Islam Grows Into a Strong Presence in America

by James Dretke

http://www.arabicbible.com/christian/islam_in_america.htm

This article first appeared in the News Watch column of Volume 23 / Number 4 / 
2001 issue of the Christian Research Journal.  For further information or to 
subscribe to the Christian Research Journal go to: http://www.equip.org/publ/ 

We welcome Islam in America. It enriches our country with Islam’s teachings of 
self-discipline, compassion, and commitment to family. It deepens America’s 
respect for Muslims here at home and around the world.1 

Today, Muslim Americans are a cornerstone of our American community. They 
enrich our political and cultural life; they provide leadership in every field 
of human endeavor, from business to medicine, to scholarship.2   

These public pronouncements of President Clinton to Muslim Americans are 
indicative of how Islam has become established as a major religion in America. 
For most of America’s history, Islam had been a marginal presence. Muslims were 
mostly foreign nationals or resident aliens, with only a few naturalized United 
States citizens, and even fewer second or third generation Americans. Christian 
churches relegated evangelism of Muslims to foreign missions. The typical 
American Christian rarely, if ever, encountered a religiously active Muslim. 
Now, however, Islam is a noticeable religious force in America. Christians need 
to be as knowledgeable of Islam’s presence as they are of any other religion in 
America.   

Islam is no passing fad, and it is growing quickly in America. American Muslim 
leaders are quite open about their hopes and dreams. In an editorial entitled 
“Time to Make an Imprint,” Dr. Muzammil H. Siddiqi writes: “North America needs 
our contribution, and it is up to us to make an imprint in founding a truly 
Islamic civilization on this continent.”3

Very few Americans lack an opinion about Islam. There are numerous views 
concerning the religion, many not favorable. “According to a recent Roper Poll, 
50% of those polled believed all Muslims to be inherently anti-American. Today, 
the bywords of the relationship between the Muslim and the Judeo-Christian 
worlds are alienation and suspicion.”4 Carl Ellis, a noted African-American 
Christian leader, asserts that Islam “is the most serious threat to the church 
in America.”5 

Muslim Influence. Just how influential is the Islamic community in America? 
Since September 1999, Muslims have conducted Friday congregational prayers 
inside the U.S. Capitol building. American Muslim opposition to a Burger King 
restaurant opened in the West Bank in Israel caused the corporation to close it 
down. The United States military has tripled the number of Muslim chaplains in 
its ranks (serving more than 4,000 Muslim members of the military). Amazon.com 
changed a video review (of the movie Not without My Daughter) in response to 
Muslim complaints.6 In 1999 Georgetown University began a three-year project 
“to document the impact of Muslim Americans on the American horizon.”7 

Islamic Horizons, one of the most influential Muslim journals in America with a 
distribution of more than 60,000,8 asserted in the article “Why Muslim 
Americans Need to Vote” that “Muslim Americans have power and its accompanying 
responsibility. We represent $75 billion of collective annual income, more than 
any Muslim country can produce.”9 This same issue relates how Muslim American 
complaints about a CNN online posting referring to Jerusalem as “the capital of 
Israel” prompted CNN to make appropriate changes quickly.10

The growing presence of Muslim Americans has not been lost on politicians 
either. For example, in New Jersey (home to an estimated 400,000 Muslims), 
former Governor Christine Todd Whitman signed a bill making New Jersey “the 
first state to enact a law ensuring the authenticity of Halal food.”11 Two 
Muslim Americans made history by delivering the benedictions on the first day 
of both the Democratic and Republican national conventions this past year.12 
Also in 2000, Congress called on the United States Postal Service to issue a 
postal stamp commemorating the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. 

Muslim Population and Growth. Is Islam the fastest growing religion in the 
world? Is it the fastest growing religion in America? The demographics tell us 
that the answer is yes to both questions. 

Establishing population demographics for Muslims is not easy. Even without 
completely accurate statistics, we find numerous independent studies in fairly 
close agreement. Most major studies estimate a worldwide Muslim population for 
the year 2000 at roughly 1.25 billion people; that is, about one-fifth or 20 
percent of the world’s population.13 In comparison, Christianity is the largest 
religion in the world with about 33 percent of the world’s population.14 

According to most reports, Islam is the fastest growing religion in the 
world.15 For example, in Europe, according to United Nations statistics, 
between 1989 and 1998 the Islamic population grew by more than 100 percent (to 
about 14 million or 2 percent of the population).16 At the current rate of 
growth it is estimated that Islam’s population by the year 2025 will be 1.9 
billion (about 24 percent of the total European population).17 

One of the most common misconceptions or stereotypes Westerners have about 
Muslims is that most of them are Arabic. “The major sections of Muslim 
populations are concentrated in Asia and Africa. Muslims are, by and large, 
people of color.”18 Missiologist Roland Miller relates that more than 68 
percent of all Muslims live in Asia and more than 27 percent live in Africa. 
Indonesia has roughly 15 percent of the world’s Muslim population. In South 
Asia almost one-third of the world’s Muslim population live in Bangladesh, 
Pakistan, and India.19 

Just how is the Muslim population growing? The growth rate of Islam in Western 
nations (including the US and Canada) primarily comes through: a high Muslim 
birth rate and immigration (e.g., Muslims moving to the United States), not 
from converts (non-Muslims becoming Muslims). As we shall soon note in regard 
to converts, however, two groups are vulnerable to Muslim evangelism. 

