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- November 17, 2014 at 9:54 am#784577GrasshopperParticipant
When the First Muslim Prayer Was Held at the National Cathedral, One Christian Lady Spoke in Protest
BY JUSTEN CHARTERS (1 DAY AGO)http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LrDK8UWsRFg#
On Friday, the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., hosted its very first Muslim call to prayer. And what happened during the event is heating up the debate on religion in America.
The event was focused on condemning terrorism and building a better relationship between Christians and Muslims.
Just before the announcements, an unidentified woman stood up and voiced disagreement that a Christian-based church would support such a service. The woman shouted:
“Jesus Christ died on that cross over there!” He is the reason why we are to worship only him. Jesus Christ is our lord and savior!”
In addition, the woman mentioned how there were many mosques in the U.S. and recommended that Muslims’ worship be done within their own religious buildings.Then, after her brief voicing of opinion, two men ushered her out of the building. According to the Voice of America:
The carpets were arrayed diagonally in the transept, to the side of the sanctuary, so that worshipers can face in the direction of Mecca without seeing crosses or Christian icons. Muslims are not supposed to pray in view of sacred symbols alien to their faith.
The service was hosted by Ebrahim Rasool, who is South Africa’s ambassador to the United States. During the service Rasool urged Muslims and Christians to come together and fight extremism.Here’s the thing: With millions of Muslims in support of radicalism, providing a forum for some Muslims to speak out on the issue is a good idea. But there are better venues to build bridges between faiths than using such a religiously revered site as the National Cathedral.
It would be as equally controversial for a Christian-led prayer service to be held at Mecca; and obviously, such a thing is outlawed in Saudi Arabia.
Editors Note: In the video footage, text added to the clip reads that what happened is based on Sharia. The claim is inaccurate, since practicing Muslims prefer segregation when it come to prayer and religious ceremonies.
November 17, 2014 at 10:33 am#784578GrasshopperParticipantI found the above article on:
I tried inserting the actual video in my post, but got it wrong, somehow.
————————————————————————-The above article, to me, is a big sign of things to come…
Parts of the supposed Church are finding it acceptable and are actualy inviting the worshipping done by people of a false religion to be performed in their presence – a religion that denies the Son of God. Wow! We are officially being put into a slow but steady boil…It’s being counted on that we’ll remain complacent and ignorant and “politically correct” with it all, and won’t realize what’s being done to the Church until it’s too late and we’re all cooked like a bunch of lobsters.~~~~~~~~~~
GrasshopperNovember 17, 2014 at 1:41 pm#784582WakeupParticipantHi Grasshopper.
It seems that you are very serious in seeking the truth.
Anyone can find the truth and know God, and understand prophesies, if truly seeking. Keep on soldieringGod is going to send strong delusions that they will believe a lie.
This will be the great falling away coming soon and is here already.wakeup
January 16, 2015 at 12:43 pm#788275GrasshopperParticipantAfter you read this, ask yourself if the reversed scenario would ever be suggested by Muslims/Islamists. I dare say THAT would have as much chance of happening as a snowball has a chance in (you know where).
The truth is that THIS scenario should have NEVER been suggested, let alone considered, by people who claim to be Christians/Believers of Christ.
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Grasshopper========================================================
FoxNews.com
Todd’s American DispatchDuke backs down, cancels Muslim call to prayer from chapel tower
By Todd Starnes
Published January 15, 2015
FoxNews.comMuslim call to prayer to sound every Friday at Duke.
Duke University has abandoned its plan to transform the bell tower on the Methodist school’s neo-gothic cathedral into a minaret where the Muslim call to prayer was to be publicly broadcast.
“Duke remains committed to fostering an inclusive, tolerant and welcoming campus for all of its students,” university spokesman Michael Schoenfeld said in a statement. “However, it was clear that what was conceived as an effort to unify was not having the intended effect.”
The first adhan, or call to prayer, had been scheduled to be broadcast on Jan. 16. University officials said, the Islamic chant, which includes the words “Allahu Akbar” would have been “moderately amplified” — in both English and Arabic.
Graham said Muslims have a right to worship in America. He also said there are millions of “wonderful people in Islam that want to live their life and raise their children and they want to be free.” But he also said that Islam is not a peaceful religion.
However, the decision brought a firestorm of national criticism from a number of high profile leaders including Franklin Graham, the son of famed evangelist Billy Graham.
