| Q&AWhy are Muslims so Resistant 
                to Christianity?CBN.com - Muslim opposition 
              to the Gospel is proverbial and the persecution that is unleashed 
              on any Muslim who dares become Christian. This is not just ancient 
              history; it occurs today. A number of converts in Egypt recently 
              suffered imprisonment for their faith. And this past year, two Moroccan 
              Christians died under suspicious circumstances. Yet, curiously, 
              Islam has also been open to the assimilation of elements that are 
              in evident conflict with its principles. As many as 70 percent of 
              all Muslims are influenced by the unorthodox beliefs and practices 
              known as "folk Islam." A Muslim may even embrace Marxism with hardly 
              an eyebrow being raised!
 
 Why then are Muslims so intransigent vis-a-vis conversion to Christianity? 
              Is it that they are unusually hardened or inherently resistant to 
              the Gospel? Or are missionaries themselves to blame, as some would 
              say, because they have imposed on the convert churches Western cultural 
              forms?
 
 A number of factors are involved; Islamic resistance to the Gospel 
              cannot be attributed to any single cause. Moreover, the Gospel by 
              its very nature is opposed to every other religious solution to 
              the problem of man, because they are all basically humanistic. We 
              may, however, single out one factor that could be termed "primary": 
              the ideological nature of Islamic society.
 
 Islamic society is ideological in that it holds that the Muslim 
              community exists to bring all of life, as a community and not just 
              as individuals, into "submission" to the will of God—as defined 
              by Islamic law. To realize this ideal there must be an Islamic State, 
              with executive, legislative, and judicial branches that are all 
              "Islamic." This is what makes Islamic society different from the 
              pluralistic societies we know in the West.
 
 Such an approach has a built-in problem that is unknown to pluralistic 
              societies: What is to be done with those, such as Christians, who 
              do not share the ideal of the majority? Islamic law has a number 
              of provisions that help to explain Muslim resistance over the centuries. 
              To hit only the high points, there is the "Dhimmi system" that segregates 
              non-Muslims, such as Christians, into ghetto communities, said to 
              be "protected," which really have only a second-class status. Similarly, 
              Islamic Law provides that a male "Apostate" who does not recant 
              within a reasonable period be put to death, and his property seized. 
              Women who apostatize are imprisoned until they recant. In a related 
              provision, apostasy renders a marriage void. Together, these provisions 
              raise tremendous barriers against Muslims making a serious commitment 
              to Christ. They raise another question for churches, especially 
              churches of converts from Islam: Given these barriers, how are they 
              to relate to Muslim society? But that is another question.
 
 
  
                 Arab World Ministries (Source)    
 
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