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Radical Islam: What You Need to Know


Radical Islam: What You Need to Know by Dr. Jim Denison

Why do radical Muslims hate us? How will the death of bin Laden affect this global conflict? What will it take to win the longest war in America’s history?

Jim Denison explains the mind and motives of radical Islam, telling you what you need to know about the greatest threat our nation has ever faced.

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Tyrannosaurus Rex at Palais de la Découverte Musuem, Paris, France (Credit: David Monniaux via en.wikipedia.org)The New York City Department of Education is in the news this morning for banning the use of "dinosaur" on tests.  The Department doesn't want to upset people who believe in creationism.  Never mind the fact that creationists don't deny the existence of dinosaurs.  The decision bans an entire species because the Department doesn't want to upset religious sensibilities.  They barred "evolution" for the same reason.

"Birthday" is also banned, since Jehovah's Witnesses don't celebrate birthdays.  "Halloween" can't be used on tests, since it could also "evoke unpleasant emotions in the students."  However, "religion" is also on the list, perhaps because atheists might be similarly offended.

In the alternate universe of New York City tests, there is no such thing as "cancer," "catastrophes," "death and disease," "divorce," "terrorism" or "violence."  "Politics" made the list, which is rather interesting, as did "Rock-and-Roll music."  Political correctness wins while education loses.

I have no expertise in educational psychology, but I would like to speak to the Department's concern about offending religious people.  This idea that we want to ignore subjects that may conflict with our beliefs could not be more unbiblical.  The assertion that religion and reason are enemies does violence to both.  A little boy, when asked to define "faith," replied: "Believing what you know ain't so."  He couldn't have been more wrong.

The prophet heard the Lord say, "Come, let us reason together" (Isaiah 1:18).  "Let us reason" translates the Hebrew niw wakhah, which means to "argue it out."  Jesus taught us to love God "with all your mind" (Matthew 22:37).  The Apostle Paul was "thoroughly trained in the law of our fathers" by Gamaliel, the finest scholar of his generation (Acts 22:3).  Some of the greatest minds in history have been devoted Christians, from St. Augustine to Dr. Francis Collins.

Unfortunately, Christians have sometimes been our own worst enemies with regard to intellectual inquiry and honesty.  The medieval Church's rejection of Galileo's discoveries was tragic.  The astronomer was right: "I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forego their use."

What decisions or challenges are you facing today?  God will speak to you intuitively by his Spirit (Romans 8:16) and practically through circumstances and events.  But he also wants to speak to your mind through Scripture and logic.  John A. Hutchinson was right: "Unthinking faith is a curious offering to be made to the creator of the human mind."

My Ph.D. is in philosophy of religion, a subject I have taught at four seminaries.  I always close my courses with this prayer: "From cowardice, which shrinks from new truth; from laziness, that is content with half truth; from arrogance, that thinks it knows all truth, O God of truth, deliver."
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Comments  

 
+2 # RickPorter 2012-03-28 08:41
What a beautiful prayer. Thank you. As the Lord has allowed me to know and understand more about myself, He has allowed me to understand more about Him and His word. My faith and my life are ever evolving and growing. And I must remain open to His loving teaching. He will give me the lessons I need when I need them and I will never "know it all" in this life.
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+2 # Reg Lyle 2012-03-28 09:11
Today's subject may be the most significant challenge that the postmodern church faces--perhaps the greatest indictment. The "body of Christ", in many instances, has abdicated it's role in the "marketplace of ideas." Predominantly, we have practiced a form of "fortress theology."

Why? Several reasons come to mind. It is an easier theology--we let the pastor/preacher do our Bible study throughout the week. Also, we are more comfortable with an abstract concept of who Jesus is rather than deal with His radical worldview that drives our values and actions. So, we are snug and comfy without having to deal with the particulars of life.

The result of this "convenient lifestyle" is that one out of two marriages end in divorce, our families are increasingly fragmented, nihilism has validated suicide, a lower class that believes they deserve more than they want to give, millions of innocent lives lost under the "morality of societal law", loss of any sense of worth and dignity--displayed by taking poisonous drugs or covering our God-given protective outer skin with graffiti, and political correctness that takes no idea of "oughtness" to the extreme.

I must admit that I have fallen short in some of these areas, but by the grace of God through the atoning work of Jesus Christ I am committed to make a difference in this world as is possible.
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+1 # Margaret Lorimer 2012-03-28 09:23
Dr. Denison,I recently "discovered" your blog through a fellow colleague in a graduate course, and I have enjoyed immensely the insight that drops into my mailbox every morning. Thank you sir! Also, is the prayer "yours" or did you borrow it from someone? I'd like to share it and want to cite the source.
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+1 # Brittany 2012-03-28 09:35
Hi Margaret, I did a little digging on the quote and found it attributed as an ancient Jewish prayer, a Kenyan prayer, and unknown on different sites.
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0 # Dianne Swaim 2012-03-28 12:25
Thank you, Dr. Denison! I agree wholeheartedly with your conclusions. I've always said thinking does not violate my faith, rather my faith enhances my thinking. And thanks for the beautiful prayer!
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