â[Christians and Muslims] worship the same God.â
These words on a Facebook post by a Wheaton College professor, Larycia Hawkins, whose principal aim appears to have been a demonstration of solidarity with Muslims (by wearing a hijab during Advent) at a time when Muslims are increasingly being demonized in the US, have caused much uproar whose ripples have reached far outside the relatively small world of North American evangelicalism (see the latest issue of Time). Since then, Wheaton administration has recommended Dr. Hawkinsâs employment be terminated, and Wheaton faculty council has asked the administration to withdraw its recommendation.
I have friends on both sides of this controversy, having graduated from Wheaton myself a few years ago, so I have personal and relational connections to this event, and like many others, I will be observing with concern and prayer as this story unfolds. But more broadly, as someone who is very much interested in the advance of Christâs mission in the US, I see the Wheaton/Hawkins controversy as serving to highlight the urgent and vital need for Christians in the US to develop a deeper theology of religions, and of our engagement with other religions â in this case, Islam.
Missiologists have called this field of study âElenctics,â and although it used to be of interest only to missionaries and academics operating âout there,â in the foreign mission fields, current events have shown us that the conceptual divide between foreign missions and home missions no longer holds. The missiologist J. H. Bavinck wrote The Church Between Temple and Mosque many years ago, drawing largely from his missionary experience in Indonesia. That church (between temple and mosque) exists now not only in Southeast Asia but also in the United States and Europe, former hearts of the late Christendom. If that church is going to be faithful to the mission of Christ, we had better get up to speed quickly. (side appeal: Eerdmans, if you are reading this, please bring this book back into print. We continue to learn from Bavinckâs insights for dealing with the challenges of today.)
A great stumbling block to a better understanding of the issues has been a usual culprit â the culture war. Writing as one of the numerous missiologists and missionaries with a wealth of field experience weighing in on the Wheaton/Hawkins controversy in a special edition of Evangelical Missiological Societyâs Occasional Bulletin, Brian Howell, an anthropologist at Wheaton College, commented that the controversy has become âsomething of a Rorschach testâ for evangelicals on either side of the culture war divide. (See his article, âWheaton College, One God, and Muslim-Christian Dialog: The Recent Past and the Difficult Presentâ in the Bulletin â I highly recommend reading the entire issue, but Christianity Today has also provided a nice summary.)
For some, it is further evidence of the narrow-minded, culturally- and racially-myopic nature of US evangelicalism, sliding into irrelevancy. For others, it is a case of an institution standing up to the forces of liberalism and pluralism that would devalue the truth-claims of the gospel and Christian theological distinctives in the name of tolerance.
The fog of culture war can derail the Church from its mission to be a faithful gospel witness among the nations and their religions, including Islam.
Robert Priest, who edits the Occasional Bulletin, sought to provide some clarity by asking the writers to stick to the question, âDo Christians and Muslims worship the same God?â Although there are disagreements as to degrees of emphasis, the various writers broadly agree that the proper answer should be both âYesâ and âNo,â which doesnât fit nicely into a liberal-conservative binary framework.
However, faithfulness to the gospel mission seems to demand that we must hold to both âyesâ and ânoâ at the same time, and resist answering only âyesâ or only âno.â Put another way, a faithful gospel witness and engagement with other religions will always be both affirmation and confrontation of other religions, at the same time.
âYes.â (Universal Religious Consciousness)
Muslims are not only generally monotheistic; but they also claim to worship the God of Abraham specifically. I wonât go into all the details of how the God of the Muslims shares the same characteristics as the God of Jews and Christians â for instance, in his justice, mercy and love; in his unique identity as the Creator of all things; and his covenantal nature of revealing himself to humankind and entering into a relationship with them. Nor can I talk in detail about how Christianity and Islam share many of the same stories â of Abraham, of Moses, and even indeed of Jesus (though it is precisely here that we find our core differences). When Muslims say âAllahâ and Christians say âGod,â we are both referring to the Creator God, who alone is God over all.
As a related aside, it is not helpful for Christians to repeat the âAllah is a moon godâ trope. (See Rick Brownâs 2006 article, âWho is âAllahâ?â) It is simply not accurate and only serves to offend Muslims. If Christians want Muslims to understand that we do not worship three gods, then we also need to do them the service of understanding their theology accurately.
