our approach to islam: charity or militancy? - by john gilchrist

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8/4/2019 Our Approach to Islam: CHARITY OR MILITANCY? - By JOHN GILCHRIST http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/our-approach-to-islam-charity-or-militancy-by-john-gilchrist 1/21 OUR APPROACH TO ISLAM: CHARITY OR MILITANCY?  by JOHN GILCHRIST "Lord, shall we strike with the sword?" Luke 22:49 CONTENTS: 1 The Provocation: Islam's Inherent Militancy 3 2 The Christian Alternative: Tolerance and Respect 9 3 Allah - The Supreme Being or a "False God"? 15 4 Yahweh or Allah - An Appropriate Comparison? 24 5 Reviling Islam as a Religion of Idolatry 28 6 The Halaal Symbol - Token of a Sacrifice? 32 7 Militancy or Love? - The Spirit of our Response 37 OUR APPROACH TO ISLAM 1. THE PROVOCATION: ISLAM'S INHERENT MILITANCY. The decade of the Nineteen-Eighties will be remembered for the resurgence of Islamic fundamentalism and its effects on both the Muslim world and the traditionally Christian West. The Islamic Revolution in Iran, spearheaded by the Ayatollah Khomeini, gave a renewed impetus to a basic Islamic concept which, with some exceptions, had been dormant for many centuries. In 1979 Khomeini succeeded in overthrowing the Shah and  proclaimed Iran an Islamic state. Since then the world has become acutely aware of the revival of Islam's concept of  Jihad known to most people today simply as "holy war". It derives from the Arabic word jahada which principally means "to struggle" but which has generally been interpreted by Muslim scholars in history to mean actual fighting and warfare for the faith of Islam. This did not mean the forced conversion of unbelievers at the point of the sword (as has sometimes been supposed) but the defence of Islam or its expansion as occasion required. The well-known scholar Muhammad ibn Rushd (known to European history as Averroes), an Islamic philosopher based at Sevilla and Cordoba in Muslim Spain in the twelfth century AD, in his major legal handbook known as Bidayat al- Mujtahid , dealt with Jihad purely as active warfare on behalf of Islam and set out the conditions under which it should be waged, the extent of the damage that could be inflicted on different enemies, and the circumstances in which a truce could be negotiated.

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Page 1: Our Approach to Islam: CHARITY OR MILITANCY? - By JOHN GILCHRIST

8/4/2019 Our Approach to Islam: CHARITY OR MILITANCY? - By JOHN GILCHRIST

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/our-approach-to-islam-charity-or-militancy-by-john-gilchrist 1/21

OUR APPROACH TO ISLAM:

CHARITY OR  MILITANCY? 

 byJOHN GILCHRIST 

"Lord, shall we strike with the sword?"

Luke 22:49

CONTENTS:

1 The Provocation: Islam's Inherent Militancy 3

2 The Christian Alternative: Tolerance and Respect 9

3 Allah - The Supreme Being or a "False God"? 15

4 Yahweh or Allah - An Appropriate Comparison? 24

5 Reviling Islam as a Religion of Idolatry 28

6 The Halaal Symbol - Token of a Sacrifice? 32

7 Militancy or Love? - The Spirit of our Response 37

OUR APPROACH TO ISLAM

1. THE PROVOCATION: ISLAM'S INHERENT MILITANCY.

The decade of the Nineteen-Eighties will be remembered for the resurgence of Islamic

fundamentalism and its effects on both the Muslim world and the traditionally ChristianWest. The Islamic Revolution in Iran, spearheaded by the Ayatollah Khomeini, gave arenewed impetus to a basic Islamic concept which, with some exceptions, had been

dormant for many centuries. In 1979 Khomeini succeeded in overthrowing the Shah and

 proclaimed Iran an Islamic state. Since then the world has become acutely aware of therevival of Islam's concept of  Jihad known to most people today simply as "holy war". It

derives from the Arabic word jahada which principally means "to struggle" but which

has generally been interpreted by Muslim scholars in history to mean actual fighting andwarfare for the faith of Islam. This did not mean the forced conversion of unbelievers at

the point of the sword (as has sometimes been supposed) but the defence of Islam or its

expansion as occasion required.

The well-known scholar Muhammad ibn Rushd (known to European history asAverroes), an Islamic philosopher based at Sevilla and Cordoba in Muslim Spain in the

twelfth century AD, in his major legal handbook known as Bidayat al- Mujtahid , dealt

with Jihad purely as active warfare on behalf of Islam and set out the conditions under which it should be waged, the extent of the damage that could be inflicted on different

enemies, and the circumstances in which a truce could be negotiated.

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He, like the majority of Muslim scholars of his time, considered Jihad to be a compulsory

obligation in terms of the Qur'anic injunction "Fighting is prescribed for you, though it is

distasteful to you" (Surah 2.216). Other Qur'anic texts quoted by him in support of the principle that Jihad meant actual warfare are:

When you meet the disbelievers, smite their necks till you have fully subduedthem. Surah 47.4 

When the sacred months are past, slay the polytheists (al-mushrikiin - "theassociaters") wherever you find them. Surah 9.5 

Fight in the cause of Allah those who fight you, but do not transgress proper 

limits, verily Allah does not love such transgressors. Surah 2.190 

During the colonial era up to eighty-five percent of the Muslim world came under 

European rule. For two centuries, despite occasional attempts at liberation, the yoke of 

foreign domination lay upon dar al-Islam (the established Muslim world). At this timemany Muslim scholars began to reconsider the concept of Jihad. One of the most

 prominent of these was Mahmud Shaltut who rose to the top post of Shaykh al-Azhar , thehead of Islam's oldest university at Cairo in Egypt. He wrote a famous book titled Al-

Qur'an wa-al- Qitaal ("The Qur'an and Fighting") which was published in 1948. He

taught that actual warfare was only permissible in defence of Islam where the oppositionhad first been guilty of oppression, rebellion or aggression. The mission of Islam,

however, had to be prosecuted by peaceful means only. Thus warfare was allowed solely

for defensive purposes and not to expand Islam as had previously been taught. Many

Muslim scholars hold this view today. Other scholars went so far as to teach that Jihadwas purely a spiritual struggle, in particular a Muslim's wrestling against the evil

tendencies of his own human soul.

