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Mark did I think.Which regulars on here said that ?
This is one of the big problems on this forum , Michie .Mark did I think.
I read it myself. Unfortunately I have not had time to search it out.This is one of the big problems on this forum , Michie .
You aren't sure .
Too often there is a dearth of facts .
It was said that some of our regularS on here have called it a Christian heresy.
I would like to know who these regulars are .
It's not the first time in recent days that the alleged words of members have been used as a source for new threads .
When asked about what these members actually said it's been errrrr , well mmm , well they didn't really say that .
If Islam can be called a Christian heresy then nearly every religion can since nearly every religion has something in it that can be compared to something in Christianity. I think calling Islam a Christian heresy is pure wishful thinking. For something to be a Christian heresy it has to at least claim to be Christian. Islam makes no such claim. And Islam teaches directly against Christianity in the Quran and calls Christians misled for believing in the core beliefs that make us Christians.The view that Islam is or was essentially a Christian heresy is found among many of the earliest Christian sources dealing with that religion. Most prominent among them from the Chalcedonians is probably John of Damascus, who was contemporaneous with the early Muslim generations (he died in 749), and wrote "On the Heresy of the Ishmaelites" as a chapter of his larger work The Fount of Knowledge. There he contrasts the Christian faith he knew against the objections of the Muslims he was surrounded by, noting those things the Muslims accept and giving responses to the things that they do not. It is probably important here to note that the root of the word 'heresy' is in the Greek word for 'choice', making this approach to Islam quite reasonable for people who would've seen Islam as nothing more than another in a long line of heresies that distorted the truth of Christianity by mixing truth with lies (seeing as how Muslims affirm Christ being God's word, as well as His virgin birth and His second coming, but deny His divinity and His death and resurrection).
From outside the Chalcedonian world, there is the legend of (Sergius) Bahira, which is found in early Muslim sources such as Ibn Hisham (d. 828) and Al Tabari (d. 923), but also in early Syriac sources of the 8th century, by authors in that part of the world who were contending with the new Muslim administration. Syriac versions of the legend tend to describe Muhammad as misled into believing his 'prophethood' by a Nestorian monk (indicating that the authors themselves were Orthodox Syriacs, as no Christian worth his salt then or now would want to claim Muhammad or his religion), who imparted to Muhammad his own confused Christology from which Muhammad drew conclusions about Christianity which are responsible for the...let's say fanciful understanding of Christianity found in the Qur'an itself. There have also been various polemical works by Chalcedonians which have laid the fault for Islam on my own church, such as referenced in O'Leary's How Greek Science Passed to the Arabs (I don't have my books at hand right now or else I'd just reference the original work from which O'Leary draws), which would likewise make it essentially a Christian heresy (that is, if you believe that non-Chalcedonians are Christians).
And finally there is the fact that some of the material actually found in the Qur'an itself (e.g., the story of Jesus speaking from the cradle about his supposed Islamic mission in Surah 19) has been rather uncontroversially accepted for a long time to have come from earlier Christian apocryphal sources, albeit obviously tweaked to fit Islam's distinctive prophetology. From wikipedia (a horrible source, I know, but good for a quick comparison like this in a simple internet messageboard post), we can compare the two. First the Arabic Infancy Gospel (translated from the 5th century Syriac original; keep in mind that Muhammad was only born in the 6th century, so obviously this would've predated the invention of Islam), we read:
[v2] "He has said that Jesus spoke, and, indeed, when He was lying in His cradle said to Mary His mother: I am Jesus, the Son of God, the Logos, whom thou hast brought forth, as the Angel Gabriel announced to thee; and my Father has sent me for the salvation of the world."
And from the Yusuf Ali translation of the Qur'an, we read:
[19:29-34] "But she pointed to the babe. They said: "How can we talk to one who is a child in the cradle?" He said: "I am indeed a servant of Allah: He hath given me revelation and made me a prophet; And He hath made me blessed wheresoever I be, and hath enjoined on me Prayer and Charity as long as I live; (He) hath made me kind to my mother, and not overbearing or miserable; So peace is on me the day I was born, the day that I die, and the day that I shall be raised up to life (again)"! Such (was) Jesus the son of Mary: (it is) a statement of truth, about which they (vainly) dispute."
Gee! What a surprise! In the Christian version, which predates the Muslim one, He says distinctly Christian stuff, while in the Muslim version, He says distinctly Islamic stuff!
