Office of Alumni/ae and Church RelationsFuller Home | News and Events Home | Alumni/ae Home | Back to E-News Comments about the interfaith conflict resolution project, featured in the L.A. Times article -- Sat., Dec. 6, 2003The following comments are intended to provide additional information about the interfaith conflict resolution project. Please let me know if additional clarification would be helpful. Thanks, 1.) Background: 2.) Fuller's project development: The significance of this initiative is that we hope to clarify our real commonalities and differences, and discern the resources that we have in both faiths for peaceful relations. 3.) Fuller's faculty resources on the study of Islam: 4.) Evangelizing Muslims: Dr. Woodberry notes that: "The goal of this dialogue is not to proselytize. Actually to the extent that we are guided by our Scriptures (and both Christians and Muslims are), we both are missionary religions with a message for all people (John 3:16; Qur'an 25:1). We both claim the final messenger (Hebrews 1:1-2; Qur'an 33:4). We both are called to be witnesses (Matthew 28:19-20; Acts 1:8; Qur'an 2:143). We both have exclusive claims for our message (John 14:6, Acts 4:12, Qur'an 3:85); but we both are also called upon to witness in a gracious way (1 Peter 3:15; Qur'an 16:125; 29:46). Dr. Mouw notes the following, about our approach to other religious, including Islam: "I believe our approach to other religions must be three-fold. First--and this is absolutely non-negotiable--witnessing to others about the saving merits of Jesus Christ as the only one who has the power to rescue us from our desperate state of sin. Second, also learning from other religions. At the very least we need to be sure that we are not misrepresenting their views, since bearing false witness against our neighbors is a serious violation of God's law. But we also need to learn from others about how we might have sinned against them in other ways. And we must be open to the possibility that the Lord can teach us some positive spiritual and theological lessons in these dialogues. Third, we must cooperate with others in working for the common good, 'seeking,' in Jeremiah's words, 'the welfare of the city' in which we are living out the time of our exile. This is an especially important time for us to be working for the common good with our Muslim neighbors, especially in encouraging those strands of Muslim thought that place a strong emphasis on the peace-making passages in the Koran." 5.) Do Muslims and Christians worship the same God: "We had a group of Muslim scholars on campus a year or so ago. They came, sponsored by the State Department, to learn about American religion. Professor Jim Bradley gave one of the lectures to this group. He emphasized to them that no prophet can ever save us--only a Savior sent from heaven to die in our place for our redemption. I found this very moving and helpful. This is the place to talk about our differences--by pointing them to the Cross where alone they can find the kind of relationship with God that they profess to be seeking." Dr. Mouw continues: "We do believe that some of the rhetoric used by evangelicals in describing Islam needs to be toned down. In contrast to those who insist on beginning with a condemnation of Islam as idolatrous, we want to seek any common ground possible as a place to witness to the saving power of Jesus Christ." Dr. Woodberry states that: "We need to distinguish between the One Creator God to whom we refer and what we say about Him. Muhammad referred to the God of the Bible when he used the name 'Allah,' the name that Arab Christians used and still do, and the Qur'an says 'Your God and our God are One' (29:46); so it means the same person. What we say about Him is both similar and different. The differences are essentially the same differences we have with contemporary Jews who do not follow Jesus. Yet most Christians would say that Jews worship the same God, even though they do not understand or accept his revelation in Jesus Christ. As one who is studying Muslim conversions to Christ and is privileged to teach in a school whose former students are probably involved in leading more Muslims to faith in Christ than those of any other school, a majority of the converts that I have seen understand their conversion as bringing them into a personal relationship to the One God whom they knew less completely and misunderstood before." Thank you again for your interest and please contact me if further information would be helpful. Fred Messick |