http://americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4475
<http://americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4475&search=arlandson>
&search=arlandson
 
The Jews should own the "Kingdom of Heaven"
May 7th, 2005
In Ridley Scott's monumental movie,  "The Kingdom of Heaven
<http://www.kingdomofheavenmovie.com> " (May 2005) (the phrase is another
way of saying "Jerusalem" in the film), the European Crusaders and the
Muslim Crusaders fight over the city, with the Muslims coming out
victorious.
The unexpected consequence effect of the film, on me at least, is that I
came away from it with a deeper conviction that neither the Muslims nor the
Christians should have fought over Jerusalem. The city historically and
originally belonged to the Jews; they owned it for a thousand years before
Christ came and for 1600 years before Muhammad came (and when they were
exiled, many came back). So it belongs to them today. It is simply a myth to
assume that Muslims or Christians won Jerusalem by some kind of divine right
or by an unchallenged assumption that says, "of course they own the region."

With that said, however, the film makes an erroneous assumption. It assumes
that the European Crusaders and the Muslim Crusaders stand on an equal
footing when they fight over Jerusalem. The opposite is true. When the
Medieval Christians fought over earthly ground, they abandoned the example
of Jesus Christ. However, when the Muslims fought over Jerusalem and
conquered other cities, they were following the example of their Prophet
Muhammad. So the two religions do not stand on the same ground whatsoever.
To clarify this unintended consequence and this opposing outlook on military
conquest, I am dividing this article into two main sections. The first
clarifies the early Muslim Crusades at the founding of Islam. Once we
understand their origins, then we will understand their later history. The
second section deals with Jesus' view of Jerusalem and how this should
influence Christians today, and also analyzes the Islamic view of Jerusalem,
as represented by two academic Muslims working in America. 
I. The Islamic Crusades
Few Westerners know that the Muslims launched their own Crusades outside of
Arabia two years of Muhammad's death of a fever in AD 632. The first part of
this article answers three questions about the early Muslim Crusades. In
this article, the word "Crusade," (derived from the Latin word for "cross")
means a holy war or jihad. It is used as a counterweight to the constant
Muslim accusation that only Europeans launched a crusade. The Muslims seem
to forget that they had their own "crusades" for centuries
1. Who or what inspired the Islamic Crusades?
It may surprise the reader that Muhammad was the first to launch a Crusade.
In October to December 630, after the conquest of Mecca in January 630,
Muhammad launches a Crusade to Tabuk, a city in the north of Saudi Arabia
today, but in the seventh century it was under the control of northern
tribes. "Crusade" is the right word, for early Muslim sources say the army
had 30,000 men and 10,000 horsemen. On his way north, Muhammad extracts (or
extorts) "agreements"-without provocation-from smaller Christian Arab tribes
to pay the jizya tax, instead of being attacked and killed (a jizya tax is
exacted from non-Muslims for the "privilege" of living under Islam; see Sura
9:29). They also had the option to convert, but most do not and agree,
rather, to pay the tax. Once the Muslims reach Tabuk, however, the Byzantine
army fails to materialize, so Muhammad and his large army return to their
homes.
So it is Muhammad himself who inspired the first generations of Muslims to
carry out his Crusades.
2. Besides following Muhammad, why else did the Muslims launch their
Crusades out of Arabia in the first place?
In a complicated Crusade that lasted several centuries before the European
Crusades, it is difficult to come up with a grand single theory as to what
launched these Crusades. Because of this difficulty, we will let three
scholars and two eyewitness participants analyze the motives of the early
Islamic Crusades.
Muslim apologists like Sayyid Qutb assert that Islam's mission is to correct
the injustices of the world. What he has in mind is that if Islam does not
control a society, then injustice dominates it, ipso facto. But if Islam
dominates it, then justice rules it (In the Shade of the Qur'an, vol. 7, pp.
