Catholicism and Islam, “Ties That Bind”
by: T.A. McMahon
Rome has been tilling "common ground" with Islam for decades,
as evidenced by the 1994 Vatican publication, Recognize the Spiritual Bonds
Which Unite Us: 16 Years of Christian-Muslim Dialogue. Why, therefore, would
anyone be upset by my simply repeating what the Roman Catholic Church very much
desires? Actually, the real controversy stems from confusion created by the
Church of Rome herself. In her zeal to be the spiritual voice of the world's
religions, she talks out of both sides of her ecumenical mouth. Regarding her
relationship to Islam, not only has she made to those of the Muslim faith some
theological overtures which contradict Christian orthodoxy, but even worse,
there are ties between the two religions which go a lot deeper than most people
realize. Let's first consider some commonalities between the two faiths.
Starting with the number of adherents, Catholicism and Islam each exceed one
billion, nearly all of whom enter their respective faiths as infants. More than
16 million babies are baptized into the Roman Catholic Church each year. It's a
family thing. My sisters and I were baptized as Catholics because our parents
were Catholics, and they and their siblings were baptized into the Church
because their parents were Catholics. That's the primary way the faith is
propagated.
Practically speaking, although baptism is not part of Islam, all children
born into a Muslim family are Muslims. Their official "confirmation"
follows as soon as they are able to confess the shahada ("There is no God
but Allah, and Muhammad is his messenger"). This baby-oriented process for
increasing their ranks has been a motivating factor in the
Vatican/Saudi-sponsored lobby against UN endeavors to introduce contraception
and other methods of population control, especially in third-world countries.
Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world today; Catholicism is the
largest religious body among those professing to be Christian. If the number of
followers is a good measure for selecting a religion, then Islam and Catholicism
would definitely be the way to go. However, the Bible has no such yardstick.
Rather, Jesus said, "Wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that
leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat. Because strait
is the gate and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few
there be that find it" (Mt 7:13,14).
Most people are aware of the veneration and even worship of Mary found among
Roman Catholics, but not many know that much the same deference exists among
Muslims. A chapter in the Qur'an is named after Mary ("Surah Maryam"). From
the outskirts of Cairo to Bombay to Medjugorje in Bosnia-Herzegovina, hundreds
of thousands of the Islamic faith have congregated wherever processions carry
her statues and where her apparitions are said to have appeared. She is esteemed
above the most revered women of the Muslim faith, including Muhammad's two
favorite wives, Khadija and Aisha, and his daughter Fatima. The hadith
teaches that Muhammad selected Mary as his first wife upon entrance into
Paradise. One of the most popular Catholic apparitions of Mary is referred to as
Our Lady of Fatima.
Catholic and Islamic prayers have many similarities. For the Muslim, praying
to Allah five times a day is altogether an act of obedience, and the prayers are
always repetitive. As one former Muslim puts it, "It's hardly intimate
communication with Allah; it's done more to escape the punishment due to those
who neglect prayer." Most prayers prayed by Catholics are also rote and
repetitive, saying the rosary being the best example. Repeating 16 "Our
Father's" and 153 "Hail Mary's" is far from personal communication. Furthermore,
when a Catholic goes to confession the priest assigns rosaries as severe
punishment, or penance, for one's sins.
Prayer beads were a part of Islamic devotion to Allah long before an
apparition of the Blessed Lady taught St. Dominic to pray the rosary beads in
the thirteenth century. Prayer beads, by the way, are a stock item in ancient
and modern paganism. Catholics and Muslims regard pilgrimages as a means of
obtaining favor from God. The hadj, one of the five pillars of Islam, is
a required (one-time) journey to Mecca. For Catholics, pilgrimages historically
have been acts of religious purification, often induced by the promise of
indulgences. Multi-millions of Catholics travel yearly to hundreds of shrines
(nearly all dedicated to Mary) located throughout the world. The Crusades were
indulgence-stimulated attempts to regain Jerusalem from the infidel Muslims in
order to re-establish Catholic pilgrimages. Incidentally, the Church of Rome
offered the crusaders full pardon from purgatory should they die trying to
liberate the Holy Land. Similarly, Islam offers rewards in and assurance of
Paradise to those who die in religious battles (jihad), including suicide
bombings.
