Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Is there really a widescale movement of conversions from Islam to Christianity? [Spirituality & Religion]

[center][/center]

It seems there is actually evidence of it: [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2j6nG59[/c] , [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2oi9FDE[/c]

Last week the [i]New York Times[/i] ran a story about an al-Nusra jihadist and his wife who have converted to Christianity :

[i]“For Mr Mohammad and Ms Rashid, perhaps it was their dreams that sealed their conversion. As the couple began to consider leaving Islam, Ms Rashid said she dreamed of a biblical figure who used heavenly powers to divide the waters of the sea, which Mr Mohammad interpreted as a sign of encouragement from Jesus. Then, Mr Mohammad himself dreamed Jesus had given him some chickpeas. The pair felt loved. ‘There’s a big gap between the god I used to worship and the one I worship now,’ Mr Mohammad said. ‘We used to worship in fear. Now everything has changed.’”[/i] [c=#BF0000]http://nyti.ms/2oihp8H[/c]

They preferred a God who is love and personal -- a God who millions of Christians connect with every day by physically consuming -- to Allah – a God who is solitary and unapproachable who people worship out of awe and fear, who can only beget violence. As [b]Chesterton[/b] wrote:

[i]“There is in Islam a paradox which is perhaps a permanent menace. The great creed born in the desert creates a kind of ecstasy out of the very emptiness of its own land, and even, one may say, out of the emptiness of its own theology. It affirms, with no little sublimity, something that is not merely the singleness but rather the solitude of God. There is the same extreme simplification in the solitary figure of the Prophet; and yet this isolation perpetually reacts into its own opposite. A void is made in the heart of Islam which has to be filled up again and again by a mere repetition of the revolution that founded it. There are no sacraments; the only thing that can happen is a sort of apocalypse, as unique as the end of the world; so the apocalypse can only be repeated and the world end again and again.”[/i] [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2nwBCrk[/c]

The[b] Venerable Archbishop Fulton Sheen[/b] said that it was no coincidence that [b]Mary[/b], who is mentioned more times in the Koran than she is in the Bible, appeared at [b]Fatima[/b] [ [c=#BF0000]https://youtu.be/NaIp8iAccLs [/c]] -- a small Portuguese town named after Mohammad's favorite daughter: [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/1oUDEQJ[/c] , [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/1XtCFTo[/c]

On this the hundredth anniversary of the Marian apparitions at [b]Fatima[/b], and where before 75,000 people the [b]Mother of God[/b] [i]“spun the sun like it was a trinket on her wrist”[/i] -- I am not alone in thinking that the [b]Prophecy of Fatima[/b] has not yet totally played out – and that 2017 will be a critical year --- a momentous year for all of humanity -- an electrifying turn in the arc of history.https://similarworlds.com/269167-I-Am-Christian-roman-Catholic/650996-One-hundred-years-ago-this-year-the-Mother-of-God

Perhaps one of those thing will be a tsunami of conversions from Islam to Christianity.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
SW-User
Why is there a different descriptions of God for both religions when we both believe we worship the same God.

Idk if theres a high count of conversions from Christianity to Islam nor does it concern if me even it there is but it just shows that people have this innate disposition to follow a higher entity. Whether you're muslim, Christian, jew, hindu, sikh, sun worshipper whatever... we all follow a deity. The only difference is the people/objects the other religions follow are thought to be creations of God. Jesus was a creation by God, the idols were a creation by God, the sun was a creation of God and people deviate from the creator by worshipping its creations.
This is off topic, but islam mentions their being 4 holy books, obviously the Quran being the most holiest and the final book, which is why all these abrahamic faiths have so much in common. (The other books refer to the Old Testament of the bible and the torah)
It is the same God, but Islam understands His nature to be much different --rejecting the triune God -- Father , Son and Holy Spirit. Christ is God in Christianity -- the Holy Spirit is the eternal love between God the Father and God the Son. God so loved man that He actually became man and sacrificed Himself for man.
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
The teachings of the religions are not the same.

They are not the same God.

Jesus was not created.

Idols are creations of humans.