8-15). Islam is expansionist and must conquer
<http://americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4013&search=arlandson>
the whole world to express Allah's perfect will on this planet, so Qutb and
other Muslims believe. But this is ambiguous at best. Over the centuries
until now, Islam does not represent justice. People, especially women, are
oppressed in Islamic lands-for reasons beyond bad rulers like Saddam
Hussein. The essence of Islam, which Qutb correctly describes elsewhere
(e.g. pp. 147-50), is to control the details of society, but sharia (Islamic
law) sometimes becomes excessive
<http://americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=3856&search=arlandson> .
Excess is never just. Nonetheless, Qutb describes Islam as politically and
militarily expansionist from the very beginning, and in this he is right.
Karen Armstrong, a former nun and well-spoken, prolific author and apologist
for Islam, comes up short of a satisfactory justification for the Muslim
Crusades:
Once [Abu Bakr] crushed the rebellion [against Islamic rule within Arabia],
Abu Bakr may well have decided to alleviate internal tensions by employing
the unruly energies within the ummah [Muslim community] against external
foes. Whatever the case, in 633 Muslim armies began a new series of
campaigns in Persia, Syria and Iraq. (Jerusalem: One City, Three Faiths, New
York: Ballantine, 1997, p. 226).
The key words "may well have decided" indicate doubt about the trigger, and
"alleviate internal tensions" and "employing unruly energies" are hardly
sufficient to justify the Islamic Crusades. Also, she notes that the
"external foes" to Islam in Arabia in 633 are the Persians and the
Byzantines, but they are too exhausted after years of fighting each other to
pose a serious threat to Islam. Therefore, it moved into a "power vacuum,"
unprovoked (Armstrong p. 227). She simply does not know with certainty why
Muslims marched northward out of Arabia.
Fred M. Donner, the dean of historians specializing in the early Islamic
conquests, cites three large factors for the Islamic Crusades. First, the
ideological message of Islam itself triggered the Muslim ruling elite simply
to follow Muhammad and his conquests; Islam had a divinely ordained mission
to conquer in the name of Allah. (The Early Islamic Conquests, Princeton UP,
1981, p. 270). The second factor is economic. The ruling elite "wanted to
expand the political boundaries of the new state in order to secure even
more fully than before the trans-Arab commerce they had plied for a century
or more" (p. 270). The final factor is political control. The rulers wanted
to maintain their top place in the new political hierarchy by having
aggressive Arab tribes migrate into newly conquered territories (p. 271). 
However replete these three factors are with ideas, we do not need to
explore them further except to note that they have nothing to do with just
wars of self-defense. Early Islam was merely being aggressive without
sufficient provocation from the surrounding Byzantine and Persian Empires.
Khalid al-Walid (d. 642), a bloodthirsty but superior commander of the
Muslim armies at the time, also answers the question as to why the Muslims
stormed out of Arabia, in his terms of surrender set down for the governor
of al-Hirah, a city along the Euphrates River in Iraq. He is sent to call
people to Islam or pay a "protection" tax for the "privilege" of living
under Islamic rule (read: not to be attacked again) as dhimmis or
second-class citizens. Says Khalid:
"I call you to God and to Islam. If you respond to the call, you are
Muslims: You obtain the benefits they enjoy and take up the responsibilities
they bear. If you refuse, then [you must pay] the jizyah. If you refuse the
jizyah, I will bring against you tribes of people who are more eager for
death than you are for life. We will fight you until God decides between us
and you." (Tabari, The Challenge to the Empires, trans. Khalid Yahya
Blankinship, NY: SUNYP, 1993, vol. 11, p. 4; Arabic page 2017)
Thus, according to Khalid religion is early Islam's primary motive (though
not the only one) of conquering people, so Donner is right about his first
factor. 
