Behind the Headlines... Seeing the World Scene Realistically
by Melvin Rhodes
Many
readers are familiar with the old Hans Christian Andersen fable about the emperor's
new clothes. The story was told about a none-too-bright emperor in medieval
times who was visited by a tailor. The tailor told the emperor about a miracle
cloth that was the most expensive and best-quality fabric ever produced. The
miracle was that only the wise could see it.
The emperor asked to see the cloth.
When the tailor pulled it out of his bag, there was, of course, nothing there.
But the emperor, not wanting to appear ignorant, professed his admiration for
the cloth and ordered a new suit for himself.
Some time later the emperor sported
his new suit as he went out in a procession. Everybody in the empire had been
told about the new miracle cloth, and the crowds lining the route shouted out
their approval-except for one little boy. When the emperor and his entourage
passed by, he exclaimed, "The king doesn't have any clothes on!"
Once the obvious was stated, the
crowds saw the truth of the boy's remarks, and the emperor was ridiculed.
Political correctness is like the
emperor's new clothes. Not wanting to seem unwise, the vast majority of people
go along with it, few thinking for themselves and questioning the prevailing
thought. As the apostle Paul wrote of a previous age, those who professed to
be "wise" became "fools" (Romans 1:22). This was the fate
of the fabled emperor. For the rest of us, political correctness could prove
dangerous if not fatal.
Historic continuum
The attacks of Sept. 11 were the
worst single terrorist action against any nation ever, but they are part of
a historic continuum. Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu aptly
described the goal of the forces of Islamic fundamentalism as "a war to
reverse the triumph of the West."
Herein lies a paradox. Although
Western culture and the Western economic system are making inroads into even
the remotest parts of the world, Western influence and power have declined in
another sense since World War II.
The dominant Western powers of the
last two centuries have been the United Kingdom and the United States, fulfilling
the prophecies in Genesis 48 and 49 that foretold Joseph's supremacy "in
the last days" (for more details request our free booklet The United
States and Britain in Bible Prophecy). No other two nations were so influential
in the last two centuries. Before World War II the British Empire was the preeminent
power in the world; since World War II the United States has dominated.
In 1945, after their triumph over
the Axis powers, it seemed as though the two nations would remain the major
powers forever. But shortly after the end of the war the British started dismantling
their empire. Within two decades almost all of it was gone.
Other empires were also coming to
an end as European nations handed over political control of their former colonies
to new indigenous leaders, many of whom quickly became despotic tyrants. In
some cases, terrorism was used against the ruling Western colonizers, forcing
them into retreat.
My wife and I lived through the
terrorist war in Rhodesia, which resulted in Rhodesia's defeat and the birth
of Zimbabwe. Political correctness saw this change as progressive, but in reality
it was another milestone in the war to reverse the triumph of the West.
Progress or regress?
Recent decades have witnessed a
paradox. While the West has since 1945 been in obvious political and military
retreat, Western culture has become more pervasive as booming world trade and
modern communications have spread American influence into every region.
With the changing political climate
after World War II, many people viewed this period of decolonization as progressive.
Political correctness derided the empire and applauded the newly independent
nations that replaced it.
Such thinking, however, has obscured
a significant reality that bears on the events of Sept. 11. The fact remains
that for the better part of 200 years the British kept the lid on some of the
major tensions that have come to dominate recent headlines.
Hindus and Muslims lived in comparative
harmony on the Indian subcontinent during the time of the British Raj. Today
Hindu India and Muslim Pakistan are enemies, both armed with nuclear weapons
that could annihilate each other.
Similarly the British Mandate of
Palestine between the two world wars tried to keep the lid on Arab-Jewish tensions
after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. When the British withdrew, the region
immediately plunged into the first of many post-World War II conflicts.
The same pattern has followed in
other hot spots such as Sri Lanka and wide swaths of the Middle East and Africa.
Wild winds of anarchy
American historian John Truslow
Adams wrote a prophetic passage in his 1940 book The British Empire (1784-1939).
Writing when the British Empire and Commonwealth were already at war with Nazi
Germany while America remained neutral, he warned that "the possible overthrow
of the British Empire would be a catastrophe scarcely thinkable. Not only would
it leave a vacuum over a quarter of the globe into which all the wild winds
of anarchy, despotism and spiritual oppression would rush, but the strongest
bulwark outside ourselves for our own safety and freedom would have been destroyed"
(p. 358).
Adams accurately predicted what
would happen as not only Britain, but later the United States itself, withdrew
from colonial possessions. For indeed it wasn't long before "the wild winds
of anarchy" rushed into the vacuum.