In 1995 there were some 4 million Muslims in France, 1.9 million in Germany, 
and 1.5 million in the UK, accounting for 7 percent, 2.4 percent, and 2.7 
percent of the overall populations respectively. In 1998 7 percent of babies 
born within the European Union were Muslim, in Brussels it was as much as 57 
percent....This growth comes primarily through immigration and a high birth 
rate.20 

It is difficult to estimate accurately the total number of Muslims in the 
United States and the rest of North America. Research scientist Carol Stone 
states that “it is still unclear how many Muslims currently reside in 
America...because of a lack of reliable information about Muslims in this 
country.”21

There are several main reasons why this is so. First, for the past 50 years the 
United States government (unlike some countries) has not included questions 
about religious affiliation in its census.22 Dr. James Dretke, executive 
director of the Zwemer Institute, states that a second factor “is the fact that 
Muslims do not join mosques as Christians join churches, so it is impossible to 
count them from membership rolls.”23 Roland Miller gives a third reason: 
“Religious statistics are notoriously difficult to compile because of 
affiliation questions and reporting problems. Muslim statisticians routinely 
give higher figures.”24

Nevertheless, both Christian and Muslim sources assert that Islam is the 
fastest growing religion in the United States.25 The Yearbook of American and 
Canadian Churches 2000 gives the figure of 3,950,000 Muslims in America 
today.26 Islamic Horizons states that there are eight to ten million Muslims in 
North America.27 The most common figure cited (the statistic the United States 
government regularly uses) is about six million.28 The largest concentrations 
of Muslims are in California, New York, and Illinois — with an estimated 
400,000 in the Chicago area.29

While specific figures may be debated, what cannot be debated is the phenomenal 
growth of Islam. According to United Nations statistics, the Muslim population 
in the United States grew by 25 percent between 1989 and 1998.30 In 1990 there 
were only about 50 Islamic schools in America. Today the number is over 200.31 
Since about 1990 the number of “registered Islamic centers and mosques” has 
tripled to “more than 2,500.”32

Factors for Growth. In the book, The Muslims of America, Prof. Yvonne Haddad 
addresses the main factors in Islam’s growth in the U.S.: “The dramatic growth 
of the Muslim community in the United States is a recent phenomenon, taking 
place primarily over the last three decades in response to changes in American 
immigration laws and the demands of the labor market.”33 Islamic Horizons 
echoes this assertion: “The Muslims of North America proudly flaunt the fact 
that they are a people with a population over eight million and growing.…These 
figures do not, however, highlight the fact that a vast majority of these eight 
million are Muslims who either came to this continent after the 1960’s or are 
reverts [i.e., people who return to their former Muslim beliefs].”34

Again, conversion has not been the major factor in Islam’s growth, with two 
major exceptions. The first is given by Wendy Zoba in a Christianity Today 
cover story entitled “Islam, U.S.A": “Islam is gaining most of its U.S. 
converts in prisons and on university campuses. The majority of American 
converts to Islam — 85 to 90 percent — are black.”35 In addition, the number of 
American women who marry Muslim men and convert is estimated to be about 7000 
per year.36

African-Americans make up an estimated 42 to 45 percent of the Muslims in 
America.37 Carl Ellis places the actual number of African-American Muslims at 
2.6 million. Of these, only 18,000 to 20,000 are members of Louis Farrakhan’s 
organization, the Nation of Islam.38

Christians may wish they could say that Islam and Christianity were two 
complementary faiths; two alternate paths to salvation. In reality, their 
foundational teachings are diametrically opposed.39 For Muslims “it is an 
article of faith that Islam is guidance for humanity,”40 and they are commanded 
to do all they can to spread their faith. Islam denies the Trinity, the deity 
of Christ, his death on the cross for our sins, and salvation by grace.

James Dretke expresses the Christian attitude very well: “For Christians who 
take seriously Jesus’ Great Commission in Matthew 28:18–20, it is a great 
thrill to see so many Muslims on our doorsteps. While we cannot easily gain 
entry into their countries...God has brought them to ours.”41

— Joseph P. Gudel
 
----------------------------
"Nay we might rationally ask, did any set of human beings ever really think the 
man they saw there standing beside them a god, the maker of this world? Perhaps 
not: it was usually some man they remembered, or had seen." (Thomas Carlyle)
 
"Every honest Jew who knows the history of his people cannot but feel a deep 
sense of gratitude to Islam, which has protected the Jews for fifty 
generations, while the Christian world persecuted the Jews and tried many times 
'by the sword' to get them to abandon their faith." (Uri Avnery, a Jewish 
Journalist)


      
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