Khalid also says that if some do not convert or pay the tax, then they must
fight an army that loves death as other people love life. This clause
inspires Osama bin Laden and Palestinian terrorists today, who blow
themselves up along with innocent civilians because the bombers love death
more than the Christians and Jews love life. Osama bin Ladin issues a
lengthy fatwa against Zionist-Crusaders (Jews and Christians) and concludes
about his jihadists: "These youths love death as you love life." In 2000,
<http://memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=archives&Area=ia&ID=IA16304> Azzam
al-Tamimi,  PhD in Political Theory and head of the Institute of Islamic
Political Thought in London, in his article "Hizbullah's Gift to Palestine,"
also draws inspiration <http://www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=95001345>
from those words in early Islam.  
But material benefit must be included in this not-so-holy call, as Donner
notes. When Khalid perceived that his Muslim Crusaders desired to return to
Arabia, he pointed out how luscious the land of the Persians was:
"Do you not regard [your] food like a dusty gulch? By God, if struggle for
God's sake and calling [people] to God were not required of us, and there
were no consideration except our livelihood, the wise opinion would [still]
have been to strike this countryside until we possess it". . . . (Tabari
11:20 / 2031)
At the time of this "motivational" speech, the Empire of Persia included
Iraq, and this is where Khalid is warring. Besides his religious goal of
evangelizing its inhabitants by warfare, Khalid's goal is to "possess" the
land.
Like Pope Urban II in 1095 exhorting the Medieval Crusaders to war against
the Muslim "infidels" for the first time, Abu Bakr gives his own speech in
634, exhorting Muslims to war against the infidels, though he is not as
long-winded as the Pope. From his short sermon Abu Bakr says:
. . . Indeed, the reward in God's book for jihad in God's path is something
for which a Muslim should love to be singled out, by which God saved
[people] from humiliation, and through which He has bestowed nobility in
this world and the next. (Tabari 11:80 / 2083-84)
Thus, the Caliph repeats the Quran's trade of this life for the next, in an
economic bargain
<http://americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4297&search=arlandson>
and in the context of jihad (cf. Suras 4:74; 9:111 and 61:10-13). This offer
of martyrdom, agreeing with Donner's first factor, religious motivation, is
enough to get young Muslims to sign up for and to launch their Crusades out
of Arabia in the seventh century.
3. Did the Islamic Crusades force conversions by the sword?
Historical facts demonstrate that most of the conquered cities and regions
accepted the last of the three options set forth in Sura 9:29 and enforced
by the later Muslim Crusaders: fight and die, convert, or pay the jizya tax.
They preferred to remain in their own religion and to pay the tax. However,
people eventually converted. After all, Islamic lands are called such for a
reason-or many reasons. Why?
Four Muslim apologists whitewash the reasons people converted, so their
scholarship is suspect. 
First, Malise Ruthven and Azim Nanji use the Quran to explain later
historical facts: 
"Islam expanded by conquest and conversion. Although it was sometimes said
that the faith of Islam was spread by the sword, the two are not the same.
The Koran states unequivocally, 'There is no compulsion in religion' (Sura
2:256)." (Historical Atlas of Islam, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard, 2004, 30). 
According to them, the Quran says there should be no compulsion, so the
historical facts conform to a sacred text. This shaky reasoning is analyzed,
below. 
Next, David Dakake also references Sura 2:256, and defines compulsion very
narrowly. Jihad has been misrepresented as forcing Jews, Christians, and
other peoples of the Middle East, Asia and Africa to convert to Islam "on
pain of death." ("The Myth of Militant Islam," Islam, Fundamentalism, and
the Betrayal of Tradition, ed. J.E.B. Lumbard, Bloomington: World Wisdom,
2004, p. 13). This is too narrow a definition of compulsion, as we shall
see, below. 
Finally, Qutb, also citing Sura 2:256, is even more categorical: "Never in
its history did Islam compel a single human being to change his faith" (In
the Shade of the Qur'an, vol. 8, p. 307). This is absurd on its face, and it
only demonstrates the tendentiousness of Islamic scholarship, which must be
challenged at every turn here in the West.
These four apologists, representing others, seem to follow this odd logic:
(1) The only forced conversions are ones that occur with swords hanging
directly over necks.(2) No "hanging sword" conversions occur during a
military conquest (because the swords of the Muslim Crusaders glimmer
outside the city wall, not directly over necks).(3) Therefore, no forced
conversions occurred during a military conquest.