Since 1980, however, Jihad has taken on a new dimension. This time it has been appliedto specific acts of violence calculated to terrorise the perceived enemies of Islam into

submission and retreat. Usually the aim has been to hit conspicuous targets for maximum

effect. The suicide missions directed against the American Embassy in Beirut (September 

1983) and the American and French military compounds in the city (23rd October 1983)cost over three hundred lives. Numerous hijackings of international aircraft by members

of Islamic movements hit the headlines. American servicemen in these planes were, on

occasion, shot and dumped on the tarmac below the aircraft. An Italian luxury liner, theAchille Lauro, was hijacked by Palestinian commandos in October 1985. Two months

later other Palestinian groups led by Abu Nidal attacked queues at El Al check-in points

at Vienna and Rome, killing eighteen and wounding more than a hundred. The hostagecrisis in Iran, when American Embassy officials were detained for more than a year,

remains perhaps the most obvious example of modern Islamic militancy.

These have not been the activities of fundamentalist extremists only, they have been

sanctioned by leaders such as Gaddafi and Khomeini. The latter once described the Popeas the "leader of a false religion" while the former said of him "This man does not

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recognise Muhammad as the final messenger of Allah; he is therefore an enemy of Islam"

(quoted in Laffin, Holy War: Islam Fights, p.93). In May 1981 a Turkish Muslim,

Mehmet Ali Agca, attempted to assassinate the Pope, shooting him and wounding himseriously in the process.

The modern spirit of Jihad was anticipated in a book written by Brigadier S.K. Malik and published in Pakistan in 1979, titled The Quranic Concept of War . General Zia ul-Haqq

in a foreword to this book said it brought out with "simplicity, clarity and precision" theQur'anic philosophy of Jihad, adding that it prescribed "the ONLY pattern of war" that a

Muslim country could wage (the emphasis is Zia's). Malik takes the following text as a

licence for terrorism against the perceived enemies of Islam:

I will instil terror into the hearts of the unbelievers: Smite ye above their necksand smite all their finger-tips off them. (Surah 8.12 - Yusuf Ali's exact rendering).

The author, commenting on this text, gives the following impression of Islamic Jihad - an

impression boldly stated by the late President of Pakistan to be the "only" way jihad can be prosecuted:

Terror struck into the hearts of the enemies is not only a means, it is the end in

itself. Once a condition of terror into the opponent's heart is obtained, hardly

anything is left to be achieved. It is the point where the means and the end meetand merge. Terror is not a means of imposing decision upon the enemy; it is the

decision we wish to impose upon him. (Malik, The Quranic Concept of War ,

 p.59).

Malik concludes that such terrorism is to aim not only at the enemy's retreat but to

destroy him completely. "It can be instilled only if the opponent's faith is destroyed ... Toinstil terror into the hearts of the enemy, it is essential, in the ultimate analysis, to

dislocate his Faith" (p.60).

That many Muslims have traditionally believed that Islam has an inherent militancy based on Qur'anic injunctions cannot be denied. Islamic Jihad is as active today as it ever 

was, Just recently, right here in South Africa, a movement known as the Jihad Movement

of South Africa was formed by Maulana Abdul Hadi al-Qaderi. In a report in the SundayTribune on the 5th August 1990 he stated "We don't condone senseless killings, but if any

Muslim takes it upon himself to defend Islam then he has a personal right to do so". The

movement warned that anyone insulting any prophet of Islam would be "confronted

 physically" and that it "could not guarantee the safety of anyone attacking the beliefs of the Muslims".

In South Africa, over many years, Christians have been subjected to the distribution of 

many booklets insulting their own faith, such as Is the Bible God's Word?, Crucifixion or 

Cruci-Fiction? and The God that Never Was, all published by the Islamic Propagation

Centre International. In the booklet on the crucifixion written by Ahmed Deedat the

author directly attacks the personality of Jesus Christ on numerous occasions, referring to

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what he calls "the hot and cold blowings of Jesus" adding "Now he must pay the price of 

failure", saying elsewhere that "Jesus had doubly miscalculated", and concluding:

It can be claimed with justification that Jesus Christ (pbuh) was the "Mostunfortunate of all God's messengers". (Deedat, Crucifixion or Cruci-Fiction?,

 p.23).

In May 1985, during a speech in Kigali, capital of Rwanda, Colonel Gaddafi of Libya

also severely provoked the Christian Church, saying that it is "false, infidel andirreligious". He claimed that Christians "are intruders in Africa" and described

Christianity as "the religion of the Jews". Calling for the assassination of President

Mobutu of Zaire as an exercise of jihad, he said "He who kills this man will go to

Paradise". This speech was broadcast in Arabic the same day from Tripoli over "TheVoice of the Greater Arab Homeland" (Laffin, Holy War: Islam Fights, p.135).

Islam can be a very militant faith and will resort to violence to defend itself or promote

its objectives at times as the evidences we have given plainly show. While one Muslimleader in Durban threatens anyone who insults Islam with physical violence, another in

the same city distributes hundreds of thousands of booklets reviling the founder of the

Christian faith. What is to be the Christian response to such provocation? Shall we too

form movements with the object of violently assaulting those who "insult" our faith? Isthere room for a Christian form of jihad? Can Christianity be effectively served by acts of 

violence calculated to strike terror into the hearts of its opponents until their whole faith

is shattered (this being Brigadier Malik's recipe for the objects of Islamic jihad)? Or isthere not an alternative approach - and a much better way?

Let us proceed to examine what the proper Christian approach and response to Islam

should be in the light of basic Biblical principles.

2. THE CHRISTIAN ALTERNATIVE: TOLERANCE AND RESPECT.

"And I will show you a still more excellent way ... Love is patient and kind". 1

Corinthians 13.1,4.

The Jihad option was perhaps the Church's first real response to Islam. After the initial

expansion of Islam during the first hundred and fifty years after Muhammad's death,

when Muslim armies marched across North Africa and into Spain, conquering most of the Middle East and parts of Europe and Asia, the traditional world of Christendom set

about evicting the invaders. Early victories over Muslim units in parts of Europe wereregarded purely as defensive measures to recover lost ground. Augustine had, manycenturies earlier, formulated a doctrine of "just war" in Christian terms, restricting

 participation to conflict for justifiable causes and fought with noble intentions only.

During the papacies of Leo IV and John VIII respectively in the latter part of the 9thcentury AD, however, a Christian equivalent to Jihad was launched - the Crusades. A

variety of heavenly benefits for those who fought and died in battle against infidels

(similar to the concept of  shaheed in Islam by which all Muslim casualties in battle are

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regarded as "martyrs") was promised to all who took a sword for Christianity in one hand

and a shield with the cross embossed on it in the other. The Church, quite simply, took 

over the whole concept of Jihad and returned eye for eye.

