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Is it really Islam's teachings that make Musllims violent?

Does the Koran say to forgive the infidels and those who blaspheme the prophet?

Or to turn the other cheek? Love thy neighbor?


IF you're trying to imply that the Bible is more about love for outsiders, you are sadly mistaken. It is a book of intolerance. Love and forgiveness apply only to believing neighbors. Don't forget that the NT claims that Jesus fully endorsed everything in the OT. Thus, any reading of his words that seem to contradict OT sentiments is wrong and not the intended meaning.

Also, Jesus himself was an unloving asshole promoting inequality, slavery, violence against gays, etc..
 
I think it's beyond question that Islamic terrorism really is a thing and it's a problem? My question is:

Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?


I've read the Koran (and the Bible). I think the Koran and the Bible are interchangeable. If the Koran manages to make Muslims violent, then surely the Bible should make Christians just as violent?
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If you disagree and you think that it is the content of the Koran that is the problem, why?
You're setting up a false dilemma -- you might as well evaluate Christian scripture's promotion of violence by reading only the New Testament.

"I have been ordered by Allah to fight and kill all mankind until they say, ‘No God except Allah and Muhammad is the prophet of Allah’." -- Sahih Al-Bukhari

"Whoever changes his Islamic religion, kill him." -- Sahih Al-Bukhari

It might be an interesting test to measure the percentage of people who do violence in the name of their religion among Muslims at large and compare that to the corresponding percentage among "Quran-only" Muslims, those who reject the authority of Hadith.
 
Well, as this is really diverging from the topic, I’ll keep it short, and not be responding further to this sidebar, which would really belong in the General Religion section….

Wow…so many problems…so little time. First there is no such animal as a “true Christian”. You are borrowing dogma from the True BelieversTM.

Nonsense. either the label Christian is an utterly meaningless string of letters uttered randomly or it refers to a defined construct that can be accurately and inaccurately applied, no different than the label "dog", or "rock". All meaning of words arises from its defining properties that determine to whom/what the word truely applies and to whom it doesn't.
My, my you seem to be a fundamentalist…Anywho, sure the word “Christian” has a definition, actually probably a few. Just as words like “conservative”, “liberal”, “libertarian” have definitions. The problem is in trying to fit people into such little boxes.

I am defining "true Chistians" as…
Now here’s the rub…which English dictionary have you published again?

In my 2 decades of being part of several liberal protestant churches and also several evangelical churches, I would have a hard time claiming one group was better read on the Bible.

There is plenty of research showing that liberal "Christians" know much less about the Bible, but the core issue isn't just awareness but belief in and adherence to and actually using the Bible's words to determine and justify one's actions on a daily basis. They are the one's who most reveal what the impact of Biblical and defining "Christian" beliefs are because they allow the Bible to have a primary influence on their life and are actually deeply convinced in those beliefs.
I see you have joined the fundamentalists here as well in assuming the Bible (you do know that there are actually 5 or 6 different Christian Cannons) is a coherent non-conflicting package, nor that it conflicts with reality. If the Bible was so Zeus clear, then one would think that the fundagelicals would all be in one big happy catholic church. Oddly, they tend to be a quite divided and bitchy non-group group. I know some deeply committed Mennonite Christians who have a very good Biblical understanding. They could quote shit out the ying-yang. And there isn’t a war/violence promoting bone in their body.
 
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You're setting up a false dilemma -- you might as well evaluate Christian scripture's promotion of violence by reading only the New Testament.

Even worse, its like using only the NT, and ignoring that everything in it is qualified by Jesus' explicit endorsement of everything in the OT as true and accurate and the word of God. Plus, the NT has plenty of very clear promotions of intolerance and violence, including by Jesus himself, so the notion that the NT is mostly love and forgiveness is a myth about a myth.
 
Islamic leaders can drive followers to violence.

Just as US leaders drive it's mercenary army to violence.

Young humans are easily driven to violence by so-called leaders. It is a problem with the species, not any religion.

But mainly Islamic leaders are driving young followers to violence for political ends, not religious.

And Nazi leaders can drive followers to violence. Young humans are easily driven to violence by so-called leaders. It is a problem with the species, not any political philosophy.

Not a political philosophy, political circumstance.

The Nazi's are a reaction to the brutality of WWI and the brutal peace imposed upon the Germans after the war, plus the underlying antisemitism of the day.

ISIS is a reaction to many things, one of them the brutal US invasion and years of military occupation of Iraq.