Jesus Christ, in answering His disciples'
question, "When will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your
coming, and of the end of the age?" (Matthew 24:3), had prophesied an increased
frequency of war between ethnic groups as "nation [would] rise against
nation" (verse 7).
The Greek word translated "nation"
here is ethnos, referring to what we would today call ethnic groups.
Ethnic conflict has always existed, but in times past large multinational empires
largely subdued it. The end of these empires in the 20th century, however, led
to a quadrupling in the number of nations and a proliferation of ethnic conflict.
The increased chaos and confusion
of the last 50 years has largely resulted from the end of the empires that previously
dominated the globe. As the West retreated, ethnic and religious tensions surged
to the fore.
In Rwanda in 1994 the Hutu and the
Tutsi fought each other in a civil war that killed a million people and created
another million refugees. In what was Yugoslavia, the Bosnians, Serbs, Croatians,
Albanians and Macedonians have fought one war after another since Yugoslavia
fell apart in 1991.
In Spain, Basque separatists have
long conducted a terror campaign to try to gain their independence. In Iraq
we've seen Iraqi forces use poison gas against Kurds. In the former Soviet Union
we've seen Chechens fighting against Russians. None of these wars has been nations
fighting nations. They've been ethnic groups fighting other ethnic groups, just
as Jesus foretold
A religious war
Osama bin Laden has called the current
conflict a "war between Islam and atheism." Ten years ago Saddam Hussein
described the Gulf War as a conflict between Islam and Christianity. Neither
terminology is correct. The West can hardly be called Christian anymore, but
neither is it atheist, because most people-in America, at least-still hold to
some religious beliefs.
The present crisis can best be described
as a war between militant Islam and secularism. It is, however, the continuation
of a conflict that follows 14 centuries of on-again, off-again wars between
Islam and Christianity.
As the West has secularized, it
has become more tolerant of other religions. Changes to immigration laws have
encouraged the immigration of millions of people from Islamic countries into
the liberal Western democracies.
Significantly, not one of the 56
countries that are members of the Islamic Conference allows Westerners to settle
and become citizens, unless they first marry a native Muslim and convert. In
many Muslim countries Christian proselytizing is forbidden by law, and those
who engage in it can be expelled or imprisoned.
In the eyes of many Muslim leaders,
Christianity and Western secularism are not compatible with Islamic values.
Could it be that the West has made a mistake in supposing that they are? Political
correctness maintains that all peoples can be successfully brought together
in the American melting pot. But what if this is wrong?
American columnist Cal Thomas recently
wrote: "One sees many white, Anglo-Saxon, mostly Protestant members of
Congress and others on television today vouching for the 'peaceful' nature and
intent of Islam. Oprah Winfrey has done a show on 'modern Muslim women'-none
of whom would be allowed to dress in contemporary clothing, be educated, or
even appear on television if they lived in radical Muslim states."
Mr. Thomas asked Sudanese Episcopal
bishop Bullen Dolli what he thought about contemporary Islam. "'It is a
militant religion,' he tells me and laughs at those who serve as its character
witnesses." Continuing: "Bishop Dolli was in Washington recently.
He attempted to warn Congress and anyone else who would listen of the dangers
posed by Islam, especially in its militant form."
Sudan is a frontline state in the
present-day conflict between Islam and Christianity. Others include Nigeria
(where Muslim mobs burned down 12 churches in the city of Kano on a recent Sunday
morning, killing hundreds), the Balkans, Chechnya, Indonesia and the Philippines.
Pakistan's small Christian minority was attacked at the end of October when
gunmen opened fire on a church service, murdering 16 worshipers.
Alarmingly, Pakistan's former intelligence
chief Hamid Gul warned that, if credible Muslim leaders declared jihad-essentially
holy war-against the United States, "Muslim youths will again come to fight.
The Americans will light a fire from Morocco to Mindanao ..."-in other
words, from northwest Africa to the Philippines (Julian Manyon, "Blood
and Fundamentalism" The Spectator, Sept. 22).
Demographics foretell trouble
We also should remember that most
Islamic countries have a rapidly growing population, 60 percent or more of which
is under age 25. Outside of the prosperous Persian Gulf states, "this means
that there is a large supply of young men with few career prospects, whose lives
have no meaning except dreams, violence and religion" (Bruce Anderson,
"Damping Down the Haystack," The Spectator, Sept. 22).
In a September New York Times
Magazine column titled "This IS a Religious War," American columnist
Andrew Sullivan warned, "Individual faith and pluralism were the targets
Sept. 11, and it was only the beginning of an epic battle."