One Crusade followed another. The first charges produced striking successes, the later 

ones ended in disaster. For centuries, however, Christians and Muslims generally onlymet on the battlefield. The decline of Islamic power after the great eras of the Ottoman,

Mughal and Safavid Empires of the sixteenth to the early eighteenth centuries, however,gave the European powers their first real opportunity to conquer lands that had been

controlled by the Muslims since the early days of Islam. The Industrial Revolution gave

these powers the means to overrun most of the Muslim world and during the nineteenthcentury up to 85% of dar al-Islam came under Western (and therefore nominal Christian)

control.

The Church at this time adopted its second approach to Islam. With the threat of Muslim

invasion now entirely removed, a spirit of apathy set in. There was no longer a need for 

active militancy and the Church felt it could now afford to generally ignore the Muslimworld. Even though this period saw the development of a growing international mission

of evangelism towards the Muslim world the general attitude was one of disinterest. For two hundred years Islam was generally overlooked - if it could not be fully evangelised,

at least it had been subdued, and little further attention to it was needed. The revolution in

Iran coupled with all that has taken place in the last ten years, however, has shaken theChristian world out of its complacency. Islamic militancy has revived strongly and is

menacing the West.

 Not surprisingly there have been calls for a renewed spirit of the Crusades - a militant

struggle to again protect the Christian world from aggressive Muslim ventures. Today,

however, Church and State are not as intertwined as they were in medieval times and sothe call within the Church has been for a verbal and spiritual struggle against the rising

Islamic challenge. A minister of the Evangeliese Gereformeerde Kerk in the Cape, Ds.

Soon Zevenster, has called boldly for a "teenaksie" (a counter-struggle) and other evangelical Christian leaders, both in South Africa and elsewhere in the traditional

Christian world, have come out strongly in favour of a militant response. "We are at war 

with Islam", they cry, and a mighty spiritual warfare has been called for against the forcesand powers of Islam.

The militant approach goes hand in hand with traditional Christian fundamentalism. The

evangelical fundamentalist sees himself as a soldier of the cross - it is his duty to fight

 battles for God, to resist and cast out demons for God, and to scatter the enemies of God.The spirit of militancy that once sparked the military Crusades of history today manifests

itself in evangelical spiritual warfare. Is there not possibly a third approach as an

alternative to the militant and apathetic approaches we have considered? The "still moreexcellent way" that Paul proposed?

Christianity, as established by its founder and perfect example Jesus Christ, is first and

foremost a religion of charity and compassion. "By this all men will know that you are

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my disciples, if you have love for one another" (John 13.35). No one can avoid the

implications of this principle - if Christians are graciously prepared to accept that

Muslims are their neighbours, then the call from the Saviour is "You shall love your neighbour as yourself" (Matthew 23.39); if, however, they remain persuaded that

Muslims are their enemies, even then the Saviour's call remains unchanged - "Love your 

enemies" (Luke 6.27). A leading Christian minister, when asked recently what the rightapproach to the Muslims should be, responded in just two words - "Love 'em!"

In the last two centuries many efforts have been made to reach Muslims for Christ

throughout the world and, beginning with Henry Martyn at the beginning of the last

century, a growing evangelical ministry has reached out to the Muslim world. Too often,unfortunately, the Gospel witness has had a militant character, one which has been

accentuated since the resurgence of Islamic jihad. If our call is to win Muslims for Christ

rather than defeat the forces of Islam, surely the time has come for a purely charitableapproach. An illustration will help here. The sun and the wind were said to have had

argument one day. The wind mocked the sun for its inability to move around as and

where it wished. The sun responded by pointing out a man who was dressed in a suitwalking down a road and called on the wind, if it was so powerful, to get the jacket off the man. The more the wind blew on him, however the more tightly the man pulled the

 jacket around himself. When the sun poured its warm rays upon the man, however, the

man began to sweat and removed the jacket himself. I have no doubt that Muslimslikewise will respond more readily to the warm rays of Christian love and compassion

than the cold blasts of militancy.

The vast majority of Muslims worldwide instinctively know that militancy is wrong. Not

even the ayatollahs and mullahs of Iran were able to inspire the Iranian people with thespirit of Jihad to the extent that they wanted to - at the end of the war, although the

 population of Iran is three times that of Iraq, Hussein was still able to put more men intothe field of battle than Khomeini. Most human beings of whatever persuasion aremoderate in their approach to life. Common sense tells most people that when we kill

each other, we destroy ourselves as well. We all breathe the same air, we all live in one

world, and one God continues to extend his providential grace to all nations alike. Thevast majority of Muslim people are schooled in hospitality, tolerance and the ethics and

morals of Islam. There is no need for a militant approach towards such a people when the

majority of them will warmly respond to love, kindness and compassion.

Paul spoke of a "still more excellent way". Let us see how he applied the principle of charity in his own approach to followers of other faiths. We have a fine example in the

occasion when he was taken by Epicurean and Stoic philosophers to the summit of the

Areopagus in Athens and was given an opportunity to address them. Athens was a major centre of pagan idolatry and when Paul arrived there "his spirit was provoked within him

as he saw that the city was full of idols" (Acts 17.16). Nevertheless when he began to

speak he said:

"Men of Athens, I perceive that in every way you are very religious. For as I passed along, and observed the objects of your worship, I found also an object

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3. ALLAH - THE SUPREME BEING OR A "FALSE GOD"?

One of the key features of the modern spirit of Christian militancy against Islam is the

 proposal that Allah, the deity of Islam, is a "false god" and that he cannot in any way beidentified with the true God of the Bible. This approach is vigorously pursued in many

recent Christian writings on Islam notwithstanding the fact that the Qur'anunambiguously defines Allah as the same God in whom the Jews and Christians believe.

At one point it plainly states that Christians and Muslims worship the same God.Specifically addressing the "People of the Book" ( Ahl al-Kitab) it says:

"We believe in what has been sent down to us and in that which was sent down to

you; our God and your God is One; and we are submitted to him". Surah 29.46  

As we shall see the basic concept of God in the Qur'an, in particular the definition of hisattributes, is very similar to the general description of the nature of God in the Bible.

