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Christianity, Islam and Terrorism

2023-12-07 07:58:54

Ongoing conflicts in Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the rest of the Middle East and Africa affect the opposition of American public opinion to Muslims. It is a fundamental misunderstanding that Islam sanctions encourage and permit what it is. Of course, the principles of Islamic belief are different from the principles of Christianity which is common in the United States today. However, there is much in common between these two beliefs, there is no reasonable reason to regard Islam as a belief in "extremists" and Christianity should not be considered like this in this way.

British Christian publications are wondering whether Christian believers have witnessed the "extinction of Egyptian Christianity" which was subject to persecution and terrorist attack by Islamic fundamentalists. Christian leaders also seem to want to know whether Christianity "extends one generation" in the UK where religious people enjoy complete freedom of worship and religion. Last year, the English church began to make a religious revolution. That normative rule requires the English church to have its own function every Sunday. But the dramatic crisis of Christianity in the UK urges British Churches to rewrite these rules in order to avoid vacant and abandoned churches.

Let's enter a short, short history. In the previous Muslim Middle East, Christianity is one of the most likely religions, a mixture of Arabian polytheism and Judaism. Until the rise of Islam and its jihad of terrorists, no conversion or death movement occurred. Compress posts to each community. As a result, there have been no major changes over the past 1000 years. Since the foundation of Islam, it has continued to fight against the unbelievers, but many people believe that Islamic terrorism exists since Western intervention in Muslim countries. This can not be true. The crusade between 1095 and 1291 was the first terrorist war. Run by Pope City II with his famous Deus Vult speech, he began his first fight against the Islamic occupation of the sacred place. The crusade itself was the end of the century when Muslims invaded Europe.

Even before the first Crusades there was a long-standing territorial conflict between the Muslim world and the Christian world. However, the provocation of foreign (foreign) European races is that Jerusalem itself is the one who believes in Christianity (faith changes but race is different), and only to some extent The right for others to land against indigenous tribes who live in their own land is based on their myth (belief) as a decisive factor in contemporary Islamic terrorism. Clearly, Christian Jihad appears in various forms, triggering Islamic Jihad and its modernization, Islamic terrorism.