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American Christians And Islam: Evangelical Culture And Muslims From

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  • American Christians And Islam: Evangelical Culture And Muslims From

    AMERICAN CHRISTIANS AND ISLAM: EVANGELICAL CULTURE AND MUSLIMS FROM THE COLONIAL PERIOD TO THE AGE OF TERRORISM

    The Christian Century
    http://www.christiancentury.org/article.la sso?id=7401
    July 27 2009

    American Christians and Islam: Evangelical Culture and Muslims from
    the Colonial Period to the Age of Terrorism by Thomas S. Kidd Princeton
    University Press, 224 pp., $29.95

    Kidd takes us through the American centuries and shows us a consistent
    conversation among Protestant Christians about Muslims--though not
    with them.

    click here to buy from amazon.com

    Before September 2001, many Americans may have believed that Islam and
    Christianity had gotten along peaceably since 1400 or so. In American
    Christians and Islam, Thomas Kidd demonstrates otherwise, taking us
    through the American centuries and showing us a consistent conversation
    among conservative Protestant Chris tians about Muslims--though not
    with them. Kidd explains that his book is not "about Islam itself. It
    is about American Christians and the views they produced about Islam."

    In the tradition of Edward Said's Orientalism (1979) and R. Laurence
    Moore's Religious Outsiders and the Making of Americans (1986),
    Kidd argues that what these Christians have had to say about the
    other--Muslims--has revealed much about the observers themselves. In
    eight chronologically ordered chapters, Kidd details conservative
    Protestants' "desire to see Muslims convert to Christianity, the
    fascination with missionary work among Muslims, the mixing of political
    policy and theology as it relates to the Muslim world (and Israel),
    and the insertion of Islam into eschatological schemes." He casts
    a careful eye over missionary memoirs, conversion narratives and
    popular eschatologies to demonstrate that American Christians have
    often imagined themselves as chosen and bound for heaven by imagining
    that Muslims are not.

    Most colonial Protestants learned about Islam not from Muslim
    African slaves but from books, sermons and English and American
    accounts of enslavement by Muslim "Barbary" or "barbarian" pirates
    from North Africa. The marauding characters in these narratives
    engaged in sexual deviance and tyrannical mistreatment of prisoners,
    and they often forced conversions to Islam. These texts reinforced
    colonial observers' view of Islam as a superstitious tangle of
    works-righteousness constructed around a fanatical impostor.

    Protestants used images of Islam in religious disagreements within
    and outside the fold. Roger Williams invoked "Mahomet" the impostor
    to critique Quakerism in his 1676 book G. Fox Digg'd out of His
    Burrowes. George Whitefield exchanged anti-Islamic barbs with
    antirevivalist critics, who in turn compared the great itinerant's
    methods to those of the "enthusiast" Muhammad. Even Jonathan Edwards
    imagined Islam's place in the Christian cosmos as one part of Satan's
    doomed kingdom. He took news of Muslims converting to Christianity
    as a signal that Jesus' return was imminent.

    Polemical uses of Islam proliferated from the late 18th into
    the 19th century. In the Revolutionary and early national
    periods, imagined Islam took on the political freight of
    antirepublicanism. Traditionalists classed antebellum religious
    innovations as defective, along with Islam; the Mormon prophet became,
    for instance, "The Yankee Mahomet." Concerns about resurgent Barbary
    piracy shaded into abolitionists' rhetoric; slaveholders were as bad
    as barbarian Muslim captors.

    The American Board of Commis sioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM)
    spearheaded early-19th-century attempts to evangelize Muslims (rather
    than simply imagining them) as a way to hasten the millennium. Legal
    strictures against proselytizing non-Christians in the Ottoman
    Empire, however, meant that Christian missionaries there usually
    worked only among Orthodox Chris tians. If they could be converted to
    Protestantism, they would witness powerfully to their Muslim neighbors.

    ABCFM missionary Cyrus Hamlin, an experienced hand in Turkey, shifted
    away from this approach. In his memoir Among the Turks, published in
    the 1870s, he did not denigrate Islam as a religion. He promoted social
    service and Muslim "uplift." Reformed Church leader Samuel Zwemer
    was another sophisticated missions strategist, "the most influential
    American Christian missionary to Muslims of his time." He joined
    a postmillennial confidence in the imminent demise of Islam with a
    commitment to social service--a fusion of conservative theology and
    modernist methods that later controversies within U.S. Protest antism
    drove apart. Zwemer's example led mission organizers to acknowledge
    past failures to deal respectfully with faithful Muslims as spiritual
    brothers and helped them to formulate a comprehensive strategy for
    reaching them with the gospel.