Why, then, do Christian writers deny that there is any point of contact between the Allah

of the Qur' an and the God of the Bible? It would appear that it is the very proximity of the Qur'an's concept to the basic Biblical doctrine of God that causes some Christian

writers to vehemently distinguish between them. Islam is not like the other major 

religions of the world which all preceded Christianity and therefore do not have an

inherent challenge to its claims to be God's final revelation to mankind. Islam is the onlymajor religion to follow the Christian faith and, unlike secular philosophies such as

communism and humanism or the eastern mystical religions which are generally distinct

from Christianity, it challenges the Christian faith at its roots by acknowledging its basic principles while claiming that these have been distorted and that it came to correct them.

The onslaught comes from within - it is by admitting the basics of the Christian faith that

it is able to challenge its finer details so forcefully. It is in acknowledging the God whom

we worship that it is most equipped to call the nature of that worship into question.

Many Christians, sensing the sharp edge of the challenge from within, believe that the

only way to resist it is to divide Islam entirely from Christianity and to reject any

suggestion of a common identity between them at any point. Thus Jesus is not the Isa of the Qur'an and our God is not the Allah set forth in that book. It appears to such

Christians that the moment we accept the Qur'an's appeal to acknowledge that we both

worship the same God, we simultaneously lose the uniqueness of what we believe has been ours alone by divine revelation and open the door for an Islamic charge on all we

hold dear at a relative and comparative level.

Therefore every effort is made to distinguish the God of the Bible from the Allah of 

Islam. In his pamphlet Halaal and the Christian (to which we shall refer more fullyshortly) Ds. Zevenster, reacting to the suggestion that Christians and Muslims worship

the same God, says: "This statement must be resisted at all costs ... they cannot be

worshipping the same God and therefore must be serving a false god".

The argument, found in many similar Christian writings on this subject, is based on the premise that because Muslims deny that God is Triune, that Jesus is the Son of God and

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that God sent his Son to die for us, they cannot claim to believe in the same God in whom

we believe and Allah is therefore a "false god". Basilea Schlink has written a book titled Allah or the God of the Bible - What is the Truth? Once again the Allah of Islam isentirely distinguished from the God of the Bible and in this way the author too

endeavours to divide Islam and Christianity and allow no point of agreement or common

identity between them.

Once Allah is declared to be another God or, worse still, a "false god", it becomes easy torevile him and assail his character. Schlink claims:

On the one hand, Mohammed's Allah is identified with the black stone of the

Kaaba. A stone is cold, soulless. This is often the nature of pagan gods: they are

rigid and lifeless. (Schlink, Allah or the God of the Bible?, p.15)

It is entirely wrong to identify Allah with the black stone in the Ka'aba as though this

were an idolatrous representation of the Islamic deity. The black stone in Islam is

 believed to be an object which Allah sent down as the cornerstone of the Ka'aba which,Islamic tradition suggests, was originally crystal clear but became pitch-black through

taking the sins of the Muslims who kiss it. In no way can the stone be directly identified

with Allah as the unseen Supreme Being of the universe. The Muslim practice of kissing

a stone in imitation of the pagan Arab practice of kissing their idols which usually took the form of stones can be severely challenged on other grounds, but it is grossly wrong,

and a severe offence to Muslim sensitivities, to charge that the black stone, cold and

lifeless, is identified with Allah.

Schlink goes on to say "Allah is an imperious god ... Allah resembles a great despot, anarbitrary ruler ... Mohammed's Allah has no heart, love for mankind is foreign to him"

( Allah or the God of the Bible?, pp.16-17). The section of her book in which thesestatements appear is titled "Allah - a Soulless God and Dictator". These claims are, in myview, imbalanced and erroneous, but what seems to occasion them is the feeling that

Islam's deity must not only be distinguished from the God of the Bible but must also be

shown to be entirely different to him and a poor caricature of his true nature. Thus theauthor seeks to force Islam away from Christianity, thereby preserving our divine

heritage and maintaining its unique distinctiveness.

So likewise Dr. J.L.Langerman, in another critique of the halaal symbol published by the

Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa, says "The god worshipped by Islam is not theGod worshipped by the followers of the Christian faith, because it does not line up the

 New Testament teaching" while Marius Baar charges "Allah has nothing to do with the

God of the Bible. He is a poor counterfeit of God" (The Unholy War , p.70).

Perhaps the strongest denunciation of Allah in Islam appears in the suggestion that he isnot only a "false god" and a "soulless dictator" but that he is an actual demonic spirit who

revealed the Qur'an to Muhammad and thereby impersonated the one true God. This

approach is clearly defined in the following summary:

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The spirit who calls himself Allah and claims to have inspired Muhammed cannot

 be the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Instead he is a spirit full of lies, who took 

upon himself the old Arabic name of God, "Allah" , wearing it over his face like amask and claiming to be God, although he is not God. Allah in Islam is an

unclean spirit of Satan, who rules with great power in a religious disguise to this

very day (John 8:30-48). (Abd-al-Masih, Who is Allah in Islam?, p.68)

One cannot help asking the following question in response to this suggestion - if theAllah of the Qur' an is really the devil himself, then who is the devil in the Qur' an? That

this approach would be highly offensive to Muslims hardly needs to be proved. Yet it is

typical of contemporary Christian crusading mentality.

So often the question is put to me "Is Allah the God of the Bible?" Too often people arelooking for a simple "Yes" or "No" answer. Langerman, Zevenster, Schlink and Abd-al-

Masih all give an emphatic "No" to this question. I do not for a minute propose with

equal emphasis to say "Yes", but I am compelled to strongly reject the approach taken by

these writers as I believe a more balanced and objective approach, based on a genuineconcern for factual truth and not on a fear of compromise of vested Christian interests,

must lead to a different conclusion. This matter is important because our ultimateapproach at this point will determine whether we will respond to the Muslims charitably

or not.

The Christian writers who endeavour to distinguish between the Allah of Islam and the

God of the Bible invariably concentrate on what Allah is not - he is not the Father of Jesus Christ, he is not Triune, he has no Son, etc. Rarely is there an evaluation of who

Allah in Islam really is. It would seem to be logical, before we express ourselves in

convenient denunciations, to enquire what the Qur'an actually teaches about Allah and

how he is defined in the book.

Firstly it is quite apparent from the Qur'an that the name Allah did not originate with

Muhammad. The pagan Arabs openly acknowledged that, beyond their various deities

and idols, there was one Supreme Being who was the ultimate source of all things. "If you should ask them who created the heavens and the earth and subjected the sun and

moon, they will assuredly reply 'Allah'" (Surah 29.61). When faced with disasters "they

cry unto Allah" (Surah 10.22) and they also "swear their strongest oaths by Allah" (Surah16.38). Western scholars agree that the name has pre-Islamic origins and it is almost

certainly derived from the Syriac Christian Alaha (Jeffery, The Foreign Vocabulary of the Qur'an, p.66).