Indeed, Arabic-speaking Christians call God Allah. That may be jarring to modern day US Christians (who tend to think of Allah as âthe god of Islamâ), but the term existed in the Arabic world long before Islam arrived on the scene, and it is the Arabic equivalent of the Hebrew word Elohim. Today, Arabic Bibles call God of Christianity Allah.
Can Christians call God Allah? They already do and have been for millennia. This in spite of efforts in some Muslim societies to outlaw Christians there from calling God Allah. Could it be that present Christian efforts to marginalize the Muslims in the US might mirror these Muslim efforts to marginalize Christians there, leading to religious tensions that end up obscuring the gospel message and undermining the mission of Christ?
Whenever the gospel entered new contexts, Christians wrestled with how best to communicate the truth of the gospel that not only utilized pre-existent religious forms and concepts but also in a way that avoided imposing a foreign religion and culture. Thus, missionaries in Korea took a pre-Christian term already present in the Korean religious mindset, Hanulnim (which means Sky), and reworked it to Hananim (which means One). This became the name for God in Korean. Our English word, and the related German word Gott have pre-Christian, pagan roots.
Christians can do this because they believe that the God and Father of Jesus Christ is the God of all nations and cultures, not simply a tribal deity, and he has revealed himself in every human context and heart â including within other religions. Theologians have termed this general revelation, and while it is limited in scope (for instance, it does not tell us about Godâs work of redemption in Christ), general revelation is sufficient witness to Godâs being and his call on us to worship him (see Romans 1:18â20). Or, to use Calvinâs words, every bearer of Godâs image have within him or her a sensus divinitatis by which God reveals himself and sends out a call for his creation to come back home. This general revelation cannot simply be dismissed as hopelessly marred by the noetic effects of sin. Rather, it provides a constellation of starting points, or a treasury of raw materials, for Christian witness.
Studies of various religions have supported this. For instance, many folk religions around the world, though their day to day religious dealings has to do with lesser spirits, nevertheless have within their mythos a concept of a High God who has gone far away from human affairs. Missionaries have identified this High God as the God the Father of Jesus Christ as they sought to bring the gospel message to these cultures. The High God has drawn near to us through his Son.
Paul himself showed us the way in Athens (Acts 17). At the Areopagus, he utilized the altar to the Unknown God (a god of the Greek pagan pantheon) and proclaimed that this Unknown God was the God who has once and for all revealed himself in Jesus Christ. He also utilized quotes from the pagan religious poems â the quote âWe are his offspringâ comes from Aratus who was originally referring not to YHWH of Israel, but to Zeus.
May we not follow his lead and seek out ways to engage with Muslims and others with confidence that they too have reliable enough knowledge of God within their religious thought and culture that we can work with in order to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ within their own worlds?
However, someone will say, doesnât all of this affirmation of Islam and other religions lead to syncretism, heresy, a denial of the gospel message which claims that salvation is found in no other name but Christâs? Isnât this just another way we are compromising with the spirit of our age that devolves into relativism and tyranny of political correctness at the expense of the unique Christian message?
In order to answer, we need to move onto the other side of the scale â to the ânoâ side. But let me first observe that US evangelicals have syncretism problems of our own. Syncretism doesnât go away just because we belong to the ârightâ camp or subscribe to the most watertight system of doctrines. It is an ever-present human condition that also affects Christians from which ultimately Christ redeems us and we, like Muslims or adherents of other religions, need to look to Christ for rescue.
âNo.â (Christ the Destination)
Biblical witness portrays a Christ, who makes an exclusive claim as Lord over all nations. He does not claim to be simply the Messiah of the Jews but the final and authoritative revelation of God to every nation and the Second Adam of a new creation. There simply is no other Lord but Christ. This is where we depart from Islam and other religions. As the writer of Hebrews says, âIn the past God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom also he made the universe.â (1:1â2)
Therefore, Christ is the fulfillment of the hopes and dreams of every religious adherent everywhere. Insofar as Islam (or, for that matter, Christianity itself) fails to lead people to Christ, it fails as a religion, for the demands and longings of the religious consciousness present in every religion and human heart cannot be met by anyone other than Christ. Every religious endeavor must be judged by how it has led people to Christ, the ultimate destination of all religious pilgrimages and fulfillment of all religious longings.