“This is a Methodist school and the money for that chapel was given by Christian people over the years so that the student body would have a place to worship the God of the Bible,” Graham told me in a telephone interview.
He had called for university donors to pull their funding – (and I suspect that had something to do with Duke’s decision.)
Instead, the prayers will be moved to outside the chapel.
“Members of the Muslim community will now gather on the quadrangle outside the Chapel, a site of frequent interfaith programs and activities,” Schoenfeld said.
The university did not say whether the Muslim call to prayer would be “moderately amplified” at the new location.
Christy Lohr Sapp, Duke’s associate dean for religious life, heralded the Muslim call to prayer in a column published by the NewsObserver.com.
“The use of it as a minaret allows for the interreligious reimagining of a university icon,” Lohr Sapp wrote.
For the record, the university says the chapel is not exclusively used for Christian worship. It’s used by students of many different religions.
She imagined what it would be like for a students to walk through the chapel quad and “catch the sight of the student muezzin facing Mecca in the Chapel tower” and how “they might catch a strain of the Arabic proclamation, ‘Allahu Akbar!’ which means ‘God is great.’”
“This opportunity represents a larger commitment to religious pluralism that is at the heart of Duke’s mission and connects the university national trends in religious accommodation,” Lohr Sapp said.
I suspect that would not have gone over very well on Friday, September 11, 2015. Imagine the nation pausing to remember the 2001 Islamic terror attacks as students at Duke University heard the words “Allahu Akbar” echoing from the school’s chapel bell tower.
The idea of a historically Methodist university nearly turning its Christian cathedral to a mosque may very well be a first in the United States.
“I am not aware of any other church bell tower that is also used to announce the Muslim call to prayer,” Lohr Sapp wrote in her NewsObserver.com column.
Graham said Muslims have a right to worship in America. He also said there are millions of “wonderful people in Islam that want to live their life and raise their children and they want to be free.”
But he also said that Islam is not a peaceful religion.
It seems to me that allowing Muslim prayers inside a Christian chapel is akin to desecration, I told Rev. Graham.
“I think that chapel was probably desecrated many years ago,” he replied.
Robert Jeffress, the pastor of the historic First Baptist Church in Dallas, Texas, and a Fox News contributor called the university’s decision a travesty.
“If I were an evangelical student attending Duke University, I would go to the administration officials today and say that after the 1 p.m. call to prayer by Muslims – I want to get on the public address system and quote John 3:16,” Jeffress told me. “I wonder how diverse Duke would be with that request?”
Duke University has a growing Muslim student population. In 2014, More than 700 of the school’s 14,850 students claim to be Muslim. In 2009, the university created the Center for Muslim Life and hired its first full-time Muslim chaplain.
“The chanting of the adhan communicates to the Muslim community that it is welcome here, that its worship matters, that these prayers enhance the community and that all are invited to stop on a Friday afternoon and pray,” Lohr Sapp wrote.
She hoped that hearing the chant might help Muslim students “feel more at home in a world marred by weekly acts of violence and daily discriminations.”
“From ISIS to Boko Haram to Al Qaeda, Muslims in the media are portrayed as angry aggressors driven by values that are anti-education and anti-western,” she wrote in her column.
Jeffress said Methodists need to revolt.
“Methodist parishioners who believe the Bible is the word of God ought to demand that their denomination cut off any support to Duke,” he told me. “I think John Wesley would be turning over in his grave. This is certainly not the Methodism of John Wesley – a faith that was firmly founded on the Bible.”
I’m still hung on up a phrase that Dean Sapp used – “interreligious reimagining.” In reality, the cathedral has been conquered – desecrated in the name of political correctness.
(Todd Starnes is host of Fox News & Commentary, heard on hundreds of radio stations.)
========================================================January 17, 2015 at 12:24 am#788283ProclaimerParticipantHi Grasshopper. You can right-click any Youtube video embedded in a Web page and choose “Get Video URL” and copy it.
Then paste it into your post.So
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrDK8UWsRFg
becomes
Now I can watch it from here.
🙂
January 17, 2015 at 4:55 am#788284GrasshopperParticipantHi @t8
Yeah, that was a post I did before you showed me how to do it correctly 🙂
~
GJanuary 17, 2015 at 2:29 pm#788309ProclaimerParticipantOkay.
I watched the video BTW. It reminds me of the political correctness that is prevalent in many countries. They think this sort of thing can bring peace. They are dreaming. True peace is not the one the world gives. 🙂
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