Friday, January 18, 2008

Andrew Sullivan equates born-again Christians with Al-Qaeda

This post at The Daily Dish, "Mark Siljander: Christianist," seems to suggest that holding to conservative moral principles is likely to drive one right into the arms of Osama bin Laden: The former Republican congressman charged with aiding al Qaeda signed the following manifesto back in 1986:

“We affirm that this God-inspired, inerrant Bible is the only absolute, objective, final test for all truth claims, and the clearest verbal picture of reality that has ever come into the hands of mankind. By it, and it alone, are all philosophies, books, values, actions, and plans to be measured as to their consistency with reality, visible and invisible. Whatever statements or values are in opposition to the statements and values of the Bible err to the degree of their opposition...

We affirm that the Great Commission is a mandate by our Lord to go forth into all the world and make Bible-obeying disciples of all nations. Getting men's souls saved is only a preliminary part of fulfilling the Great Commission. Our work is incomplete unless we teach them to obey all He commanded. The words of the Lord's prayer for God's will to "be done on earth as it is in heaven" are another way to state the essence of the same Great Commission...

We affirm that all Bible-believing Christians must take a non-neutral stance in opposing, praying against, and speaking against social moral evils such as the following… B. Adultery, fornication, homosexuality, bestiality and other forms of sexual perversion."

Not everyone seems to understand:

What makes the allegations in the indictment so shocking, is that Siljander is a Born-Again Evangelical Christian. We had fast days in his office. There were prayer circles.

Er, yeah. Osama bin Laden has prayer circles too. Somewhere, Dinesh D'Souza is happy.

Well, I confess it, Mr. Sullivan: I'm one of those who don't understand. Are you saying that Siljander's allegedly aiding Al-Qaeda is entirely consistent with his conservative morality? Or are you saying that opposition to abortion etc. is just like flying planes into buildings full of thousands of civilians and beheading reporters as the cameras roll?

Are you saying that all that "Christian Taliban" business that the media likes to throw around isn't just hysterical fantasy, as I argued it was in my book Religion of Peace?, but that Christians, like Islamic jihadists, really do harbor an impulse to do violence to unbelievers? If so, where are they doing this violence, and which Churches approve of it? Are you saying that social conservatives are secretly hoping to get enough power to stone homosexuals and adulterers, just like the Taliban? If so, on what grounds do you think this?

Also, if conservative morality tends toward sympathy with Al-Qaeda, why do social conservatives generally (but by no means universally) favor anti-jihad efforts, and social liberals generally oppose them? Debbie Schlussel's puzzlement, linked above by Sullivan, is entirely reasonable -- because actually Christian conservatives and Islamic jihadists have radically different values and principles.

But Sullivan's little dig at Dinesh D'Souza is apposite, since D'Souza, in his ridiculous book The Enemy At Home, advocated an alliance between conservative Americans and "traditional Muslims." It may be that Siljander was pursuing just that sort of alliance when he began his work for the Islamic American Relief Agency, and ended up either duped or corrupted by his new friends. This exposes the fatal weakness of D'Souza's argument: there are millions of peaceful Muslims, but no reliable way to determine whether any given Muslim individual or group actually rejects the jihad ideology and Islamic supremacism or not. Mark Siljander has driven the last nail into the coffin of Dinesh D'Souza's credibility.

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