from the site:
aleteia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

January 10,  2015 
 
After Charlie Hebdo, Could European Churches Be Next?
 
 
It doesn't take a prophet to foresee the threat to Christian Europe.



Philip Jenkins
 
 



 
 
Yet again, a hideous  terror attack forces Europeans to confront basic 
political and cultural  realities. The massacre at the Paris offices of Charlie 
Hebdo raises  fundamental and troubling questions about free speech, and the 
delicate balance  between civil rights and effective policing. But for 
Christians, and for  Catholics specifically, current terrorist dangers should 
be 
forcing a very  serious consideration of quite different issues. Looking at 
contemporary Europe,  we should take account of one grim event that has not 
occurred yet, but that  almost certainly will within the next few years. 
Unless political circumstances  change radically, there will soon be a major 
attack on an iconic symbol of  European Christianity.

To assert this demands no gifts of prophecy.  For years, the most extreme 
segments of radical Islamism have uttered direct  threats against Christian 
belief and practice, and it is immaterial whether  their actions are in 
conflict with tolerant interpretations of Islamic  tradition. Radical groups 
like 
al-Qaeda and ISIS condemn modern  Christians as idolaters who fall outside 
the Qur’an’s promises of protection. To  strike at Christian churches is to 
fight idolatry and  infidels.














Terrorist groups have already targeted Christian individuals and  
institutions, with a view to achieving the maximum shock effect. In 1995, an  
Arab 
group based in the Philippines planned to assassinate Pope John Paul II on  
his visit to that nation, as a means of distracting attention from a related  
plot against U.S. airliners. (Though a Turk actually did shoot the same pope 
in  1981, he was not acting on behalf of Islamist causes.) When Pope 
Benedict made  his controversial Regensburg speech in 2006, extremist Muslim 
groups organized  protests outside Westminster Cathedral, England’s pre-eminent 
Catholic church,  while a spokesman warned that execution awaited anyone who 
insulted  Islam.

Cathedrals and great churches have featured among the  aborted list of 
targets planned by Islamist cells. Such thwarted attacks were  directed at 
Strasburg and Cremona cathedrals, and al-Qaeda made threats against  the great 
cathedral of Bologna. A medieval fresco of the Last Judgment in that  last 
building depicts the Prophet Muhammad being thrown into Hell, naked, with a  
snake wrapped around his body, and attended by a demon. Italian Muslim 
activists  have frequently protested against this work. Scarcely less sensitive 
is 
the  pilgrim shrine of Santiago of Compostela, given its dedication to Saint 
James  the Moor-Slayer, Santiago Matamoros. Although they do not 
specifically offend  Islamic sentiment, other high-profile Christian buildings 
would 
attract  terrorist violence because of their enormous symbolic value.

Recent  events in the Middle East make attacks on churches far more likely. 
Over the  past decade, extremists across the region have deliberately 
targeted Christian  buildings and communities for destruction, particularly in 
Syria and Iraq. Mob  attacks against churches in Egypt in 2013 were the worst 
and most widespread in  that country since 1321. Iraq has repeatedly been 
the scene of massacres of  Christian clergy and worshipers, commonly during 
major celebrations like  Christmas. Around the world, in fact, Christmas is a 
uniquely dangerous time for  churches in lands like Nigeria or Kenya, when 
suicide attacks are most feared.  Al-Qaeda and ISIS, the main perpetrators of 
such tactics, both have a potent  presence on European soil.

European security officials are of  course acutely aware of these dangers. 
Witness the security checks for anyone  seeking to enter Rome’s St. Peter’s 
Square. But by definition, churches and  church services have to be open to 
the public. For terrorist planners, they  represent low-hanging fruit. 
 
 
As an intellectual exercise, we should think through the consequences of  
such acts. What would be the cultural or political effect of an attack that  
devastated a cherished building such as Westminster Abbey or Notre Dame,  
Santiago de Compostela or the Duomo of Florence, or St. Peter’s in Rome 
itself?  Or what about simultaneous Baghdad-style attacks on Midnight Mass 
services in  two or more European cities?

The immediate response, undoubtedly,  would be grief and fury, and Muslim 
leaders would be among the first to condemn  the hypothetical attack, and 
with utter sincerity. They would declare that the  terrorists represented an 
extreme fringe of the faith, who violated its basic  precepts. Church 
authorities in turn would undoubtedly respond with words of  forgiveness and 
reconciliation, and we would expect mass interfaith  gatherings.

It is difficult though to avoid the likelihood of  increased religious 
tension and confrontation. As an attack would result in  dramatically increased 
and militarized security around other churches, it would  promote a sense of 
siege, and encourage a rhetoric of crusade and jihad. The  Vatican 
initially described the London subway attacks of 2005 as  “anti-Christian,” but 
withdrew the comment when it was attacked as inflammatory.  In other 
circumstances though, blatant anti-Christian motives might be  impossible to 
conceal.

Conceivably, we might even imagine old-stock  European Christians being 
galvanized to a new awareness of their culture and  heritage, to a newly 
discovered sense of the Christian history they had always  taken for granted. 
In 
England, for instance, the old crusader flag of St. George  was virtually 
unknown forty years ago, but is now a standard symbol of national  identity. We 
might also expect enhanced militancy from the Global South  immigrants 
living in Europe, millions of whom are Christian, and whose home  countries are 
the scene of interfaith violence. Might we expect retaliatory  violence? 
Far-right nationalists might themselves adopt Crusader rhetoric and  imagery, 
as they struck at mosques and Islamic centers.

I don’t  pretend to predict consequences in any detail. It would, though, 
be valuable to  think through such potential atrocities before they actually  
occur.


Philip  Jenkins is a Distinguished Professor of History  at _Baylor  
University_ (http://www.baylorisr.org/) ...

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