Secondly the name Allah is to this day not exlusive to Islam. Although Christian Arabsuse the name Yasu tor Jesus and not the Qur'anic Isa, they use no other name for God

than Allah. It is not so much the name of the deity of Islam as it is simply the Arabic

name for God, the one Supreme Being who created all things. What "God" is to the

English language (and "theos" to Greek) is what "Allah" is to Arabic. Even the smallArabic-speaking Jewish communities of Morocco and other North-African Muslim

countries use the name Allah for God and every translation of the Bible into Arabic

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The issue is not one of identity but purely one of a distinction of concepts. Sure we will

deny that the fulness of God's character is revealed in Islam and will stand by our 

conviction that this revelation came through Jesus Christ alone. To this extent we mustdistance ourselves from the Allah of Islam and cannot give an unqualified "Yes" answer 

to the question of whether he and the God of the Bible are the same, but it is equally

obvious that we also cannot give a simple "No" answer to the question. We can defineour position by saying that in principle we believe in the same God but that we differ in

our understanding of how he fully revealed himself.

We need to return to Paul's sermon on the Areopagus for a final assessment of this

question. (All Christians intending to evangelise Muslims should read through thissermon very carefully - it is a model of a correct Christian approach in a crosscultural

context). Twice in his message Paul appealed to pagan writings to support his contention

that the "unknown god" whom the Athenians worshipped was the same God he was now proclaiming to them. The relevant passage reads as follows:

"Yet he is not far from each one of us, for 'In him we live and move and have our  being'; as even some of your poets have said, 'For we are indeed his offspring'.

Being then God's offspring, we ought not to think that the Deity is like gold, or silver, or stone, a representation by the art and imagination of man". Acts 17.27-

29. 

"In him we live" and we are "his offspring", the Greek poets said, and Paul unreservedly

applied these references to the God whom he was proclaiming, the God who raised Jesusfrom the dead (Acts 17.31). Yet they were originally both applied to Zeus, the supreme

god of the pagan Greeks and known to the Romans as Jupiter. The first quote comes from

a poem by Epiminedes the Cretan where the words were addressed to Zeus by his son and

the second derives from the Phainomena of Aratus the Cicilian which opens with thewords "Let us begin with Zeus" (cf. Bruce, The Book of Acts, pp.359-360). It may seem

remarkable that Paul should have no scruples about applying such statements to the only

Supreme Being of the universe and therefore to the God whom he proclaimed, yet he did.He obviously considered that, to the extent that they correctly described something of 

God's own character, they could be considered as referring ultimately to him. If Paul

could make such allowances, can we not accept that the Allah of Islam too is, in principle, the same as the God of the Bible, especially when we consider that the Qur'an's

description of him is far closer to the character of the one true God than the attributes of 

Zeus and that there was a deliberate intention to refer to the same deity.

4. YAHWEH OR ALLAH - AN APPROPRIATE COMPARISON?

During a lecture given on the halaal symbol Ds. Soon Zevenster said of the Muslims

"Hulle eer Allah, 'n valse god, hulle eer nie Yahweh nie" (They honour Allah, a false god,

they do not honour Yahweh). It has become fashionable in some circles to again draw a

distinction between the Allah of Islam and the God of the Bible by referring to hisBiblical name Yahweh. So you have a choice - Yahweh or Allah? True God or false god?

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A brief analysis of this approach will show that here, too, the comparison is inappropriate

and unacceptable.

While the name Yahweh appears throughout the Old Testament in the original Hebrewtext, it appears nowhere in the books of the New Testament, not even in the original

Greek texts. In Old Testament times Yahweh was the name of the covenant God of Israel(Exodus 3.15), but the Lord has never used this name in a new covenant context. The

coming of Jesus Christ brought about a major change in God's relationship with his people. Now he is projected solely as the Father of all true believers, Jew and Gentile

alike, without any distinction being made between them (Romans 10.12). The name

Yahweh was used solely in an old covenant context and the New Testament plainly statesthat the old covenant has become "obsolete" (Hebrews 8.13) and that it has been entirely

"abolished" (Hebrews 10.9). For this reason one never finds the name Yahweh in the

 New Testament - it was relevant only to the people of Israel in old covenant times.

Yet Ds. Zevenster went on to say "My Bybel sê: 'So lief het die Yahweh God die wêreld

gehad'..." (My Bible says: Yahweh God so loved the world ... John 3.16). It would beinteresting to see that Bible! There is no text of John 3.16 anywhere which says that

"Yahweh God" so loved the world - the Greek contains only the word theos. On other occasions it has been suggested that the Arabic Bible should have used the word Yahweh

for theos and not Allah. Again the suggestion must be challenged on textual grounds. The

 New Testament deliberately avoids the use of the name Yahweh and the only possibletranslation of theos into Arabic is Allah.

Militant Christian writers say Allah cannot be a representation of the true God because,

according to the Qur'an, he is not Triune, he has no Son, etc. Well then, the Yahweh of 

the Jews today cannot be the true God either because they maintain that he too is not

Triune and also has no Son. At least Islam acknowledges Jesus as a man sent from God but the Jews say Yahweh did not send Jesus at all!

 Nonetheless those who deny that Muslims believe in the true God will never lay this

charge at the feet of the Jews. They liberally accept that the God whom the Jews worshiptoday is the true God, yet the Jews deny Jesus Christ entirely. Why, then, can we not at

least concede that the Muslims offer their worship to God as well? Instead of attributing

their worship to a false god, should we not rather hold that it is duly offered to the trueGod but is not acceptable outside of faith in Jesus Christ? (cf. Matthew 15.9 - "In vain do

they worship me").

It seems to me that much of the problem here, and indeed possibly the root cause of so

much of the virulent anti-Islamic militancy found in Christian writings today, stems fromthe premillenial view of Biblical eschatology. Central to this view is the belief that God

has restored Israel as a nation and that he will send his Messiah to deliver the city of 

Jerusalem and save the State of Israel at the end of the age from her enemies. As the

immediate enemies of Israel are obviously the Muslim nations that surround it, it ishardly surprising that premillenialists are usually the source of anti-Islamic militancy

(Marius Baar's book The Unholy War is a prize example) though this does not apply to all

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of them. This also explains why it is accepted that Jews believe in the one true God even

though they deny Jesus Christ entirely, while the Allah of Islam is rejected simply

 because it is said he has no Son.

