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Offline Yada  
#1 Posted : Friday, October 19, 2007 11:18:06 PM(UTC)
Yada
Joined: 6/28/2007(UTC)
Posts: 3,537

Below is an exchange between Yada and "GQ" about a recent BBC news report. Yada's response follows the quoted text.

Quote:
-----Original Message-----
From: "GQ"
Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2007 8:12 PM
To: email@prophetofdoom.net
Subject: BBC NEWS REPORT

Dear Mr Winn,

I have been reading your book Prophet of Doom with great interest and was
amazed to find one of the Qur'an quotations you make from 003.062 on page
426 being used in an open letter issued by a group of Muslim religious
leaders. The letter is part of a news item on the BBC News website
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7038992.stm. I thought you might find it
of interest as they are using it to back a claim that Islam, like Judaism
and Christianity, is a religion of love. I have attached a copy of the full
Open Letter.


Rev. Dr. "GQ,"


GQ,

Ignorant and immoral people with an agenda often quote things out of context for the purpose of misleading others. This is no exception. Moreover, the message of the Koran and the Bible are the opposite, not the same as is alleged. The misguided article you referenced states:

"More than 130 Muslim scholars have written to Pope Benedict XVI and other Christian leaders urging greater understanding between the two faiths.
The letter says that world peace could depend on improved relations between Muslims and Christians. It identifies the principles of accepting only one god and living in peace with one's neighbours as common ground between the two religions. It also insists that Christians and Muslims worship the same god.

The letter comes on the anniversary of an open letter issued to the Pope last year from 38 top Muslim clerics, after he made a controversial speech on Islam. Pope Benedict sparked an uproar in September last year by quoting a medieval text which linked Islam to violence. The letter coincides with the Eid al-Fitr celebrations to mark the end of Ramadan.

It was also sent to the Archbishop of Canterbury, the heads of the Lutheran, Methodist and Baptist churches, the Orthodox Church's Patriarch of Constantinople Bartholomew I and other Orthodox Patriarchs. The letter, entitled A Common Word Between Us and You, compares passages in the Koran and the Bible, concluding that both emphasise "the primacy of total love and devotion to God", and the love of the neighbour.

With Muslims and Christians making up more than half the world's population, the letter goes on, the relationship between the two religious communities is "the most important factor in contributing to meaningful peace around the world". "As Muslims, we say to Christians that we are not against them and that Islam is not against them - so long as they do not wage war against Muslims on account of their religion, oppress them and drive them out of their homes," the letter says.

It adds: "To those who nevertheless relish conflict and destruction for their own sake or reckon that ultimately they stand to gain through them, we say our very eternal souls are all also at stake if we fail to sincerely make every effort to make peace and come together in harmony."

One of the signatories, Dr Aref Ali Nayed, a senior adviser at the Cambridge Inter-faith Programme at Cambridge University, told the BBC that the document should be seen as a landmark. "There are Sunnis, Shias, Ibadis and even the... Ismailian and Jaafari schools, so it's a consensus," he said.

Professor David Ford, director of the programme, said the letter was unprecedented. "If sufficient people and groups heed this statement and act on it then the atmosphere will be changed into one in which violent extremists cannot flourish," he said in a statement.

The letter was signed by prominent Muslim leaders, politicians and academics, including the Grand Muftis of Bosnia and Hercegovina, Russia, Croatia, Kosovo and Syria, the Secretary-General of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, the former Grand Mufti of Egypt and the founder of the Ulema Organisation in Iraq.

It adds: "To those who nevertheless relish conflict and destruction for their own sake or reckon that ultimately they stand to gain through them, we say our very eternal souls are all also at stake if we fail to sincerely make every effort to make peace and come together in harmony.""

There is a reason Yahweh said in Hosea 4:6: "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge."

Yada
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