People are not reacting to books. They are reacting to so-called leaders who are reacting to political circumstance.
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

That was exactly my point with the OP. And similarly, Western anti-Islamic feelings can be traced to Ottoman Turkey's conquering of the Balkans and beseiging of Vienna. Based on what I've read, this was deeply traumatising for the entire west. Early Christianity wasn't racist at all (because Roman society had a very complicated system of hierarchies that weren't based on race). Which makes me wonder if this is when western racism starts? If it wasn't already getting going during the crusades?
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

There was more Western involvement in Africa and far more brutal occupation there. And yet the terrorism against the west is by and large coming from the Middle East and the Muslim African countries. Where are the Christian Africian countries engaging in terrorism against the west, those that were former colonies and suffered brutally in servitude/quasi-slavery?
 
The British Empire frequently stoked hostile feelings between different groups under their control, so as to weaken them. This has been blamed for a variety of problems today, most prominently the bloody division of India and Pakistan. It would not surprise me to see this also among other regions they controlled. Nigeria for example, might be a significant place to consider.

I am not as familiar with French colonialism, but it would also not surprise me if they used similar tactics.
 
I think it's beyond question that Islamic terrorism really is a thing and it's a problem? My question is:

Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?


I've read the Koran (and the Bible). I think the Koran and the Bible are interchangeable. If the Koran manages to make Muslims violent, then surely the Bible should make Christians just as violent? Baghavad Ghita has got even more war in it. It's partly pro-war propaganda IMHO. Why aren't Hindus murdering fashion designers who print the face of gods on sandals?

Here's the case I'm making; it's not the teachings of Islam that is the problem, it's the economic and political situation of the people who live in "the Muslim world". If religions would switch around between continents I'm convinced whatever religion they had in the Middle-East would be the problem child. Whatever it says in those religious texts, they would have been picked apart and twisted to justify suicide bombing. Case in point. First recorded use of a worn suicide bomb was by Christians (fighting Muslims) in Gozo 1551.

If you disagree and you think that it is the content of the Koran that is the problem, why?
It seems like you want to absolve religion of any responsibility for anything, good, bad or indifferent because in the absence of religion or the presence of other religions, people would still do horrible things but just use another ideology to justify it.

We way as well absolve any sort of ideology of blame for anything because people can always find justification in another ideology for doing the same thing.
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

There was more Western involvement in Africa and far more brutal occupation there. And yet the terrorism against the west is by and large coming from the Middle East and the Muslim African countries. Where are the Christian Africian countries engaging in terrorism against the west, those that were former colonies and suffered brutally in servitude/quasi-slavery?

I think that can be explained simply by the Middle-Eastern countries have historically been more stable than the African countries. African identity is a hell of a lot more over the map than Arab identity. I don't think Africans has the same monolithic us vs them thing going as the Arabs. So African religious terrorism is more likely to be targeted against other Africans. Which is exactly what is happening. The Lords Resistance Army are Christian extremists. As far as atrocities go they're pretty hard to tell apart from Boko Haram. I think you'd be hard pressed to find some sort of meaningful comparison between relative violence between African Christians and Muslims. The Rwanda genocide was Christian vs Christian. Yes, religion was used to motivate those attacks.
 
Well, as this is really diverging from the topic, I’ll keep it short, and not be responding further to this sidebar, which would really belong in the General Religion section….

Nonsense. either the label Christian is an utterly meaningless string of letters uttered randomly or it refers to a defined construct that can be accurately and inaccurately applied, no different than the label "dog", or "rock". All meaning of words arises from its defining properties that determine to whom/what the word truely applies and to whom it doesn't.
My, my you seem to be a fundamentalist…

No, I am a rationalist literate in the use of human language and who understands the conceptual underpinnings that make language and concepts useful tools for cognition. Unlike yourself, I don't spew out words and then deny their meaning if some soft minded post-modern effort to avoid logical thought that contradicts my faith, since logical thought required defined concepts on which to operate.

Anywho, sure the word “Christian” has a definition, actually probably a few. Just as words like “conservative”, “liberal”, “libertarian” have definitions. The problem is in trying to fit people into such little boxes.


I am defining "true Chistians" as…
Now here’s the rub…which English dictionary have you published again?