But history does not follow abstract logic. Did the vast majority of
conquered peoples make such fine distinctions, even if a general amnesty
were granted to People of the Book? Maybe a few diehards did, but the
majority? Most people at this time did not know how to read or could barely
read, so when they saw a Muslim army outside their gates, why would they not
convert, even if eventually? To Ruthven's and Nanji's credit, they come up
with other reasons to convert besides the sword, such as people's fatigue
with church squabbles, a few doctrinal similarities, simplicity of the
conversion process, a desire to enter the ranks of the new ruling elite, and
so on. But using the Quran to interpret later facts paints the history of
Islam into a corner of an unrealistically high standard. 
Indeed, militant Christianity does not live up to it. Jesus said that "if
anyone would come after me" . . .  (Matt. 16:24). The word "if" shows that
Jesus did not force anyone, and this is the implied starting point in the
following logic. Would a Muslim apologist believe this about the Medieval
European Crusades?
(4) If anyone follows Jesus Christ closely, then the follower never forces
conversions.(5) The Medieval Crusaders followed Jesus Christ closely.(6)
Therefore, the Medieval Crusaders never forced conversions.
This is the same unsound logic that the four Muslim apologists use in their
explanation of the Muslim Crusades. But this is completely inaccurate and
wrong. Rather, everyone agrees that Medieval Crusaders did not always act
exemplarily or that they sometimes forced conversions. Hence, this misguided
connection between Scripture and later historical facts does not hold
together. Revelations or ideals should not run roughshod over later
historical facts, as if all followers obey their Scriptures perfectly.
Actually, modus tollens (denying the consequent or "then" clause) works
better here.
(7) If anyone follows Jesus Christ closely, then the follower never forces
conversions.(8) But the Medieval Crusaders forced conversions.(9) Therefore,
they did not follow Jesus Christ closely.
The historical fact in the eighth premise leads to a better conclusion. This
must be repeated: The Medieval Crusaders did not follow Jesus Christ closely
when they slashed and burned or forced conversions. The same cannot be said
for the Muslim Crusaders, for they in fact closely followed their founder.
To his credit, Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406), late Medieval statesman, jurist,
historian, and scholar, has enough integrity and candor to balance out these
four Muslim apologists, writing a history that is still admired by
historians today. He states the obvious:
In the Muslim community, the holy war is a religious duty, because of the
universalism of the Muslim mission and (the obligation to) convert everybody
to Islam either by persuasion or by force. (The Muqaddimah: an Introduction
to History (abridged), trans. Franz Rosenthal, Princeton UP, 1967, p.183) 
In these thirty-three words lies the insight that follows common sense. When
the Islamic Crusaders go out to conquer, carrying an Islamic banner
inscribed in Arabic of the glory and the truth of their prophet, Ibn Khaldun
would not deny that the army's mission; besides the material reasons of
conquest, the purpose is to convert the inhabitants. Islam is a
universalizing religion, and if its converts enter its fold either by
persuasion or force, then that is the nature of Islam. 
Moreover, Ibn Khaldun explains why a dynasty rarely establishes itself
firmly in lands of many different tribes and groups. But it can be done
after a long time and employing the following tactics, as seen in the
Maghrib (N and NW Africa) from the beginning of Islam to Ibn Khaldun's own
time:
The first (Muslim) victory over them and the European Christians (in the
Maghrib) was of no avail. They continued to rebel and apostatized time after
time. The Muslims massacred many of them. After the Muslim religion had been
established among them, they went on revolting and seceding, and they
adopted dissident religious opinions many times. They remained disobedient
and unmanageable . . . . Therefore, it has taken the Arabs a long time to
establish their dynasty in the . . . Maghrib. (p. 131)
Using wisdom that is based on observation, the Medieval Muslim scholar
acknowledges that slaughter occurred not only to establish a worldly
dynasty, but also to force people to convert to the true religion by the
sword, even though some of the inhabitants in the Maghrib were People of the
Book, European Christians. If they did not convert, then "the Muslims
massacred many of them," he says, matter-of-factly. This excerpt also shows
that many did not want to become Muslims, or when they gave up and became
Muslims, they "apostatized [and] . . . adopted dissident religious opinions
. . . and remained disobedient." Therefore, freedom of religion was not the
purpose of Islam, as it was not in Muhammad's days, when he conquered Mecca
and the Arabian Peninsula.
