by John Piper
take eternal life from Muslim people. Jesus said - and we say it with
tears - "He who believes in the Son has eternal life; but he who does
not obey the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him"
(John 3:36). In other words, nominal Christians, devoted Muslims, pious
Hindus, faithful Buddhists, orthodox Jews, devout animists, sincere
agnostics, secular atheists - everyone who does not hold fast to Jesus
Christ as the supremely valuable Son of God and Savior - will perish
and not have eternal life. "He who has the Son has life; he who has not
the Son of God has not life" (1 John 5:12).
Whatever obscures this message for Muslim people obstructs their way to
eternal life. For them Christ is a prophet, but not the divine Son of
God who said, "Before Abraham was, I am" (John 8:58). For Muslims Jesus
is not the Savior who died for their sins and said, "I am the way, and
the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me" (John
14:6). Unless Muslims - and all others who deny Christ's deity - hear
and embrace the good news that "the fullness of deity" dwells in Jesus
(Colossians 2:9), they will be without eternal hope. This has always
been true, but today things are different. Two seemingly opposite
forces gather to block the gospel from Muslim minds.
First, there is the fire of hatred, fanned by the flames of September 11.
Second, there is a twisted tolerance fed by the fear of man.
My son called me from Chicago to say that one of his Muslim friends had
been beaten on the street. No reason. He just looked like one of
"them." The spirit of revenge against Muslims in our nation these days
is indiscriminate. Rage boils just beneath the surface. This is not the
way of Christ. He calls his people to suffer for the sake of love, not
seethe with the fire of hate. "Christ suffered for you, leaving you an
example, that you should follow in his steps. When he was reviled, he
did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he
trusted to him who judges justly" (1 Peter 2:21-23).
Hatred from Christians keeps Muslims from seeing the superior worth of
Jesus Christ. The spirit of revenge sends the false signal that Christ
is not an all-sufficient, all-satisfying Savior. We justify our own
little jihad, and seek our satisfaction by injuring the adversary. But
true Christians treasure Jesus above vengeance, and do not rob Muslim
people of truth and hope in this way. Christians would rather suffer to
show the supreme worth of Christ. They crucify the craving of hate in
their own hearts. They long for Muslims to see Jesus for who he really
is. They know that eternal life is at stake - for both.
In reaction against indiscriminate hate there is now a stampede to
pluralism and twisted tolerance. If Muslims are hated, then let us call
ecumenical gatherings, and let us all praise the virtues of Islam, and
the wisdom of Allah and the goodness of Mohammed. But let no one speak
the intolerable and indispensable truth that Jesus is the only way to
God.
Once upon a time tolerance was the power that kept lovers of competing
faiths from killing each other. It was the principle that put freedom
above forced conversion. It was rooted in the truth that coerced
conviction is no conviction. But now the new twisted tolerance denies
that there are any competing faiths; they only complement each other.
It denounces not only the effort to force conversions, but the very
idea that any conversion may be necessary for eternal life. It holds
the conviction that no religious conviction should claim superiority
over another.
When Muslims are protected from hate with this "tolerance," they are
cut off from eternal life. And what promises deliverance proves to be
death. If, in the name of this new tolerance, we are forbidden to say
of Jesus, "There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other
name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved" (Acts
4:12), then eternal life is concealed and we are cruel.
Therefore let us open the door of life for all Muslim people by
renouncing hate, showing love, conquering fear, commending the King of
the universe, Jesus Christ, and suffering willingly, if we must.
Praying with you for a stunning breakthrough,
John Piper
Monday, September 25, 2006
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