- Many Evangelical Christians in the U.S. say they are
outraged over President George Bush's statement that Christians and Muslims
worship the same God.
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- The statement was made Thursday, during the joint press
conference in England with Prime Minister Tony Blair. A reporter noted
Bush has frequently expressed the view that freedom is a gift from "the
Almighty," but questioned whether Bush believes "Muslims worship
the same Almighty" as the president and other Christians do.
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- "I do say that freedom is the Almighty's gift to
every person. I also condition it by saying freedom is not America's gift
to the world," Bush replied. "It's much greater than that, of
course. And I believe we worship the same god," reported the London
Telegraph.
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- Bush's equivalence of the Judeo-Christian and Muslim
gods brought reactions of shock and dismay from Christians in the U.S.
Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention, the nation's
largest Protestant denomination, was quoted in the Baptist Press as saying
the president "is simply mistaken."
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- According to a Washington Post account, Land said in
an interview: "We should always remember that he is commander in chief,
not theologian in chief. The Bible is clear on this: The one and true god
is Jehovah, and his only begotten son is Jesus Christ."
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- Blair avoided answering the same question, replying with
a general statement about freedom.
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- Bush, a practicing Christian who frequently talks publicly
about the importance to him of his faith, nevertheless has repeatedly defended
Islam as a religion of peace, ever since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attack
on the U.S. by 19 Islamist radicals.
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- The Rev. Ted Haggard, president of the National Association
of Evangelicals, also contradicted the president in a press statement,
reported the Post. "The Christian God encourages freedom, love, forgiveness,
prosperity and health," said Haggard. "The Muslim god appears
to value the opposite. The personalities of each god are evident in the
cultures, civilizations and dispositions of the peoples that serve them.
Muhammad's central message was submission; Jesus' central message was love.
They seem to be very different personalities."
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- Despite their strenuous objections, neither Land nor
Haggard thinks the president's statement will cost him votes: "This
president has earned a lot of wiggle room among evangelicals," said
Land, according to the Post. "If he had said that Islam is on a par
with Christianity, it would be a more serious case of heartburn. This is
just indigestion."
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- But according to Gary Bauer, former presidential candidate
and president of American Values, Bush's comment is "not helpful to
the president. Since everybody agrees he's not a theologian, he would be
much better advised to punt when he gets that kind of question."
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- http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35787
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