Though European Crusaders may have been sincere, they wandered off from the
origins of Christianity when they slashed and burned and forced conversions.
Jesus never used violence; neither did he call his disciples to use it.
Given this historical fact, it is only natural that the New Testament would
never endorse violence to spread the word of the true God. Textual reality
matches historical reality.
In contrast, Muslims who slashed and burned and forced conversions did not
wander off from the origins of Islam, but followed it closely. It is a plain
and unpleasant historical fact that in the ten years that Muhammad lived in
Medina (622-632), he either sent out or went out on seventy-four raids,
expeditions, or full-scale wars, which range from small assassination hit
<http://americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=3920&search=arlandson>
squads to the Tabuk Crusade, described above. Sometimes the expeditions did
not result in violence, but a Muslim army always lurked in the background.
Muhammad could exact a terrible vengeance on an individual or tribe that
double-crossed him. These ten years did not know long stretches of peace. 
Given these real-life and historical facts, it is only natural that
Muhammad's Quran would be filled with references to jihad and qital, the
latter word meaning only fighting, killing, warring, and slaughtering.
Textual reality matches historical reality. Therefore, Muslim Crusaders did
not wander off the original path of their founder Muhammad. 
After Jesus' death and Resurrection, his disciples in the first three
centuries (Constantine comes in the fourth century) turned the world upside
down by simply preaching the love of God, never by swinging a sword. After
Muhammad's death, his disciples turned the world upside down in the first
few centuries by swinging a sword or by forcing a city's surrender with a
large army backing up the peace treaty and the jizya tax.
That is the difference that Ridley Scott's film overlooked.
II. Why the Jews alone should own the "Kingdom of Heaven"
We now come to the second part of the article, which answers why Muslims and
Christians should lay no claim over Jerusalem or the "Kingdom of Heaven." It
belongs to the Jews alone.
According to prolific and prominent Muslim scholar Seyyed Hossein Nasr,
professor of Islamic Studies at George Washington University, Muhammad
transforms Jerusalem into a holy site for Muslims primarily in three ways
("The Spiritual Significance of Jerusalem: The Islamic Vision. The Islamic
Quarterly. 4 (1998): pp.233-242).
First, the prophet used Jerusalem as his first qiblah (prayer direction),
which therefore provides a "mystical" link between Mecca and Jerusalem.
Second, while Muhammad was still living in Mecca he reports that he took a
Night Journey to Jerusalem in a vision, even though Jerusalem is never
mentioned by name. According to MAS Abdel Haleem's translation for Oxford
University Press (2004), the two passages in the surah (or chapter), itself
entitled Night Journey, read:
17:1 Glory to Him who made His servant travel by night from the sacred place
of worship [Mecca] to the furthest place of worship [Jerusalem], whose
surroundings We have blessed, to show him some of Our signs . . . . 
17:59 . . . We send signs only to give warning. 60 Prophet, We have told you
that your Lord knows all human beings. The vision We showed you was only a
test for people . . . .
This non-empirical revelation contains two basic ideas: First, as the
context around verses 59 and 60 show, Muhammad was undergoing some
persecution in Mecca; the polytheists were asking for a sign of Muhammad's
prophethood. He replies that he is only an ordinary man, so he cannot
perform them. The only sign Allah gives him is a vision. Second, this
revelation parallels the one in 2:144, which permits Muhammad to take over
the Kabah shrine before he actually does. The two passages are mutually
supportive. Verse 1 reads: . . . "whose surroundings We have blessed" . . .
