse, who died in poverty as a result of
fulfilling his commitments.
My subject at this big conference in Hartford Connecticut
was: THE CHRISTIAN RIGHT, WHY IT FAILS TO DEMAND PEACE,
and how its grass roots can be influenced to do so.
This 24-slide Power Point presentation concerns the
reasons evangelical dispensational "Christians"
(sometimes called the Christian Right) do not demand
peace. This slide show is our answer to the war, the
dilution of our money, and the church that fails to act
like a church, enabling war, when it is bound to seek
peace among all men.
Project Strait Gate has performed peace vigils (pickets
also fits) at no less than 51 Mega-churches and religious
organizations, including the Billy Graham Crusade,
Promise Keepers, Jerry Falwell's Thomas Road Baptist
Church and his Liberty University, the Southern Baptist
Convention, and more.
The essence of this talk is already available free on
audio on our website. Those who heard the message
received it with heartwarming courtesy.
Two of the questions asked by attendees deserve a more
thorough answer:
1) "What progress or sign of success do you see from
your program of performing vigils (pickets) in front of
evangelical churches?"
2) "How can Muslims best approach and influence
Christians to convince them that Islam is not terrorist
and that we seek peace just as they do?"
Answer 1.) Project Strait Gate is 30 months old,
starting with a vigil in front of a Southern Baptist
Church in posh Scottsdale Arizona where about 15 men and
women dressed in church attire picketed this church
demanding peace. One attendee joined us that
morning, and the pastor talked to us and about us from
the pulpit. We have found both encouragement and
hostility in our path, and we always try to take the
police with us to each event.
We are there because there are leaders inside many
churches who say that peace is not an option and war is
God's will. Even it we found no improvement or
signs of progress, or even if the war craze in churches
was getting worse rather than better, we would still be
there because the Churches of America are the
battleground for the survival of our culture.
Churches once stood for righteousness, not for war and
the attendant immorality and financial debauchery that
war brings. Dispensational leaders are scripturally
wrong, ignoring Jesus' opposition to all forms of hatred,
and certainly to killing. We are asked of our
progress, we would be there even if there was no progress
because it is the right thing to do.
We are greatly encouraged by what some grass roots
members are telling us. Seeds of change are
sprouting in the attitude of some church attendees.
Project Strait Gate's private church vigils are a
non-scientific, rolling exit poll, revealing to those who
hold the "BLESSED ARE THE PEACEMAKERS" signs
how churchgoers view the President's wars. Among
evangelical dispensationalist church leaders the
President's policy still enjoys very substantial
support. But more lay members are now willing to
discuss the issue, whereas two years ago few would.
Our Arizona Project leader joined us from a church we
visited. Pastors and deacons have lately come out
of the church to talk to us at length, wanting to know
both why we have chosen their church. The defining
question we always ask them is:
"Do you teach that the State of Israel is the
fulfillment of Biblical prophesy?"
They usually answer "yes" (we know their answer
in advance) and we can tell them that this is why we
chose to visit you.
Perhaps the strongest argument for what we do comes, not
from friends, but from those who oppose our objectives
from the start. Recent stories in two large Jewish
newspapers tell of their concerns about a rift in the
ranks of "evangelicals," some of whom are
opposed to the Israelis' policies toward the
Philistines. This worries the supporters of Israel,
who carefully count Israel's support among the various
evangelical sects. One such story by The Forward, A
RIFT IN THE RANKS OF "EVANGELICALS" WORRIES THE
SUPPORTERS OF ISRAEL, openly seeks continued
"Christian" support for Zionism.
It tells much to correctly define those who support every
war that is friendly to Israel; it also clarifies what
"dispensationalist(s)" believe politically; and
it measures their strength. The Forward concludes from
polls, that most "dispensational evangelicals"
(63% to 22%) believe that the State of Israel is the
fulfillment of Biblical prophesy. But The Forward
is worried about the weakening of support among the
"broader front of evangelicals" who now are
only 52% in support of the present Israeli policy as
compared to 35% of the general public. This is The
Forward's poll, not ours, and what they point out that it
is a small but tight cult views Israel as a god
icon. However, it seem that many who call
themselves "evangelicals" are not tied
doctrinally to the unscriptural myth of the Israeli
chosen people.
We include a link to The Forward story with this caveat:
its author deliberately misplaces the word
"traditional" falsely associating it with
dispensational evangelicals, when in fact this sect is
younger than Mormonism, a fact carefully obscured..
Southern Baptists claim they existed before Catholics,
but in fact, the dispensationalism that dominated this 16
million sect came along after Joseph Smith (also a
dispensationalist in practice) allegedly found his
tablets of gold in the 1830s.
