February 21, 2015  
 
What They Get Wrong About ISIS
By _Rob  Schwarzwalder_ 
(http://www.realclearreligion.org/authors/rob_schwarzwalder/) 



ISIS is motivated by its deeply-held religious convictions. 
We can argue ad infinitum about whether or not ISIS's interpretation  of 
the Koran is correct, or whether or not Islam is a religion of  peace. But 
what is unarguable is that ISIS is animated by deeply-held  beliefs about God, 
His will, and the future of humankind.
 
 
President Obama is reluctant to call the ISIS terrorist group "Islamic," in 
 that he insists ISIS distorts the teachings of Islam. But ISIS stands for 
the  "Islamic State of Iraq and Syria;" it styles itself, and the 
Administration  calls it, the "Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant," meaning 
all the 
Middle  East (including Israel). 
Others protest that it is axiomatic for an American president to call Islam 
 "a religion of peace." Not to do so, they say, is an affront to the 
hundreds of  millions of peaceful Muslims and insults one of the world's most 
prominent  faiths. They also cite episodes of "Christians" being brutal, as in 
the Central  African Republic and Rwanda. 
Of course, brutality committed in Jesus's name is blasphemy and 
intrinsically  anti-Christian; no serious student of Christianity -- no serious 
Christian --  can ever claim such. Regardless, say defenders of the "Islam is a 
religion of  peace" narrative, ISIS is not truly Islamic. American political 
leaders must  affirm those Muslims who live peacefully (and that would include 
the great  majority of Muslims worldwide). 
The repressive nature of Islam as it is practiced in Muslim-majority  
countries (conversion is illegal in Islamic-run states, for example) invites  
immediate skepticism of the "religion of peace" trope. Moreover, as Graeme Wood 
 _observes_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/02/what-isis-really-wants/384980/)
  in  a landmark piece for The Atlantic, to deny that 
ISIS is Islamic is  intellectual fraud: "The reality is that the Islamic 
State is Islamic. Very  Islamic. Yes, it has attracted psychopaths and 
adventure 
seekers, drawn largely  from the disaffected populations of the Middle East 
and Europe. But the religion  preached by its most ardent followers derives 
from coherent and even learned  interpretations of Islam." 
However, Koranic interpretation is not my interest here. Rather, it is  
twofold: 
First, a piece of rhetorical advice: Instead of saying "Islam is a religion 
 of peace," American political leaders should say, "The great majority of 
the  world's Muslims are peaceful, and eschew the barbaric violence of ISIS, 
the Boko  Haram, and other openly militant Muslim groups." This cuts away 
the theological  debate about the nature of Islam while affirming the bulk of 
the world's Islamic  population at the same time. 
Second, ISIS and other Islamist groups are driven by their religious 
beliefs.  To deny or minimize this is to spurn reality. Whether or not those 
beliefs  comport with the Koran is a distinct issue. 
This fact seems lost on secular elitists who are attempting to figure out 
how  to deal with ISIS. Here's what President Obama _wrote_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-obama-terrorism-conference-20150218-story.html)
   
in an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times earlier this month: 
Groups like al Qaeda and ISIL promote a twisted  interpretation of religion 
that is rejected by the overwhelming majority of the  world's Muslims ... 
groups like al Qaeda and ISIL exploit the anger that festers  when people 
feel that injustice and corruption leave them with no chance of  improving 
their lives...Efforts to counter violent extremism will only succeed  if 
citizens can address legitimate grievances through the democratic process and  
express themselves through strong civil societies. Those efforts must be 
matched 
 by economic, educational and entrepreneurial development so people have 
hope for  a life of dignity. 
The issue for those devotees of Islam who see their faith mandating 
violence  is not jobs (per the State Department's oblivious Marie Harf) or 
"improving  their lives" (per the President). It is their firm conviction that 
Allah 
demand  certain behaviors, behaviors that include militant, violent, 
widespread acts of  killing to establish a "caliphate" worldwide. 
Graeme Wood writes that ISIS's adherents are faithful to their vision of 
what  the Koran teaches -- period. 
We can gather that their state rejects peace as a  matter of principle; 
that it hungers for genocide; that its religious views make  it 
constitutionally incapable of certain types of change, even if that change  
might ensure 
its survival; and that it considers itself a harbinger of -- and  headline 
player in -- the imminent end of the world...much of what the group  does looks 
nonsensical except in light of a sincere, carefully considered  commitment 
to returning civilization to a seventh-century legal environment, and  
ultimately to bringing about the apocalypse. 
The worldview offered by President Obama and Ms. Harf is one in which  
economic opportunity and education are sufficiently fulfilling that they will  
palliate the dissatisfaction of the followers of ISIS, the Boko Haram, 
al-Qaeda,  and the other networks of Islamic terror around the world. 
This is the materialistic perspective of the elite secular class. It comes  
from the same source as then-candidate Obama's condescending remark about 
people  in "small towns" in Pennsylvania and the Midwest, that "they cling to 
guns or  religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them or 
anti-immigrant  sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their 
frustrations." 
This sniffing, above-the-bourgeoisie mindset is one of the reasons this  
Administration has been so ill-adept at countering ISIS. It cannot reckon with 
 religiously-impassioned violence and, therefore, rationalizes away the 
intensity  of such conviction and reduces the "real issues" to the economic -- 
to the  material. 
This perspective eliminates from human experience the longing for the  
transcendence only God can complete. It is as anti-religious in its  
presuppositions as that of ISIS is in its fierce devotion to it understanding 
of  
Islamic faith. 
What to do? 
First, my colleague Travis Weber has it _right_ 
(http://frcblog.com/2015/02/footsteps-jesus/) : "The answer for  followers of 
ISIS is to walk in the 
footsteps of Jesus Christ, who offers all  human beings (regardless of skin 
color, ideology, political party, nationality,  prior life choices, or past 
faith) the chance for complete devotion, both in the  here and ever after." 
However, no American president can serve as a Christian evangelist. 
Instead,  he can (1) affirm the peaceful character of most Muslims and, as he 
rightly has  done, urge that attention be given to the Islamic leaders who have 
condemned  ISIS and (2) acknowledge the theological propulsion of ISIS and 
its assorted  allies, quit pretending the answer is entrepreneurship, and lead 
a coalition to  defeat ISIS militarily -- a coalition preferably composed 
substantially of  military forces from Islamic nations. 
The church must offer the Gospel. Christians must stand for their faith, 
just  like the brave martyrs throughout the Middle East have been doing. And 
ISIS must  be stopped, to which end the American president should work to 
defeat of our  enemies in as conclusive and immediate a way as possible.
 

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
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