. Allah blesses the location (read: Jerusalem, though the Quran never says
this), as He will bless Mecca a few years later. It should be noted that
later tradition says that while in Jerusalem Muhammad was taken up to the
seventh heaven, giving the vision extra significance for Muslims today.
The third factor is this: Muslims, says Nasr, believe in the Second Coming
of Christ to Jerusalem. Therefore the city is sacred to Muslims and to
Christians according to Nasr. But this is misleading, for Muslim theology
says that Jesus will return as a leader of Muslims and break the cross to
show how wrong Christians have been, in following their Lord (Bukhari 3:425;
3:656; 4:657; and Muslim no. 289). Also, these hadiths say nothing about
Jerusalem. Rather, traditional belief says that he is supposed to return to
Damascus, as this Islamic website says
<http://www.irshad.org/islam/prophecy/messiah.htm> .  But let us assume,
only for the sake of argument, that Nasr is correct about Jerualem. Then his
assertion still fails.
The empirical and political implications of these three factors (the qiblah,
the Night Vision, and the Second Coming) are enormous: Muslim ownership over
Jerusalem. With these three factors combined, Jerusalem is now the third
holiest site for Muslims and therefore a place of pilgrimage and alleged
ownership. 
According to this dubious epistemology, revelation takes priority over
history; indeed, revelation makes or creates history. Even Nasr, a modern
scholar, accepts this epistemology: 
Not all the Palestinians nor all the Arabs nor even all the over one billion
two hundred million Muslims now living in the world could give Jerusalem
away for no matter what amount of wealth, power, land, or any other worldly
compensation. The attachment to Jerusalem is permanent and will last as long
as human history itself. (p. 234)
His inference makes three controversial claims. 
First, the words "Muslims living all over the world now living could not
give Jerusalem away" assume that Jerusalem is owned by the Muslims already.
Could it be that Nasr is following the path or sunna of Muhammad as the
prophet claimed Mecca before he actually owned it? 
Second, those same words assume that "Muslims living all over the world"
actually worry about Jerusalem and controlling it. However, more evidence of
this needs to be offered. It is doubtful whether the millions in Indonesia
care about not giving it away for any "amount of wealth, power, and, or any
other worldly compensation." Nasr speaks for too many people.  
Third, Nasr brings up "human history" in the last sentence, but it is
precisely this element that is missing in his three factors. Jerusalem is
sacred to Muslims supposedly all over the world mainly due to non-empirical
revelations that not everyone agrees with and that cannot be verified in
history. 
Waleed El-Ansary, the second Muslim scholar, draws this outlandish
conclusion about Jerusalem:
Perhaps the only ways to achieve peace in the Middle East would be for
Jerusalem to be depoliticized. It should not be a political capital of
either Israel or Palestine, but be given a unique status as a spiritually
sovereign entity under a theocracy of the traditional representatives of the
Abrahamic religions . . . . ("The Economics of Terrorism," in Islam,
Fundamentalism, and the Betrayal of Tradition, ed. J.E.B Lumbard,
Bloomington: World Wisdom, 2004, p. 216).
However noble and lofty his conclusion may sound, it has never crossed my
mind, as a Christian, that the Jews should relinquish control of Jerusalem
and let a representative theocracy rule over it. Why not?
The answer can be found in simple logic too:
(10) If Jesus never transformed a location into a holy site, then neither
should his followers.(11) Jesus never did.(12) Therefore, neither should his
followers.
We do not need to answer each premise one by one, since that would involve
multiplying words about evidence that is non-existent. No evidence shows
Jesus transforming Jerusalem (or any other city) into a holy site, and
certainly not in the way Muhammad did to Mecca-by the sword-nor did he
institute a required pilgrimage to a holy site.