Daniel 11:40-44 warns of a conflict
just before Christ's return between the "king of the South" (apparently
a leader of Islamic nations) and the "king of the North" (a leader
of some of the Western powers). It is a continuation of a historic struggle
that has gone on for more than 2,000 years.
Changing demographics have been
factors here. The rise of Islam as a world force is partly because of a high
population-growth rate.
"In the long run ... Mohammed
wins out," analyzes one author. "Christianity spreads mainly by conversion,
Islam by conversion and reproduction. The percentage of Christians in the world
peaked at about 30 percent in the 1980s, leveled off and is now declining, and
will probably approximate about 25 percent of the world's population by
2025.
"As a result of their extremely high rates of population growth, the proportion
of Muslims in the world will continue to increase dramatically, amounting to
20 percent of the world's population about the turn of the century, surpassing
the number of Christians some years later, and probably accounting for about
30 percent of the world's population by 2025" (Samuel Huntington,
The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, 1996, p. 65). Current
population statistics bear out his predictions.
A different kind of Islam
Few non-Muslims are aware of a shift that has taken place within much of Islam
in recent years. Compared to previous years, many mosques are now "under
the control of Wahhabi imams, who preach extremism . . ." (Stephen Schwartz,
"Ground Zero and the Saudi Connection," The Spectator, Sept. 22).
This trend has particularly affected many among the younger generation of Muslims,
the generation from which the Sept. 11 suicide hijackers were recruited. "These
Wahhabis . . . accuse their own fathers of heresy, sin and unbelief. And the
young children of the immigrants . . . get exposed only to this one-sided version
of Islam and are led to think that this is the only Islam" (ibid.).
Explaining Wahhabism, the same article says it is "a strain of Islam that
emerged . . . less than two centuries ago. It is violent, it is intolerant and
it is fanatical beyond measure. It originated in Arabia, and it is the official
theology of the [Persian] Gulf states. Wahhabism is the most extreme form of
Islamic fundamentalism, and its followers are called Wahhabis. Not all Muslims
are suicide bombers, but all Muslim suicide bombers are Wahhabis."
The sect was founded by Ibn Abdul Wahhab (1703-92). "From the beginning
. . . his cult was associated with the mass murder of all who opposed it. For
example, the Wahhabis fell upon the city of Qarbala in 1801 and killed 2,000
ordinary citizens in the streets and markets."
Continuing from the same article: "Bin Laden is a Wahhabi. So are the suicide
bombers in Israel. So are his Egyptian allies, who exulted as they stabbed foreign
tourists to death at Luxor not many years ago . . . So are the Algerian terrorists
whose contribution to the purification of the world consisted of murdering people
for such sins as running a movie projector or reading secular newspapers. So
are the Taliban-style guerrillas in Kashmir who murder Hindus. "Interestingly,
"Wahhabism is subsidized by Saudi Arabia," America's chief ally
in the Gulf. Wahhabis are motivated by a similar conviction to what motivated
the communists, who threatened the West during the Cold War: "the belief
that the West was or is decadent and doomed."
By no means do such descriptions apply to all Muslims. Nor should all Muslims
be judged by the actions of a few fanatical extremists. Nonetheless we mustn't
let political correctness hide our eyes from the potential danger.
Contribution of liberalism
Liberal thinking has been a contributory factor to the West's crisis. Not
only have the postwar, supposedly progressive policies on decolonization, religion
and immigration played a role, but major contributors include the West's
liberal moral laws, dating back to the sexual revolution of the '60s.
The "belief that the West was or is decadent and doomed" is a significant
factor here. In spite of religious differences, there was a time when the rest
of the world looked up to the United States, Britain and the European powers.
"Righteousness exalts a nation," Proverbs 14:34 tells us, "but
sin is a reproach to any people." The rest of the world gets its impression
of America from television, movies and music, much of which is heavily violent
and sexual in content.
America's liberal, permissive
society has been looked upon as progressive by the forces of political correctness.
In response to ever-expanding freedoms, rates of sexual promiscuity and perversion,
pornography, abortions, sexually transmissible diseases, divorce and broken
homes have skyrocketed. The fruits are rotten to the core.
America's respect in the eyes of the rest of the world doesn't come
through its military power. It will be helped only if the United States cleans
itself up morally and its citizens become a godlier people.
Then God's promise in Deuteronomy 28:1 will come to pass: ". . . If
you diligently obey the voice of the Lord your God, to observe carefully all
His commandments which I command you today, . . . the Lord your God will set
you high above all nations of the earth." GN
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