In contrast, the traditional followers of Christ, meaning
a few like this author who share church at home with
friends, and all the millions of those associated with
mainline churches, have always believed that it is a
self-evident truth that Jesus Christ is the fulfillment
of the Old Testament, and certainly not any nation-state,
especially not the State of Israel, which came along 1948
years too late.
We agree with The Forward, that the support for serial
wars is slipping as more people learn what serial wars do
to Christian participants, to say nothing of the victims.
We also show you another equally important story
entitled: "EVANGELICALS, PROTESTANTS CLASH ON
ISRAEL," from The Jewish Times, which is also
worried about the mainline churches (those older than 150
years who have rich coffers of accumulated cash) and who
are following the lead of several Protestant churches
that have voted for "divestiture." The
United Church of Christ synod is considering dropping
their stock and bond holdings in companies that do
business with Israel. The churches considering
divestiture have money to divest. They are old, stagnant
and cash rich, with combined pension holdings of
$20 billion, and perhaps more. This is about six
times the cost of the wall Israel is building through and
around the villages of the Philistines, who are now
squeezed into starvation gulags on a fraction of the land
their biblical ancestors possessed. Israel gain
billions in revenue each year from "Christian"
tourism, second only to American aid and loans.
You (peace loving American Muslims) are welcome to help
with vigils. Requests to start two new Project
Strait Gate units in major cities have been
received. No church we have visited has ever
accused us of being too few to be important to
them. We often learn we are the discussion topic of
the day and no church is prepared for the experience. Six
participants have been found to be an ideal number for
most vigils.
However appearance at churches is only a catalyst for our
very difficult and expensive Internet actives.
Internet broadcasts are amplifying our vigils at one big
church into virtual pickets at many more. Our
objective is to reach 100,000 new church leaders and
laymen every week via Internet. This is attainable
if our friends will gather list of their own and forward
every letter to local religious leaders.
Question 2)
"How can Muslims best influence Christians to
convince them that Islam is not about terrorism and that
Muslims seek peace just as they do?"
A) Our acts are our witness, however, the Muslims I know
are already gentlemen and good neighbors. Being a good
neighbor is not grass roots activism, it requires a lot
more, and I agree with Dr. Kaznie, who says it is a
matter of survival.
Christ Followers and Muslims alike are losing the
freedoms that brought us here. My ancestors came
from Sweden and yours from the far East and Mideast, some
even from Africa, yes, some of you came here from Africa
not in chains, but to find peace. We need to
preserve our freedoms as our forefathers did 229 years
ago.
To be an activist approaching "Christians" we
need to know to whom one is talking. This requires
that we qualify "Christians" into the three
broad camps: (1) Secular, (2) mainline or traditional,
meaning from one of the old establish branches such as
Methodists, Lutherans, Episcopal, Presbyterians,
Catholics, and Orthodox; (3) dispensational, often
referred to as evangelical, Christian-Zionists, the
Christian Right, born again, and the name "We Hold
These Truths" gives them,
"Judaized-Christians" which was used in
biblical times to describe persons just like them.
All the groups, including the secularist, can be
separated from the dispensationalists by a simple yes or
no question that is not going to insult them. Let
me repeat this, you should learn this question if you do
not learn anything else from this talk. Ask the
"Christian" you are speaking to: "Is the
state of Israel the fulfillment of Biblical
prophesy?"
Most evangelical dispensationalists will constantly
answer "yes" to this, and those who do will
include some from every denomination and crosses all the
lines I just told you about.
Some cagey dispensationalists may waffle, answering
something like this:
"Israel is corrupt and atheistic today, but in the
future God will deal with her, as God has not forgotten
his chosen ones." THIS IS A "YES"
ANSWER.
Followers of Christ will usually say, "NO, only
Jesus is the fulfillment of biblical
prophesy." You are safe in saying there is
nothing in the New Testament that supports the slaughter
of another people. I suggest you carry a New
Testament in case someone challenges you know, hand them
the book and ask him to show you otherwise. You will not
be disappointed.
The second imperative for Muslims in winning the
confidence of "Christians" is to concentrate on
the common ground that already exists. No one I have met
is more committed to pro-life that Islam. No
country on the face of the earth is less pro-life than
Israel. Christians do not know this, and are told
otherwise.
Ask a Christian if he is pro-life, and to what degree he
believes in the rights of the unborn. Most
evangelicals consider themselves pro-life fanatics.
You can press the agenda and ask how he feels about the
destruction and starvation of many of the children in the
Middle East. Don't be too surprised if the person
denies this is happening, evangelicals are amazingly
sheltered from war facts. There will be disappointments,
but you can establish common ground around the pro-life
motives of many sincere Christians.
This author is himself a former Baptist Deacon, and is
certainly experienced in this neo-movement whose first
godfather was Cyrus I Scofield. Our 24-slide
presentation will soon be available to you. We hope
we will have many occasions to provide our message to
other programs like this great conference of Muslim
families.
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