In our view the evangelical Church would be able to develop a far more charitable and

genuinely compassionate approach to the Muslim people of the world if it could see thatthere will never again be a distinction between Jew and Gentile, something Paul declared

again and again (cf. Romans 3.29, 1 Corinthians 12.13, Galatians 3.28, Colossians 3.11).

As we have seen the Book of Hebrews plainly states that the old covenant which God

made with Israel was "obsolete ... ready to vanish away" (8.13) and that it was totally

"abolished" (10.9) so that the new covenant could be introduced. The language used in

these texts could not have been stronger - God will never again show favour or partialitytowards Israel as a nation.

All Old Testament prophecy about the restoration of God's people (Israel at the time)

must be understood in New Testament terms, therefore, to refer to the Church, just as allOld Testament prophecies about the re-establishment of Jerusalem as the city where God

will dwell forever (Zechariah 2.4-12) are expressly shown in the Book of Revelation to

refer to the heavenly Jerusalem which will be the eternal city of God and will come down

from above (Revelation 21.10). Just as God has introduced a new covenant to entirelyreplace the old, so the New Testament speaks only of "the city of the living God" as a

"heavenly Jerusalem" which will be the eternal city of God and will come down from

above (Revelation 21.10). Just as God has introduced a new covenant to entirely replacethe old, so the New Testament speaks only of "the city of the living God" as a "heavenly

Jerusalem" (Hebrews 12.22) and elsewhere records Jesus as describing it as "the city of 

my God, the new Jerusalem which comes down from my God out of heaven" (Revelation

3.12). The New Testament knows nothing of the restoration of the earthly Jerusalem asthe city of God. If the Church could divest itself of its premillenial interpretation of 

Scripture it would perhaps see that God loves all the Muslims of the world, and therefore

the Muslim nations of the world, as much as he still loves the people of Israel. We wouldthen be able to fulfil our duty towards the Muslims by evangelising them in a spirit of 

genuine love and unreserved compassion.

Yahweh or Allah? True God or false god? Our Gospel is not about God's identity, it isabout the revelation of his love and kindness towards us in the gift of his Son Jesus

Christ. What is our message to the Muslims - "Our God is the true God while you

worship a false god. You must denounce him and come and worship our God"? No, not

at all. This is our message to the Muslims: God has redeemed us in Christ, in HIM youcan be forgiven by God, you can become children of God, you can receive the Spirit of 

God, you can come to personally know God, and you can be assured of a place in thekingdom of God. This is the new covenant message (Jeremiah 31.31-34), this is the issue between Christianity and Islam and the essence of our Gospel.

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5. REVILING ISLAM AS A RELIGION OF IDOLATRY.

It has also become fashionable in recent times in some sections of the Church to revile

Islam as a religion of idolatry. This has much to do with the recent controversysurrounding the halaal symbol which we will deal with in the next section but here we

shall confine ourselves to the subject itself. In a pamphlet issued by B.F. Hayes onSanlamhof titled Die Christen en Halaal the author says that Ds. Zevenster "het die moed

van sy oortuiging gehad om 'n paar sake duidelik oop te vlek" (has had the courage of hisconvictions to clearly expose a few matters) and the first of these is said to be "die

afgodiese karakter van die Islam" (the idolatrous character of Islam). This approach has

appeared in other publications as well and it has been suggested that not only Allah buteven the Qur'an and Muhammad himself are idols on the premise that anything that is not

consistent with the revelation of God in Jesus Christ must be idolatrous.

It is very easy to stick labels on things. Allah is an idol, the Qur'an is an idol, Muhammad

is an idol - such is the simple way we are now seeing the whole of Islam labelled and

misrepresented. This of course makes it easy to write the whole religion off and cast itaside without any further study or reflection. Its whole heritage can thus be reviled and

summarily dismissed without further ado.

The proponents of this view fail to discern that there is a radical difference between Islamand the animistic religions of the world. The latter are generally idolatrous and have very

little in common with Christianity. Our faith has a divine heritage through Judaism based

on foundations of theology, prophethood and scripture. Islam, unlike the other religions,confronts us at this very level. Allah, Muhammad and the Qur'an have come up alongside

the Gospel at these very points - theology, prophethood and scripture. The Qur'an is not

an idol, it is a form of scripture competing with our scripture at a remarkably intense

level. Allah is not an idol - he is a representation of the true God of the Bible with certainvital characteristics of his nature and purposes for mankind in our view distorted and

misrepresented. Muhammad is not an idol, nor was he an idolater. He stands and put

himself at the level of prophethood over and against the very prophetic heritage that ledto the advent of our Lord Jesus.

There is a further problem with simplistically labelling things as idols - we will soon be

adding the sub-label "demons" as idolatry and demonism always go together (1Corinthians 10.19-20). Thus it is not surprising to hear some folk today not only

regarding Islam as idolatrous but also as inherently demonic and occultic. This is an

extremely dangerous approach which will destroy our witness to the Muslim people of 

the world and will result in a backlash rather than a positive receptiveness.

This brings us back to the whole question of love and compassion, the hallmarks of the

Christian faith. Paul says "For the love of Christ constrains us" (2 Corinthians 5.14).

Indeed it should. We need to exercise restraint in our attitude towards Islam and should

never be misled into believing that the more we can downgrade and revile Islam, themore we can demonise it, the more we exalt the Christian faith above it. The laager was a

good form of defence during the wars of the last century and an effective base from

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which to shoot at anything that opposed it from the outside. It is, on the contrary, a most

inappropriate structure for reaching out beyond ourselves in selfless love and compassion

towards the nations of the world, no matter to what extent they may oppose us. What arewe ultimately aiming at - to win a case for Christianity or to win Muslims to Christ? As

one Christian writer has said:

What matters is not that men have thought ill of Christianity but that they have

forfeited the Christ. (Cragg, The Call of the Minaret , p.248).

We must not suppose that we are acting in love towards the Muslims just because we are

willing to give up much time and endure opposition to reach them with the Gospel. We

can do all this and yet be most uncharitable in our attitude towards them. As Paul says,

you can give away all you have and deliver your body up to be burned and yet not havelove (1 Corinthians 13.3). I am quite persuaded that genuine love for the Muslims and a

thoroughly militant approach just don't go together. Muslims must sense our love is

genuine and respectful. The moment a Muslim detects a spirit of militancy in our 

approach to Islam, that moment our acceptance falls to the ground and it will be fatal for our witness.