Which argument are you relying upon that says dictionaries contain the "objective" definitions of words?
The way human language and concepts work is that they are most aptly applied when they denote the propertied tied to that label are central defining features of that thing and distinguish it from other things that don't belong to that category. The word root is "Christ" who is a character in the Bible who professed a particular sort of God and other ideas, including endorsing every idea and ethic in the OT as true and accurate word of that God. Thus, the word Christian implies that the unique aspects of this book and the character of Christ are actually core and defining aspects of the person. Books are ideas and thus, "Christian" implies that their psychology can be accurately captured by relation to the Bible and the character of Christ who endorsed all its contents as the truth and the source of goodness. Their are billions of books and trillions of characters and no one defines themselves or others in terms of those characters, no matter how great a book and how much they like the character and their ideas. That is unique to religious texts, and thus it means that Christian is a rather silly useless label unless it goes way beyond how anyone thinks or feel about any other books in human history. It is at best meaningless, and more likely misrepresenting to apply the label of Christian to any person for whom Christ and entire Bible (again, Christ endorsed it all), as definition of themselves and how they think the world should be, and are devoted to those ideas to a level that is almost unheard of for any non doctrinal religious text.
And again, the thread is about the impact of religious ideas, not ideas shared by the religious and non-religious alike, which are in fact most of the ideas held by all the liberal, non-fundie "Christians" you are referring to. They don't support war and violence because their ideas and ethics are in no sense tied to the Bible or the Character of Christ, no matter how much they utter the phrase "I am Christian". If you want to make the word "Christian" devoid of all semantic meaning and as useful in conversation as a string of random nonsense characters, then that is fine, we can use your definition of "anyone who utters the phrase "I am Christian". But then the word is useless for the current question, so it is a red herring to bring it up.

In my 2 decades of being part of several liberal protestant churches and also several evangelical churches, I would have a hard time claiming one group was better read on the Bible.

There is plenty of research showing that liberal "Christians" know much less about the Bible, but the core issue isn't just awareness but belief in and adherence to and actually using the Bible's words to determine and justify one's actions on a daily basis. They are the one's who most reveal what the impact of Biblical and defining "Christian" beliefs are because they allow the Bible to have a primary influence on their life and are actually deeply convinced in those beliefs.
I see you have joined the fundamentalists here as well in assuming the Bible (you do know that there are actually 5 or 6 different Christian Cannons) is a coherent non-conflicting package.

Nothing I have said presumes it is a non conflicting package. In fact, liberal "Christians" recognition that the Bible is incoherent is among the many reason why most of them make almost no use of the Bible to make any ethical or factual decisions and why their ethics and ideas clearly come from the larger secular culture they live in. That's the point. However, despite local incoherence their are more fundamental ideas inherent to anything that could be claimed to have any meaningful basis in those texts, namely the inherent authoritarian intolerance of a creator God from whose will is the source of all things good. The Bible is rather coherent and consistent in this regard. In addition, nothing in the Bible actually counters God's intolerance for non-believers and calls for their torture and death. An ethical and tolerant being doesn't do or say what God did in countless parts of the Bible, even if they more rarely say vague "nicey" sorts of things that within context don't actually apply to all persons anyway, only the inner circles. Thus, even the local contradictions still portray a generally violent and evil being that is incompatible with modern tolerance and decency, despite occassionally uttering things that decent being say all the time.

This is one case where comparisons to Hitler are quite apt, because if anything, it is an insult to Hitler to claim he ever said or did as many evil and violent things as God. Even at his worst, Hitler did and said kind things. These do not confuse any sensible person into thinking that his evil things were just misunderstood. He was an evil and violent prick with bad ideas, who of course sometime said positive things. The occasional nice word does nothing to reduce the extreme evil, whereas the extreme evil completely disqualifies him from being anything remotely good or to be honored. So, again, the Christians who endorse aggression and violence are in line with the kind of overall character that the Bible, with all its local contradictions, portrays. The notion of a loving and tolerant being held by "liberal" Christians is incompatible with the Bible overall and in its context. IT is as absurd as concluding that Hitler was kind, loving, and tolerant, by examining a few love letters he wrote some girl and ignoring the rest.


If the Bible was so Zeus clear, then one would think that the fundagelicals would all be in one big happy catholic church.