Given the obviously self-serving recension/stealing from Muhammad here, it's pretty easy to see how early Christians could've considered Islam to essentially be a Christian heresy. In fact, I'm not sure when exactly this view fell out of favor. Probably among different people at different times. I've known some EO people who still call it that, with a nod towards John of Damascus, who is a saint in their communion. I don't think that's terribly common in my own church, however, given how turned off we generally are from associating anything Islamic with our religion (1400 years of being ruled by these people and their false religion will do that). But the fact is that they are associated -- from Islamic historians flipping around history and apocryphal legends of Assyrian monks in Muhammad's favor, and Muhammad himself -- errr....excuse me...the writer of the Qur'an -- doing the same with apocryphal Christian gospels, as with the Syriac/Arabic Infancy Gospel example given above. By far the lion's share of Jefferey's seminal 1938 work on foreign (non-Arabic) vocabulary in the Qur'an is taken up by words derived or directly borrowed from Syriac, too, meaning that a lot of the terminology that Muslims consider to be "pure, clear Arabic", including even religious terminology, is also (ahem) 'borrowed' from preexisting Christians and refashioned to fit Islam. And this only makes sense (similar to how we inherited much from the Jews, while of course putting out own spin on things), as despite Islamic apologists' insistence to the contrary, there were plenty of Christians present among the Arabs before Islam. It was not just pagans, Jews, and a few scattered Christians here or there. Granted, Christianity never took off among the Arabs as a whole in Arabia proper (for the many interesting sociological and linguistic reasons for this, see Trimingham 1979 Christianity Among the Arabs in Pre-Islamic Times), but plenty of individual tribes were Christian, or became mostly Christian in the centuries before Muhammad. In Arabia proper, there were the Banu Taghlib (in Bahrain) and the Kalb (descended from Yemenites), as well as the more well-known Ghassanids (also originally Yemenites) and Lakhmids (ditto). The Lakhmids founded the first Arab kingdom outside of Arabia proper at Al-Hira, in what is now Iraq, c. 300 AD. Even the Qur'an itself testifies to a historical Christian presence in the Najran region of what is today Saudi Arabia through its retelling of the Christian martyrs killed there by Dhu Nawas, the last Himyarite (Yemenite Jewish) king. Granted, there (in Sura Al-Buruj; popularly known as "The People of the Ditch" story) they are stripped of their distinctly Christian identities and are only referred to as "believers in God", but we know they are Christians because of pre-existing, pre-Qur'anic accounts of their martyrdom which match what information is found in Islamic sources in terms of year and place (collected and translated from Syriac sources in, e.g., Brock and Harvey Holy Women of the Syrian Orient).
If Islam can be called a Christian heresy then nearly every religion can since nearly every religion has something in it that can be compared to something in Christianity. I think calling it a Christian heresy is pure wishful thinking. For something to be a Christian heresy it has to at least claim to be Christian. Islam makes no such claim. And Islam teaches directly against Christianity in the Quran and calls Christians misled for believing in the things that make us Christians.
I have never considered Islam Christian anything. The beginnings of its history testifies to that. It is a grab bag of this and that to suit it's founder.
The charge that I created this thread to hate on Muslims is simply not true
I really struggle understanding how they could given the way they have perverted Christianity. I can see Jews worshipping God the Father as depicted in the OT but I cannot reconcile it at all in Islam.I do not even believe they worship the same God as Christians
If Islam can be called a Christian heresy then nearly every religion can since nearly every religion has something in it that can be compared to something in Christianity. I think calling Islam a Christian heresy is pure wishful thinking. For something to be a Christian heresy it has to at least claim to be Christian.
Calling God our Father is something that Christians and Jews share in common. But Muslims call it blasphemy. The religion of Islam is against the core teachings of our faith, and it denies that the Jews are God's first chosen people.I really struggle understanding how they could given the way they have perverted Christianity. I can see Jews worshipping God the Father as depicted in the OT but I cannot reconcile it at all in Islam.
If Islam can be called a Christian heresy then nearly every religion can since nearly every religion has something in it that can be compared to something in Christianity. I think calling Islam a Christian heresy is pure wishful thinking. For something to be a Christian heresy it has to at least claim to be Christian. Islam makes no such claim. And Islam teaches directly against Christianity in the Quran and calls Christians misled for believing in the core beliefs that make us Christians.
I really struggle understanding how they could given the way they have perverted Christianity. I can see Jews worshipping God the Father as depicted in the OT but I cannot reconcile it at all in Islam.
The first thing that we need to establish is how far a definition can differ from reality before it no longer has the same subject. For example, if someone referred to my brother and gave a description which was accurate in all details except for being off by an inch for his height, we would certainly say that this person was indeed talking about my brother. But if they said that my brother was a 100-year old midget from tasmania with three heads and seven eyes they would be completely off the mark. But the question becomes: are they describing an imaginary person with those characteristics, or are they just describing my brother extremely poorly?
I think that anyone who refers to the "God of the philosophers" (or God as He is described by classical theism) is describing God. That is, if they identify God as a the only true god, the creator of all, the source of all goodness and so on then they have identified God. Thus Aristotle knew of God, though he had no encounters with Christianity or Judaism. And Islam, for all of its numerous faults, does know God in this way.
Again, this is not necessarily to their benefit. If a polytheistic shaman describes the gods of the rivers and trees and animals, he does not misidentify God and so does Him no great disservice. If someone does know God on the other hand, but attributes things to Him which are abhorrent, that very well may be blaspheming even if the worshiper is not Christian.
If Islam can be called a Christian heresy then nearly every religion can since nearly every religion has something in it that can be compared to something in Christianity. I think calling Islam a Christian heresy is pure wishful thinking. For something to be a Christian heresy it has to at least claim to be Christian. Islam makes no such claim. And Islam teaches directly against Christianity in the Quran and calls Christians misled for believing in the core beliefs that make us Christians.
Things like Shintoism or Buddhism are not Christian heresies, because they have no connection to Christianity in their origins. Islam does. While Mohammad was certainly not Christian, he was familiar with some form of Christianity and incorporated elements of it into his new religion.
Note that while Muslims do not call them Christians, they do view themselves as the true heirs of the Christian tradition.
As for teaching against Christianity and claiming that Christians are misled: that is what heresies do. If they were not against core dogma, they wouldn't be heresies. And since the distinction is so great they must claim that normal Christians are being misled. Gnosticism in particular made lots of claims along these lines, with Gnostics being the Christians with the "secret knowledge" of how things really were.
I should note that I think heresy is primarily a useful term for understanding the development of an idea. It is not a compliment. I have more respect for the completely non-Christian traditional Chinese teachings than I do for most heresies.
God being all thst is good and true is one thing but the God of Islam seems to condone deception.