Simon Peter said to Jesus "Lord, shall we strike with the sword?" (Luke 22.49). Shall we?

Will Jesus be constrained to say of us "You do not know what manner of spirit you areof, for the Son of man came not to destroy men's lives but to save them"? (Luke 9.55).

Instead of seeking causes to revile Islam we would do well to spend time studying its

heritage and endeavour to relate more to Muslims where they are. Some have suggested

that we should "love the Muslims and hate Islam". I think we are far more likely tosucceed in genuinely loving the Muslims if we try rather to understand Islam. Christians

who are willing to study the Qur'an, learn the history of Islam and respect Muslims for who they are (and evaluate their religion properly) are far more likely to attract them tothe Gospel than those who revile Islam in ignorance. Muslims respect Christians who

have a genuine knowledge of Islam but they are quickly alienated by those whom, they

say, "just come to condemn us and our religion".

Muhammad was involved in a mighty struggle to rid his people of idolatry and bringthem to worship the supreme God - ar-Rahmaan of the Jews and the Christians - alone. It

is Christian intellectual dishonesty to now make him both an idol and an idolater.

Christianity can never be boosted by downgrading Islam to the level of common idolatry.Let us not be fearful of respecting Islam - we have nothing after all to lose. Islam cannot

threaten the existence of the Church (Matthew 16.18) and we have nothing to fear from

it.

The charge of idolatry against Islam appears to be seriously unfounded when weremember that no Muslims have ever made images or idols of Muhammad as so many

millions of Christians have done with Mary, Jesus, apostles and saints. Just walk around

the cathedrals of Europe and see how infected Christian history is with images and icons,yet Muslims refrain from calling us idolaters. As Islam has kept itself free from the

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temptation to fashion similar images and idols of its own, it appears to be considerably

 presumptuous to accuse it of idolatry.

Brethren, "bear with my word of exhortation" (Hebrews 13.22). I do not want to comeacross too harshly, but I am deeply concerned for the future of Muslim evangelism in this

country and the spirit of our approach which must always be motivated by love.

6. THE HALAAL SYMBOL - TOKEN OF A SACRIFICE?

 Nowhere has the spirit of anti-Islamic militancy manifested itself more strongly than in

the recent campaign against the Halaal symbol on many of our food products. In principlethis symbol simply informs the Muslim public that the food is fit for consumption in

terms of Islamic law. The very word halaal in Arabic simply means "loosed", that is, that

it is free from the restrictions that apply to haraam ("forbidden") food products. Theseare defined in the Qur'an as "carrion, blood, the flesh of swine and that over which any

name other than Allah's has been invoked" (Surah 5.4). The passage goes on to say "Eat

what is caught for you, but pronounce the name of Allah over it" (Surah 5.5). Thus anyanimal or poultry product with the traditional Halaal symbol on it is lawful for Muslims

as it indicates that it was properly slaughtered, the blood has been drained out of it, and

the tasmiyah-takbir ( Bismillah Allahu-Akbar - "In the name of God, God is Most Great")

has been pronounced over it. The symbol stands solely for the benefit of the Muslim public, it is never applied as a means of gaining an advantage over adherents of other 

faiths or to bind them to Islamic rites as some have suggested.

The presence of the Halaal mark on other products (such as margarine and potato chips)

is a sign to the Muslims that no forbidden substances, such as pig-fat, have been used intheir composition. Indeed the Qur'an has a general exhortation to all mankind (an-naas)

to eat of that which is in the earth that is "lawful and good" ( halaalaan-tayyibaan ) - theword halaal here being used purely in a relative sense without any deliberate reference tothe application of the name of Allah over the product, yet even where it is used in this

latter sense it is really no different to the Jewish concept of kosher foods and substances.

In Old Testament times there were similar restrictions on food products, some of them

 being the same as those the Qur'an mentions, namely the prohibition on the flesh of swine(Leviticus 11.7) and blood (Leviticus 7.26). Jesus declared all foods clean (Mark 7.19), a

decree which was later impressed on Simon Peter in a vision (Acts 10.9-16), yet even

then some of the leaders of the early Church at Jerusalem still exhorted the Gentile believers to "abstain from what has been sacrificed to idols and from blood and from

what is strangled and from unchastity" (Acts 15.29). In the context of the old covenant

 prohibitions on certain foods the Christian cannot object to the motive and principle behind the halaal laws of Islam. In a spirit of genuine Christian liberty we should not

object to the Muslim's scruples at this point as they relate solely to the question of 

hygienic laws in Islam which are similar to those of Old Testament Judaism. There is no

reason why we should be troubled at this point.

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"Food will not commend us to God. We are no worse off if we do not eat and no better 

off if we do" (1 Corinthians 8.8). The Christian should be concerned about far more

important things in this new covenant age than scruples about food and drink. "I knowand am persuaded in the Lord Jesus that nothing is unclean in itself ... For the kingdom of 

God does not mean food and drink but righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit"

(Romans 14.14,17). Elsewhere Paul reproves certain Christians for their immaturity inhaving scruples ("do not handle, do not taste, do not touch") about foods "which all

 perish as they are used" (Colossians 2.22).

The very existence of a Christian campaign against Muslim scruples about food products

is in the circumstances highly questionable on the grounds of New Testament teachingabout Christian liberty and maturity, yet the actual nature of the campaign against the

Halaal symbol itself can be challenged on a number of other grounds. It is defined by Ds.

Zevenster in his pamphlet Halaal and the Christian as follows: "The Halaal sign tells usthat Halaal foods have been consecrated to a strange god. Therefore, as Christians, we

should not eat these foods". He also speaks of Halaal foods as having been consecrated

"to an idol". In a public lecture recorded on tape he went on to say "Halaal kos isgekoppel aan afgode - laat hom staan" (Halaal food is linked to idols - leave it alone) andconstantly spoke of such foods as "afgodskos" (food sacrificed to idols) which had been

offered to the "false god Allah".

We have already shown that the charge of idolatry against Islam is based on false premises, yet here we must also disown the suggestion that Halaal foods have been

offered in sacrifice. This claim has no foundation in Islamic law or history. There is only

one prescribed sacrifice in Islam, the qurbani sacrifice at the end of the Eid al-Adha

festival in remembrance of Abraham's willingness to give his son to God. On thisoccasion the food of the animals sacrificed is simply distributed to the poor and it is

 purely an act of commemoration without any sense of a prior consecration to Allah. TheHalaal symbol on a food product is purely an indication that it is fit for Muslimconsumption as its preparation has been in compliance with the hygienic laws of the

Qur'an which we have already mentioned. In no way whatsoever is the Halaal mark on

such a product a sign that it has been sacrificed, least of all to an idol or false god.

