Some authorities seem to be having a
problem finding a motive for the killing of our marines and a sailor in
Chattanooga this July. There seems to be
a hesitation to call it terrorism if the perpetrator cannot be proved to have
some connection to a terrorist organization.
Since the killer was a Muslim the authorities are obviously looking into
Islamic Jihadist movements.
There is of course a problem in that
thinking, and that is a failure to understand the motivating factor of religion
within an individual to produce an act of terror. This attack was against our entire nation,
not simply against a location, not simply against individuals, as those who were
attacked and killed were representatives of our nation’s armed forces. I don't believe this was typical American work place
violence, or done from a despairing sense of nihilism; any target will do for
that. This was too political a statement
to be dismissed so easily. Two military
locations were targeted, although one location might have simply been to draw
off the police so the killing could take place in another.
It may be proved that the killer was in
contact with some particular organization, or at least reading online
encouragement for Jihad and the call to commit attacks against the U.S. by the
end of Ramadan. That is when it
happened, but again whether that is what the attacker intended is still
unknown. Whether he was in contact with
Jihadis, or simply inspired by propaganda, or motivated by things he heard and
saw while visiting the Middle East, it is still possible something else was at
work and that something may have simply been religious zeal.
There is a political conundrum about
blaming a religion for horrendous acts against our nation and culture, although
those who have been our enemies have consistently and outspokenly explained
their murderous and heinous acts as religiously motivated. The obvious problem of simply blaming Islam
for the terror is that not everyone who is a Muslim is a terrorist, for which
we are grateful. That would make things
fairly simple, but overwhelmingly horrible, and the war would therefore have to
be horrendous to put it down.
Preachers know that one sermon can make the
difference between someone who is a “backslider” or “prodigal” and one who now
has a fresh passion and commitment to God. Ramadan is a time of year when Muslims get in touch with their
religion, they get back to the basics, they seek for a spiritual revival. The Muslim killer not too long ago had a DUI,
which is not a sign of being a good Muslim.
I am not sure what he did with his guilt about that, but I have a
suspicion. Christians are well aware of
spiritual revival and renewal, when our faith is “radicalized” and we become
more fervent. This is something common
to religious adherents.
What is not common is murder, and this is
exactly where Islam and Christianity part company. This is one reason I am so grateful that the
Bible is a book of progressive revelation, where the Old Testament unfolds into
the New Testament. When a Muslim becomes
“radical” in their faith all the teachings of the Koran become motivating to
them, even the ones that construe the killing of non-Muslims to be something
their Allah would approve. For
Christians to become radical means we become more like Jesus, and thus more
loving and more forgiving.
All religions have splinter groups that are
not consistent with the fundamental principles of that religion. All religions have “cults” and charismatic
leaders who delude their followers into stupid and perverted twists on the
original religion. For Christianity to
be “fundamental” means to love more, but that is not true for Islam. Islamic fundamentalism doesn’t need a cult to
make it dangerous, it has always been a militaristic and imperialistic
religion, and it is a great blessing to the world for most of its adherents to
be “moderate” about their religion. It
is a shame for so many Christians to be “moderate” about theirs.
There have been seminars and conferences to
bring about some understanding of what has radicalized Muslim young adults. Opinions have been offered about poverty,
displacement, alienation, and other emotional and social causes. It seems like it is forbidden to simply say,
“ah, how about religion?” If it could
simply be renewed fervency of Islamic practice that means it is fairly
unpredictable, or very predictable, depending on how you look at it.
The secular West has a very hard time
trying to figure this out. We seem to
have the expectancy that people will privatize their religious beliefs, be
non-intrusive to others, and that religious adherents would subordinate their
beliefs to a Western pluralism.
Secularists have few tools to understand Islam nor do they have the
ideas to clearly speak to its dangers without sounding undemocratic. The mass migration of Muslims to countries of
the West without their willingness to assimilate either to Christianity, or to
Western secular ideas (and this is not to include materialism or technology
which Muslims can readily embrace) makes radicalized individuals, in our midst,
far too possible. For Christians being a
martyr means to die for your faith, for a Muslim it means killing infidels
while you die for your faith.
We are not speaking of crazy people here nor
of deadbeats and losers. We are talking
about smart, educated, earnest young people who want to make a difference in
life. Unfortunately the religion they
have become fervent about means that to make a difference might come through
murder, beheading, suicide bombing, kidnapping of young women, and taking
children into slavery. Since the West
has decided it doesn’t know what its values are, or which cultural values it
should keep, it has opened the door to all kinds of difficulty in stemming what
it will call “inexplicable” acts of violence.
There is another problem that is closer to
home for Christians. The question is how
can we love Muslim people while understanding that the religion they hold might
cause them to act in hate toward us, and might motivate them to kill us, and
has motivated other Muslims to kill our brothers and sisters around the
world? How can we love Muslims who hold
to a religion that might at any time motivate some of them to kill our military
members, our own sons and daughters, in the name of their Allah? This is hard, but it has always been hard for
Christians to love those that hate them, and yet at the same time it has always
been the command of Christ for us to do so.
In times like these we will need to believe that the grace of God is
able to help us to do just that.
END.
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