Roman Catholicism recognizes Allah as the God of the Bible. In 1985,
Pope John Paul II declared to an enraptured audience of thousands of Muslim
youths, "Christians and Muslims, we have many things in common as believers and
as human beings. We believe in the same God, the one and only God, the living
God...."
But how is that possible?
Historically, Allah was a pagan idol, supreme among many idols worshiped by
Muhammad's Quraish tribe long before he was born. Will Durant in his classic,
The Story of Civilization, writes, Within the Ka'aba, in pre-Moslem days,
were several idols representing gods. One was called Allah; three others were
Allah's daughters, al-Uzza, al-Lat, and al-Manat. We may judge the antiquity of
this Arab pantheon from the mention of Al-il-Lat (Al-Lat) by Herodotus [fifth
century b.c. Greek historian] as a major Arabian deity. The Quraish paved the
way for monotheism by worshiping Allah as chief god....
Archaeological evidence uncovered in Arabia is overwhelming in demonstrating
that the dominant pre-Islamic religion was the worship of the moon-god, Allah.
Muhammad simply eliminated the other 300-some deities, including Allah's
daughters, making Allah supreme while retaining many of the pagan rituals and
symbols associated with him. For example, the crescent moon was the symbol of
the moon-god from the time of the Sumerians and the Babylonians through the time
of Christ and right up until Muhammad's arrival. It's hardly a coincidence that
Ramadan, the Muslim time of fasting, begins and ends at the time of the crescent
moon. Nearly all of the moon-god rituals and other idolatrous practices,
including kissing the Black Stone, praying toward Mecca, running around the
temple and between the two hills of Safa and Marwa, were pre-Islamic rituals.
Catholicism's zeal to relate to Islam makes one wonder how honest it is about
its own perspective on God, based on the "Sacred Scripture." God is referred to
as Yahweh or Jehovah about 9,000 times in the Bible. Never is He thus referred
to in the Qur'an. He reveals himself in the Scriptures as "The God of Abraham,
the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob/Israel." He is the Father of the Jews,
"the God of Israel." In the Qur'an, Allah never refers to himself that way. God
calls the Jews His "chosen people." He gave them the land of Israel as a
heritage "forever": "And they shall dwell in the land that I have given unto
Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have dwelt; and they shall dwell therein,
even they, and their children, and their children's children for ever" (Ezk
37:25). God's covenant is with Isaac (Gn 17: 19-21), while Muslims believe
Allah's covenant is with Ishmael.
Allah has a completely different attitude toward the Jews than does the God
of the Bible. Allah commands his followers to "Take not the Jews for friends" (Sura
5:51). While the Jews are referred to in the Qur'an as "the people of the book"
(the Bible), if they refuse to convert to Islam they must pay a tribute tax to
their overlords and become subservient to them: "Fight against such of those who
have been given the Scripture as believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, and
forbid not that which Allah hath forbidden by his messenger, and follow not the
religion of truth, until they pay the tribute readily, being brought low" (Sura
9:29). According to the hadith, which most Muslims regard to be nearly as
authoritative as the Qur'an, Muhammad is quoted as saying, "The last hour will
not come before the Muslims fight the Jews, and the Muslims kill them." Again,
the hadith says that, related to the Day of Judgment, Muslims will fight
and kill Jews, who will hide behind trees that say, "Oh Muslim, Oh servant of
Allah, here is a Jew hiding behind me. Come here and kill him." Catholicism has
its own grievous and well-documented history of slaughtering the Jews.