Such a claim, of course, runs counter to a Post-Enlightenment notion that all religions are essentially the same, an idea that looms heavily over the Wheaton/Hawkins controversy. âThere are many paths up the mountainâ serves as a reference point for both those who say âYesâ as well as those who say âNo.â
Yet, the universal claim of Christ transcends and relativizes our quibbles over which camp possesses the truth (and, therefore, the rightful religious authority). Christ is not merely Lord of Christians; he is Lord of every culture and people groups throughout all history. We see Godâs glory properly only through the revelation we have in Christ.
This claim also will not submit to the demands of Western liberal thought that all the religions behave themselves and collapse their differences into a universal religion and ethos shaped by Eurocentric rationalism. Many have already noted that such an approach is paternalistic imperialism, in spite of prima facie protests to the contrary.
Instead, we must say both âYesâ and âNo.â
For instance, Paul, speaking to new Christians regarding Judaism and its religious rituals, said this: âTherefore do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.â (Col. 2:16â17) Judaism as a religion served its purpose as a sign pointing to its Messiah, who is also Lord of all creation. Jesus, similarly, took forms of Judaism and filled them with new meaning, namely himself. He did this all the time â for instance, the Passover meal became a memorial of the new covenant mediated through his body and his blood. Could we speak similarly about Muslim prayers, fasts, and pilgrimages â that they are a shadow of the reality, which is Christ?
You will notice that my language is different from a Christianity vs. Islam paradigm, a clash of religions locked in a struggle for domination. Such a view does not take the need for growth and discipleship within Christianity itself seriously enough, nor does it account for the danger of cultural chauvinism or religious imperialism â of which Two-Thirds World Christians are all too aware. Rather, faithful and wise communicators of the gospel message will connect the dots â whether they are dots within the Muslim world or within the context of Christendom â and show how the lines lead all to Christ. Harvie Conn said as much back in 1978, speaking of Muslims who came to profess faith in Christ: âWe must look for a verbal equivalent similar to the Jews for Jesus movement who speak⌠of being âcompleted in Christ.ââ (âThe Muslim Convert and His Culture,â in The Gospel and Islam: A 1978 Compendium, ed. Don M. McCurry, page 108)
In order to describe this idea, we could perhaps borrow a term from my friends in biblical studies, Douglas Green, and others, and speak of a Christotelic theology of religions â the telos of our universal religious consciousness is none other than Jesus of Nazareth who died on the cross and was raised to redeem all creation.
I say all this with an eye towards significant developments in the Islamic world. Lost among the news stories of extremists like ISIS and humanitarian disasters in the Middle East is a tectonic shift that missiologists are struggling to understand â mass movements of Muslims coming to faith in Christ. This has been documented by David Garrison in his Wind in the House of Islam (WIGTake Resources, 2014), and it should force those who have grown up in Christendom to re-examine everything. For many of these new followers of Christ came to faith not through the traditional missionary efforts of Christendom or its children, but quite apart from them. Many do not identify as âChristiansâ but rather as âMuslim followers of Christ.â (My colleague Stephen Taylor wrote a very helpful piece on the âInsider Movementâ a couple of years back, which you can find here.) Could it be that we are finding in our day and age an echo of developments that led to the Council of Jerusalem in Acts 15, who came to recognize and affirm a new movement of Godâs Spirit whose covenantal people now included Gentiles?
********
This blog post has become far too long, and I have raised more questions than given answers. I have simply sought to sketch out some of the terrain ahead for us as those who follow Christ in Post-Christendom now encounter Muslims and adherents of other religions. It is uncharted territory, and we will most certainly make numerous wrong turns, but we must be confident that the Lord of all nations is sovereign and will guide us. For the journey ahead, we will need courage, not simply prudence.
One final note as I think of my alma mater. My hope is that the current throes at Wheaton prove to be the pains of childbirth, leading to a deepening theology of the missio dei at work among the worldâs religions and cultures that equips the Church to more faithfully engage our neighbors for the sake of Christ and his kingdom.
Dr. Kyuboem Lee
Kyuboem Lee, D.Min., is the Doctor of Ministry Program Director and Associate Professor of Missiology. He is also the general editor for the Journal of Urban Mission.