The quran was transcribed from the ramblings of an iliterate sexist, pedophile, murderer. Nothing holy about that.
@UserName1234: There are three monotheistic religions –and they all come from the same root Hebrew sources. Islam's understanding of God is based on the revelations of Mohammad and Christianity's on the revelations of Christ. The understanding of what God is is totally different based on those revelations. It is not the same God in the sense that His nature, other than His oneness, is totally different in the two religions. Islam's understanding is incompatible with the Christian understanding of God.
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
There are several other monotheistic religions .... not just the 3.(but I know what you meant)

Mohammad revealed nothing. He said stuff, he revealed nothing.
@UserName1234: [b]Hilaire Belloc[/b] said that Islam (like all the modern secular ideologies [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2bc8H7p[/c] ) is a Christian heresy:

[i]“It might have appeared to any man watching affairs in the earlier years of the seventh century, say from 600 to 630, that only one great main assault having been made against the Church, Arianism and its derivatives, that assault having been repelled and the Faith having won its victory, it was now secure for an indefinite time....It was just at this moment, a moment of apparently universal and permanent Catholicism, that there fell an unexpected blow of overwhelming magnitude and force. Islam arose quite suddenly. It came out of the desert and overwhelmed half our civilization.”[/i] [c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/29HQ6vE[/c]

See also : [i]"Hilaire Belloc in 1938: Islam ‘the Most Formidable and Persistent Enemy’ of Western Civilization[/i]"[c=#BF0000]http://bit.ly/2ocneHD[/c]
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
"religion, which above all others was founded and propagated by the sword—the tenets and principles of which are instinct with incentives to slaughter and which in three continent's has produced fighting breeds of men—stimulates a wild and merciless fanaticism"
LoneKnight · M
Nothing holly about the book that encourage raping,killing and beheading those who want to leave.Why don't people realize this truth in this 21st century!?
Sharon · F
@LoneKnight: Because not many people have read all the christian bible.
LoneKnight · M
@Sharon: I am not a Christian, but Christians had the bible revised unlike those Muslims .
Sharon · F
@LoneKnight: Islam is only about 1400 years old. Consider what christianity was like in the middle ages.

The bible has been rewritten several times to try to keep it popular. I doubt the current versions bear much resemblance to the original. So much for it being the immutable word of god. ;)
LoneKnight · M
@Sharon: but Christians don't do the things Muslims are doing in the present like beheading those who want to leave, kill innocents so that they can go to heaven etc.In fact no religion is doing those things in the present except those Muslims..
GeniUs · 56-60, M
I think the point is, that when Christianity was the same age, atrocities were being committed in it's name, like Islam today.
GeniUs · 56-60, M
And while I think about it, it was only 30 years ago in Ireland that atrocities were being committed Christian on Christian in Northern Ireland.
Sharon · F
@GeniUs: Exactly. Even today some fanatical christians kill those who do not believe as they do.
GeniUs · 56-60, M
@Sharon: (ha! It's amazing how we can be on 2 discussions, on one we totally agree and the other are at odds with each other!)
Sharon · F
@GeniUs: Different subjects; different views.
GeniUs · 56-60, M
Absolutely but you do find if you cross some people in one topic, they don't let it go.
Sharon · F
@GeniUs: Sometimes. They ignore the arguments and attack the person.
LoneKnight · M
Are Christians killing and raping while chanting Jesus name like those Muslims are doing in Iraq to those Yazidi women.Google it for further detail.
Sharon · F
@LoneKnight: Yes. Google [b]christian fundamentalist violence[/b].
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
@Sharon: do Google it. What you will see is a small number of "mass murder" from people who may be unrelated to religion.
Some of these are terrorism. Most are not.
Let's remember that mass murder and terrorism are not the same thing. Both are wrong and should be stopped but they are not the same thing.

Also look at the number of attack and the number dead, one religion stands alone in the number killed.
Sharon · F
@UserName1234: You could say those christian mass murderers are unrelated to religion but even they would disagree with you. The so-called Islamic killer may be unrelated to religion, Muslims as a whole disassociate themselves from them.

You're right about one religion standing alone in the number of people killed in its name - christianity is well ahead of the field, starting before Islam even emerged as a religion.
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
Christianity doesn't call on believers to kill others.
Sharon · F
@UserName1234: Exodus 22:18
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
The best you can do is a quote about what a judge should do to a convicted person? This is your equivalent to 34 direct statements to kill ALL non belivers.

OK. I guess those are equal.