    World War I pushed this moderation toward a somber millennialism. Some
    American Christians, including ABCFM missionaries, interpreted the
    war as a strictly political event. Others, however, worried that
    events such as the Armenian genocide in Turkey revealed a cosmic
    conflict brewing between Christianity and Islam. (One strength
    of Kidd's book is its insistence on the diversity of Protestant
    evangelical opinion.) Prophecy-watchers thought the war presaged
    millennial transformation: the British capture of Jerusalem, the
    Balfour Declaration and the formation of the League of Nations
    fit some interpretations of the book of Daniel. They also began to
    think more pointedly about how Christianity could take political
    advantage of Islam's apparent postwar vulnerability. As the
    fundamentalist-modernist controversy of the 1910s and 1920s heated
    up, conservatives rededicated themselves to conversionary missions,
    giving no quarter to non-Christian religions. Groups such as the
    Christian and Missionary Alliance and the Sudan Interior Mission
    acted on views of Islam as Christianity's great cosmic foe.

    The postwar landscape that Kidd surveys in the second half of the
    book probably looks more familiar to his readers than any other
    in the book. The Holocaust and the creation of Israel fueled both
    a cataclysmic, dispensational view of Islam's destruction and a
    de-emphasis on missions. Islam's anticipated demise became a kind
    of prophecy placeholder, marking the way to Israel's triumphant
    expansion and the Jews' subsequent conversion to Christianity. Voices
    like Kenneth Cragg's in The Call of the Minaret (1956), clear about
    Muslims' need for the Christian gospel while wary of extreme Zionist
    energies, faded. Dispensationalist Christians overwhelmingly supported
    Israel as a matter of prophetic correctness. Cold-war concerns about
    Russia's designs on Israel bolstered conservative Christian support
    for American anticommunism as biblical prophecy became the playbook
    for geopolitical engagement.

    Still, some evangelical conservatives tried to temper assumptions about
    the inevitability of conflict with an insistence on the political roots
    of the conflict between Palestinian Muslims and Israeli Jews. In 1969,
    for instance, Charles Ryrie of Dallas Theological Seminary cautioned
    that "a concern for people, more than for politics or even prophecy,
    brings the Palestine problem into proper perspective." As the furor
    over Jimmy Carter's 2006 book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid,
    demonstrated, such voices may not be welcome in contemporary
    discussions of Israel and Palestine. But Kidd shows that they have
    sounded clearly in years not too far past, giving hope that they
    might return.

    Through the revival of Christianity in Indonesia in the 1960s, the
    rise of OPEC and the Iranian Revolution in the 1970s, and the events
    of 2001, Americans' focus on the Middle East has intensified. Missions
    to Muslims--or at least conversations about them--have continued. Yet
    Islam has, over the past several decades, taken on new force as the
    image of Christianity's foil, explaining some Christian conservatives'
    support of the Bushes' wars in Kuwait and Iraq. New dispensational
    readings of biblical prophecy claim that the Antichrist will be a
    Muslim, explaining some Christian conservatives' suspicion of Barack
    Obama's Islamic background.

    Still, Kidd explains, other conservative Christians read prophecy
    differently--by containing political events in a political realm
    and holding to a spiritual promise of redemption for all through
    Christ, not through Jerusalem. In the words of one conservative
    observer, "Arabs, too, have a prophetic future." This moderating yet
    consistently Christian voice seems always to be there. Indeed, Kidd
    makes an interesting though not thoroughly compelling case for seeing
    George W. Bush as a brake on hardline Christian prophecy-watchers
    who hoped, post-9/11, for the destruction of Islam at the hands of
    the U.S. military.

    Many of the motifs of earlier conversations about Islam recur in
    early-21st-century imaginings: an insistence on Islam's demonic
    or violent nature, for example, and on its inevitable, ultimately
    unsuccessful challenge to Christianity. Our skittishness toward
    Islam has a long history, but we have been shadowboxing an imagined
    Islam. Kidd suggests that Americans may now be reaping the whirlwind,
    and his book offers an informative tonic that might move Christians
    in the U.S. beyond deeply embedded suspicions and into more hospitable
    encounters with Muslims at home and abroad.

    Anne Blue Wills teaches the history and culture of U.S. religions at
    Davidson College in Davidson, North Carolina.
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