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Thank you for your commentary on these subject areas . I have been reading many articles about the names of God , I have learned so much . I am trying to build my knowledge base to help convince western Christians that the name Allah should not be feared and showing the commonalities of the names of God . I have even read that we technically shouldnât be calling God â Godâ but Yahweh , Jehovah … That the word god is pagan in origin . I am a little overwhelmed by it all but your writings helped me to clarify a bit . Thank you .
Is there any doubt about Allah, the creator of heaven and earth? . ..(surah 14:10)
ALLAH created heavens and earth in 6 days.-(Quran-10:3) Proof of evidence from Bible, Etymology ,ancient Hebrew root, Theology ,Lexicon , Early bible Commentaries, Biblical Cyclopedia ,Internatonal Standard of Bible Encyclopedia standard of Palestinian targum, Palestinian talmud etc. all these sources proves ALLAH is true word. Word of God Elohim is derived from name of Allah ××× in ancient hebrew lexicon Compressive etymological dictionary state that etmyos means “that which is true sense” is the only true word in Hebrew. Means truth can be found using etymology. So there is no God no elohim but Allah That is why we say There is no God but “Allah”. https://nightthiefblog.wordpress.com/2020/06/20/allah-in-torah/amp/
In the First Chapter of Bible , God finish the creation in 6 days. There is no other name when God finish his creation in 6 day. NO jesus no Yahweh but that the True word which is ALLAH.Word Yahweh is forgeries. And one can never find in New testament or jesus teaching as well Abraham did not know any God name Yahweh.neither he teach this God name but Allah.
Say, “Have you considered that which you invoke besides Allah ? Show me what they have created of the earth; or did they have partnership in [creation of] the heavens? Bring me a scripture [revealed] before this or a [remaining] trace of knowledge, if you should be truthful.” â (Quran 46:4) See you not Allah created heaven and earth…(quran 14:19)
“Allah” means something like “the deity” in Arabic and may indeed be related to Elohim, which similarly means “deity”. However while it is true that the name “Yahweh” is not found in Genesis 1, it is in Genesis 2, wherein Adam is created, and in many later chapters also. Abraham did know of the name Yahweh (Genesis 22:14), but what Exodus 6:3 refers to is that Abraham Isaac and Jacob didn’t know God to the fullest, or to the extent that Moses did. Exodus 10:1-2 shows that eventually Pharaoh would be given this knowledge of the Lord, and 1 Samuel 3:6-7 shows the same for Samuel. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwbd4s4IACI
The reason this can become contentious is that the Quran acknowledges the name of Yahweh less than Abraham acknowledges it, which is to say, never directly but only indirectly in unexplained names like Zakariyya and Joel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkcaHAxopZM
Quick correction, I mean to put Ilyas (Elijah) instead of Joel. I got confused because the two names have similar meanings, Ilyas derives from “My God is Yahweh” and Joel derives from “Yahweh is God”.
It is clear that Author does not understand the type word of the word Allah. It is a PROPER NOUN and of course NOT a COMMON NOUN. Consequently, we can not find out the PLURAL form of Allah, and NEVER found to be in CONSTRUCT. We never find such phrase of Allah Israel/Abraham/Yakcob, …etc and never foud MY Allah. Thus the word Allah CAN not be translated as God, since we can say My God, But, God is DIFFERENT CODE in linguistic grammar. Therefore, the word Allah should be deleted in Christian Bible, but ILAH instead.
Shalom
Kristian
Thanks for commenting, but I needed to respond because what you say may sound somewhat plausible to those who are unfamiliar, but is not supported by the consensus of either Muslim or Christian scholarships. It is also quite puzzling, because the Qur’an itself clearly refers to Allah as the same God (Allah) found in the Bible–the Allah of Adam, Abraham, and Jesus; the God who created all things and is over all things. Moreover, Arabic speaking Christians have always referred to their God as Allah and their Muslim neighbors have historically also done the same, without resorting to the argument that you are making.
I have been reading many articles about the names of God , I have learned so much . I am trying to build my knowledge base to help convince western Christians that the name Allah should not be feared and showing the commonalities of the names of God
Amazing article . Thanks for such a great collections of information’s. keep updating it.
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