Royal wrote: ↑Sat Jun 10, 2017 10:06 am
Contrast this with the Q'uran which teaches its adherents to kill the infidel, to make the whole world submit to Islam, to stone and murder apostates, to stone those caught in adultery etc etc.
Islam is clearly NOT a religion of peace. Christianity IS a religion of peace.
As far as I am aware - and am by no means conversant with the Quran - the passage often referred to doesn't say infidels it says idolators
and the context in which it was written is important. The Quran also mentions that Muslims must adhere to the laws of the land they are
living in. There are passages which directly forbid killing in the name of Islam, forbid coercion in to the faith etc etc.
The point being that whether we are discussing the Quran or the Bible there are passages that those who seek to do evil will twist
and use to justify their actions. We can be selective and spend all day picking out passages from both that hardly reflect well on
either religion but that's just giving excuses to evil people.
Around 800,000 people were slaughtered in Rwanda in 1994 by the mainly Christian Hutus, helped by the Christian church but that doesn't
mean that all Christians will act that way. The KKK mentioned earlier often used bible passages to try and justify what they were doing but
thankfully not all Christians were blamed. When President Bush was bombing Iraq & Afghanistan I believe he said that he was told to do by
God - was that therefore a religious act that all Christians should feel responsible for?
None of the above should in any way be taken as support/defence for the murderous scumbags who attack innocent people. It would be
ridiculous to suggest that there are not issues in the UK with a minority of Muslims and that certainly needs addressing. However attacking
all Muslims for the actions of the few is imo unfair, counter-productive and leads us all down a slippery slope.
As for the recent attacks in Manchester & London the condemnation from Muslim community was swift and absolute but often under reported.
I was pleased to see that 500+ Imams in the UK have refused to say prayers over the bodies of the "vile murderers" stating :
"the group aimed to broadcast the message that violent extremism was “forbidden” by Islam. If you follow this path you are stepping away
from Islam to a dark and godless place. Your views are not welcome in our mosques or in our communities. This is not a path to heaven.”
There is in my opinion only one way forward with this issue and that is to work together to root out extremist killers - we cannot do it
alone.
Cheers
Steve