That does not follow at all. Look at the Theory of Evolution as expressed in modern science. There are plenty of things about which it is quite clear and coherent, and yet there are people with various conflicting notions of the theory who selectively quote and misrepresent the ideas. People with other ideas or biases they did not get from the stated theory, inject those notions into the theory. Almost all of those alternative notions are objectively wrong and deliberate distortions, not merely "equally plausible or reasonable interpretations" of the modern theory. Same is true for the Bible. There is no getting around the inherent intolerant authoritarianism of the God of Abraham. It is inherent to the notion of a singular creator who is also the source of morality. Only highly dishonest deliberate ignorance of the clear meaning of most of the Bible could support any notion of God other than an intolerant authoritarian. The fundagelicals are the only Christians willing to accept this clear meaning. Other people, again, impacted by ideas and ethics outside of the Bible, want a different view, yet they want to try and steal the cache that the Bible and the label "Christian" have, so they dishonestly ignore almost all of it (doesn't mean they can't quote it, just that they don't apply it and ignore its logical implications). In addition, sectarianism is not mostly about different Biblical interpretations. Much of it is just about particular individuals with an ego complex wanting power, so they invent an excuse to form their own offshoot. Also, many Protestant sects in the US were born out of the power/authority vaccuum when the Church of England no longer was a viable option in the New World seeking to give a big fuck you to the motherland.
Before the second great awakening, only about 10% of Americans belonged to a church, despite being religious in their views. Thus, local pastors began competing for followers, inventing and making hay of minor discrepancies for the sake of being able to say their way was best. The reason that aggressive fundamentalism is bigger in the US is precisely because these new sects had no established authority so they turned to the Bible and its actual words as the authority of God's will, rejecting the Catholic Church and its rather non-Biblical (being equally silly) nonsense it created to empower itself and to make Chrisitianity more sellable to heathens, such as by deifying Mary and inventing a bunch of Saints to make it seem more pantheistic.
 
Does the Lords Resistance army justify itself with the bible? Do they quote and push scripture the way that Muslim terrorist groups do?
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

That's a very different question, because hate and violence toward the West, is just one form of hate and violence fueled by Islam, hate and violence toward women, infidels, and dissenters within those countries being others.

The hatred of the West is a political strategy to promote Islam and its core ethos of authoritarian intolerance of the new and different. The West interventions have given them a form of evidence they can point to in advancing these arguments of fear and need for retreating to the identity in Islam, and thus enable the kind of authoritarian violence against their own people that is inherent to Islam's core ideas. However, the West is a hotbed and promoter of infidels (any form of non-Islam from Christianity to science and secularism), gender equality, and protective rights for dissenters on any issue. Thus, even if we did not directly interfere in the Islamic world, committed Islamists would still direct a great deal of Ire and hate toward us and we'd still be used as a dangerous enemy to fuel the strength of Islam and influence of the Koran's authoritarian intolerance over society.

OTOH, the West's actions have made it very easy to connect the world not based in Islam as evil. Thus, our intrusions have likely had the ironic effect of impeding the natural internal progress toward post-enlightenment thinking, secularization, and the weakening of Islam. Some religious apologists wrongly paint it as though we have "radicalized" Islam. This is wrong. Like Christianity, Islam is a set of radically unreasonable and unethical ideas. What we have done is to impede the natural demise of core Islamic ideas into something more like modern Christianity in which its inherent promotion of authoritarian violence, racism, sexism, and unreason have been weakened by the fact that most adherents get their ideas and ethics from secular society and only engage in superficial practices and labeling to maintain the illusion of a Christian identity.

So, we have fueled Islam it is core ideas and values, which in turn are inherently anti-progressive. Christianity and Islam are ideological weapons that run on fear and misery and get people to run under the skirt of religion which then suffocates them for its own gain.
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

There was more Western involvement in Africa and far more brutal occupation there. And yet the terrorism against the west is by and large coming from the Middle East and the Muslim African countries. Where are the Christian Africian countries engaging in terrorism against the west, those that were former colonies and suffered brutally in servitude/quasi-slavery?

No oil.

The West has attached itself like a giant tick to the ME, in an attempt to control the flow of oil and profit from that flow, and has not let up.

There is a lot of Christian terrorism occurring in Africa but it isn't directed against the West because the presence and intrusion of the West is relatively insignificant.
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

There was more Western involvement in Africa and far more brutal occupation there. And yet the terrorism against the west is by and large coming from the Middle East and the Muslim African countries. Where are the Christian Africian countries engaging in terrorism against the west, those that were former colonies and suffered brutally in servitude/quasi-slavery?

"No, Stella. Stanley just beat you. He raped Blanche. And see, she's happy now in state home, so why would you be mad about a little beating? Your anger isn't justified in the least."
 
The British Empire frequently stoked hostile feelings between different groups under their control, so as to weaken them. This has been blamed for a variety of problems today, most prominently the bloody division of India and Pakistan. It would not surprise me to see this also among other regions they controlled. Nigeria for example, might be a significant place to consider.

I am not as familiar with French colonialism, but it would also not surprise me if they used similar tactics.

The British did not create the Muslim-Hindu or Muslim-Animist/Christian enmity in these lands; this pre-existed colonialism. Remember that Islam came to India through violent invasion. Pakistan was carved out of India by the British because the Muslims would not tolerate being ruled by Hindus. The Sikhs were not allotted an area for their homeland, so many made the sensible decision to head East knowing the Hindus would treat them far better than the Muslims.
 
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