It is true that Jesus wept over Jerusalem because as a whole she did not
accept his comfort (Luke 19:38-44); and that he cleansed the temple there
with a whip (Luke 19:45-46), but he did this by himself, which shows he was
making only a theological statement, not a military one. If his intentions
were military, then he had enough disciples and crowds to call them to a
holy war to try to conquer Jerusalem. It is also true that he foretold her
destruction (Luke 21:20); that he instituted the first Eucharist there (Luke
22:7-23); that he died there (Luke 23:26-49); and that he was resurrected
there (Luke 24:1-12). 
All of these events are historically and empirically verifiable, as opposed
to non-empirical revelations. Despite all of these events that are rooted in
earth and not floating in the air, Jesus never once turned Jerusalem into a
place of pilgrimage or declared that it should belong forever to his
followers, the Christians.
Thus, Nasr misses the mark widely when he writes:
. . . [B]y virtue of accepting Christianity, Christians are duty bound to
have a special attachment to Jerusalem as did their forefathers who even
fought bloody wars known as the Crusades for over a century with the
declared intention of regaining control of the holy city, who oriented their
churches in Europe in its direction and who have made pilgrimage to the holy
city during the past two millennia. (p. 234)
The key words are "duty bound." Why does he impose that duty? Bloody wars?
Oriented European Medieval churches? Free-will pilgrimages? These are not
nearly sufficient for the average Evangelical Christian anywhere in the
world. It is difficult to imagine that Thai or Korean evangelicals, for
example, ever feel duty bound for those reasons, and certainly not for
non-existent New Testament reasons. The American ones I know do not feel
duty bound.
It is one thing for a devout Christian to follow his heart on a personal
pilgrimage to Jerusalem in order to derive spiritual benefit, but it is
quite another to follow one's alleged bound duty or command to go on one and
to insist that Jerusalem should come under the political control of
Christians, especially to the point of bloodshed.
And as to the Christian doctrine of the Second Coming (Nasr's third factor),
Christians believe that Christ will return when the Father pleases. Whoever
is squabbling over Jerusalem at that time will have to submit to his reign.
True, professional Bible prophecy teachers believe that the Bible teaches
Jews own Jerusalem, but they do so for a simpler reason than reading current
events and matching them up with the Bible.
American Evangelicals (including Bible prophecy teachers) are faced with
three grounds of epistemology on which to make some choices: (1) history,
which says that the Jews own Jerusalem; (2) the non-existence of evidence in
the New Testament that says Christians should own Jerusalem (what Christ's
later followers like the Crusaders did is another matter, but they do not
set the genetic code for Christianity); and (3) Islamic revelation that says
Muhammad transformed Jerusalem into a holy site-which is completely
unacceptable to Bible-educated Christians.
The vast majority of Evangelicals in America choose the first
epistemological option simply because the Bible and history outside the
Bible agree that Jews have lived there long before Christians and Muslims
arrived on the scene, and because the Christian Founder never said it
belonged to them.
However, Christians (and Jews) should respect later Islamic revelation (the
third option)-respecting is different from agreeing with-that says Jerusalem
is a place of pilgrimage for Muslims. Fulfilling a pledge to take a
non-violent pilgrimage to the Jews' sacred city harms no one materially or
politically. 
Yet, Muslims should understand why Bible-educated and Bible-believing
Christians claim that the ownership of Jerusalem belongs to the Jews.
History trumps revelation, which is always better epistemologically when a
revelation and its inferences can become politically charged and are not
believed by everyone. Thus, moderate Muslim scholars should understand our
position thoroughly before imposing a non-existent, mystical duty on us, as
Nasr does.
Instead of an earthly Jerusalem, Christians are looking for a New Jerusalem
in heaven (Revelation 21). They are on a pilgrimage to the City of God (as
Augustine calls it), not to a mundane city. Therefore, it is not hard for us
to let plain ole history take priority over earthward and political
revelations. 
And plain ole history says Jews should be able to live in and govern their
holy city in peace.
James Arlandson (PhD) teaches introductory philosophy and world religion at
a college in southern California. He has written a book, Women, Class, and
Society in Early Christianity (Hendrickson, 1997).  He may be reached at
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 


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