People attending
the new Islamic Center of Murfreesboro will have to pass by thirteen crosses
erected by the neighboring Grace Baptist Church. According to the local paper
(Daily News Journal) three of the crosses, including the tallest one, stand for
the Trinity, and the other ten represent the Great Commission given to the
apostles by the resurrected Christ to evangelize the world (Matthew 28: 18-20).
While there is no
equivalent statement in Islam, there should be no doubt that Islam, too, is a
missionary faith. And while most Muslims and Christians probably play down the
fact, missionizing the world is what both religions are about. Historically
both have done so by the sword, though today (with some exceptions) persuasion
is the preferred method of conversion.
What we have
brewing in Murfressboro is a classic contest between two competing faiths.
While many may find the crosses an affront to Islam, and while some within the
Grace Baptist Church may even intend them to be such, the fact is we may be in
for a good ol’ American advertising war. Think of it as the religious
equivalent of the great department store wars between Macy’s and Gimbels in New
York City. While Gimbels never had a huge nationwide presence, the publicity
generated by its rivalry with Macy’s raised its status far more than the store
could have done on its own. Given that we are talking about a mosque in Murfreesboro
rather than a church in Istanbul, I would link the Islamic Center to Gimbels.
The more Grace Baptist trumpets Christianity over Islam, the more interesting
and enticing Islam may become for people in the ‘Boro.
An honest and
passionate religious rivalry is good for both faiths. Each should put its best
foot forward and make their case for why they are right and where the other is
wrong. We can learn a lot about each religion from this. All I ask is that we
do not allow a potentially educational and very American rivalry between “Macy’s”
and “Gimbles” to devolve into a violent yet no less American feud between
Hatfields and McCoys.
No comments:
Post a Comment