Why, then, are such suggestions so vigorously pursued by certain Christians? One canonly presume that the motive is one of pure anti-Islamic opportunism. Once it is

conceded that Halaal in Islam is very much the same as the Kosher principle of Judaism,

one can hardly raise any real objections to it. Once it is distorted, however, into the claimthat it represents food sacrificed to an idol, then the antagonist creates a cause of offence.

There are texts in the New Testament which speak out against the eating of foods so

sacrificed to idols (Revelation 2.14, 2.20) and in his first letter to the Corinthians Paulgives circumstances under which such foods should not be eaten. These texts are then

 brought forth as proofs that Christians should not eat Halaal foods and should also

campaign against the Muslim practice by which these are produced.

Even here, however, the argument has been taken too far. The New Testament does notoutlaw the consumption of foods sacrificed to idols altogether and in the references from

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Paul's letter we can see that it was only in two cases that the Apostle cautioned against

the consumption of such foods, namely where a weaker brother might be offended by

thinking that there really was something in the idol to whom it had been offered (1Corinthians 8.7) and where a pagan worshipper himself might have his conscience

disturbed if he saw a Christian eating such foods which had been ritually consecrated to

an idol (1 Corinthians 10.28-29). On both occasions, however, Paul showed that it wasonly for the sake of the consciences of weaker brethren and pagans that the Christian

should abstain, not because there was anything wrong in principle with the practice itself 

of eating such foods.

"Eat whatever is set before you", Paul said, "without raising any question on the groundsof conscience" (1 Corinthians 10.27) and he added that "a man of knowledge" (that is, a

mature Christian with a correct perspective on Christian liberty in this matter - 1

Corinthians 8.10) could freely eat foods that pagans had sacrificed because their idols, inany event, had no real existence and the food could not therefore be affected in any way

(1 Cor. 8.4).

There is, therefore, nothing wrong in principle with eating food sacrificed to idols - the

exceptions applying solely to consideration for the weak consciences of others - and allfood created by God is good and to be received with thanksgiving, consecrated in our 

case by the word of God and prayer (1 Timothy 4.3-5).

It is obvious that the anti-halaal campaign is based on extremely weak arguments. It not

only requires a crude distortion of Islamic teaching on the subject but also amisrepresentation of Biblical principles to assert itself. Christianity does not need to

degrade the beliefs of others to maintain itself. We really need to show consistency and

sustain a truthful attitude towards Islam at this point - nothing can be gained from pure

revulsion.

7. MILITANCY OR LOVE? - THE SPIRIT OF OUR RESPONSE.

During his public lecture on the Halaal symbol Ds. Zevenster complained that the

Muslim influence in our society was a gevaar (danger), a bedreiging (threat) and an

attempt to intimideer ons (intimidate us). These expressions are the language of fear, anatural reaction when someone feels his vested interests are being threatened. Should

Christians react to Islam out of fear or should they not rather give themselves to the task 

of winning Muslims for Christ? As we have seen the latter course can only be achieved if it is motivated by love for the Muslims, what Paul called the "still more excellent way".

As another apostle put it, "there is no room for fear in love" (1 John 4.18). We need to

reach out to the Muslims, we must resist the temptation to lash out at them.

Can Islam ultimately do anything to threaten the existence of the Church or prevent itsultimate triumph? When Jesus Christ died and rose again, did the battle end or was it just

 beginning? Is the outcome of his redeeming work dependent on our efforts and sweat or 

was it guaranteed by his resurrection?

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The New Testament plainly shows that the final victory over sin, death and all the powers

of the devil was gained at the cross (Colossians 2.13-15). When Christians set about

witnessing to the world and preach the Gospel they are not fighting a battle for Godwhose outcome will depend on the intensity of their efforts. They are merely seeking the

spoils of victory. Every convert is yet another proof of Christ's invasion of the devil's

realm and a sign of the ultimate fate of the powers of evil - they are destined todestruction when Jesus returns again, when the kingdoms of this world will "become the

kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ and he shall reign for ever and ever" (Revelation

11.15).

It is so often said that the Church must engage in the work of mission, but here too itwould seem more appropriate to consider it as the outworking of mission - the gathering

in of the people of God whose destiny was assured at the cross. Jesus said "No one can

come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him" (John 6.44) which shows that thesuccess of Christian mission depends not on our efforts but upon God's call. In full

confidence, however, Jesus could say "All that the Father gives me will come to me ...

and this is the will of him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that he has givenme but raise it up at the last day" (John 6.37,39). He could also say, as he faced the cross,"Of those whom thou gavest me I have lost none" (John 18.9). When he hung on the

cross he had no uncertainty about the outcome of his saving work - he knew the Father 

would certainly draw to him all that he had given him and that they would be raised toglory at the Last Day.

When he makes himself an offering for sin, he shall see his offspring, he shall

 prolong his days; the will of the Lord shall prosper in his hand; he shall see the

fruit of the travail of his soul and be satisfied. Isaiah 53.10-11. 

The conversion of Saul, later to be called the Apostle Paul, is a fine example of this fact.If ever the devil had a volunteer to destroy the whole Christian Church and wipe it out, it

was Saul of Tarsus. One could say he was the General of Satan's army. He instigated

such a great persecution against the early Church in Jerusalem that all the believers werescattered except the apostles. "Saul laid waste the Church" (Acts 8.3) and, determined to

destroy it, he made his way to Damascus. Suddenly Jesus appeared to him in a glorious

vision and appointed him to be his Apostle to the whole Gentile world.

The question might well be asked - could Saul have resisted the call of Jesus to become

the Apostle Paul, the General of the Lord's army? However one might reply, Paul himself 

said "He set me apart before I was born, he called me through his grace, and he was

 pleased to reveal his Son in me, in order that I might preach him among the Gentiles"(Galatians 1.15). The Apostle's response was simply "I found myself caught up in God's

 purposes for me".

The key question, however, is - could the devil have resisted the call of Jesus? It is almost

as if the two armies spoken of in Revelation 19.19 were standing opposite each other, andthe king of the one, Jesus, went to the ruler of the other, Satan, and said "Who is the

leading soldier in your ranks?" After Saul had been pointed out to him, Jesus, so it

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