There are about a billion Muslims who are turned off by what many of them 
regard as two obstacles against their becoming Christians: (1) the Crusades of 
the 11th to 13th centuries demonstrate openly for all time that "Christianity" 
is a cruel and unjust religion (they say); and (2) the doctrine that one man's 
righteousness can substitute morally for another man's unrighteousness. In 
fact, their theologians connect the Crusades to that doctrine of vicarious 
moral substitution. It's unjust, and unfair, they say.
We know first: the Crusades were not true, biblical Christianity. Second, could 
the doctrine of a vicarious substitution be explained to Muslims more clearly? 
Does the Bible also teach the truth of a shared substitution?

In His first lesson on the cross Jesus told us, "If anyone desires to come 
after Me, let him ... take up his cross, and follow Me. ... Whoever loses his 
life for My sake will find it" (Matt. 16:24, 25). Paul understood this idea of 
shared substitution: "I am crucified with Christ" (Gal. 2:20). "As many of us 
as were baptized into Christ were baptized into His death. ... We were buried 
with Him through baptism into death. ... We have been united together in the 
likeness of His death. ... Our old man [the love of self] was crucified with 
Him. ... If we died with Christ we believe we shall also live with Him" (Rom. 
6:3-8--but not otherwise!). If "our" Crusaders had understood this, world 
history would have been different! Praying for the Muslims is good, but not 
good enough: we must tell them the gospel clearly, truthfully.

--Robert J. Wieland

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