Further comparisons between Jehovah and Allah demonstrate clearly that they
cannot be one and the same. Jehovah has a Son: "And we have seen and do testify
that the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world" (1 Jn 4:14). Allah
has no son: "And say: Praise be to Allah, Who hath not taken unto Himself
a son, and Who hath no partner in the Sovereignty..." (Sura 17:111); "Allah hath
not chosen any son, nor is there any God along with him" (Sura 23:91). Whereas
God the Father declared from heaven concerning Jesus, "This is my beloved Son,
in whom I am well pleased" (Mt 3:17), Allah of the Qur'an condemns such a
belief: "...the Christians say: Messiah is the son of Allah. That is a saying
from their mouths. They imitate the saying of the disbelievers of old. Allah's
Curse be on them, how they are deluded away from the truth!" (Sura 9:30 )
While there are both clear and critical differences between the biblical God
and Allah, nevertheless, the Roman Catholic Church accepts them as one and the
same God. The following quote is from Vatican II:
The Church has also a high regard for the Muslims. They worship God, who is
one, living and subsistent, merciful and almighty, the Creator of heaven and
earth, who has also spoken to men. They strive to submit themselves without
reserve to the hidden decrees of God, just as Abraham submitted himself to God's
plan, to whose faith Muslims eagerly link their own. Although not
acknowledging him as God, they venerate Jesus as a prophet, his virgin
Mother they also honor, and even at times devoutly evoke. Further, they await
the day of judgment and the reward of God following the resurrection of the
dead. For this reason they highly esteem an upright life and worship God,
especially by way of prayer, alms-deeds and fasting (Nostra Aetate,
Vatican II).
Consider carefully the above quote (taken from what the Roman Catholic Church
claims is an infallible council) and you will realize what truly binds
Catholicism and Islam together: They both have a Jesus who cannot save
their souls. The Qur'an teaches that Jesus did not die on the cross:
"And because of [the Jews] saying, We slew the Messiah Jesus son of Mary,
Allah's messenger, They slew him not nor crucified, but it appeared so unto
them; and lo! those who disagree concerning it are in doubt thereof; they have
no knowledge thereof save pursuit of a conjecture; they slew him not for
certain" (Sura 4:157). Vatican II may give Muslims credit for "venerating"
Jesus, but in fact, it's a bogus Jesus. Sadly, Catholicism also has a false
Christ. It teaches that His death on the cross was not sufficient for our
salvation. Not only must His sacrifice (which, according to the Scriptures, was
offered only once to take away our sins completely [Heb 9:28]) be
"re-presented" as a daily sacrifice for sins on altars around the world, but
Catholics must expiate their own sins through sufferings here on earth and in
purgatory.
Finally, Vatican II spells out clearly what Islam and Catholicism regard as
their hope for salvation: "...they highly esteem an upright life and worship
God, especially by way of prayer, alms-deeds and fasting." This is works
salvation. In Islam, a person is accountable for every thought, word, and
deed. His or her life is to be lived according to what is pleasing to Allah as
found in the Qur'an and the hadith. In addition, there is shari'a,
which is the body of rules that attempts to cover the totality of Islamic
religious, political, social and domestic life. Breaking such laws involves
various forms of temporal punishment. At the Last Judgment Allah will determine
one's eternal destiny as He places one's good and evil works on the divine
scale: "Then those whose scales are heavy [with good deeds], they are the
successful. And those whose scales are light are those who lose their souls, in
hell abiding" (Sura 23:102,103). The hadith vividly describes the
tortures of hell.
Although the Catholic Church states that it is only by God's grace that one
can enter heaven, it becomes very clear that what is meant is that grace is
required to enable one to do the works which qualify one for heaven.
According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, they "obtain the joy of
heaven, as God's eternal reward for the good works accomplished with the grace
of Christ" (par 1821) and they "can merit for themselves and for others all the
graces needed to attain eternal life" (par 2027). Pope John Paul II has often
repeated these words: "It is now urgent that Christians and Muslims enter a new
period of history, to recognize and develop the spiritual bonds that unite us."
Truly, the God of Catholicism and of Islam are compatible, but neither one is
the God of the Bible!
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