BreakPoint Blog

Banner
Banner
Not today, thanks

At the Navy Hospital in Bethesda yesterday, I couldn't believe my eyes--and not just because an opthamologist had dilated my pupils. A large poster at the bottom of an escalator near pharmacy read:

Pastoral Care Services invites you to celebrate

The Season of Hajj to Mecca

with a Luncheon

Monday, 30 November 2009

BRAL Journey Room

1200 to 1300

To make your reservation by Tuesday, 24 November 2009 at 1600,

please contact Pastoral Care Services at . . .

Accompanying the words was a large picture of bearded, white-robed men of Middle Eastern appearance, their hands raised in worship, against a background of mosques.

Hajj, according to Wikipedia, is "a pilgramage to Mecca" and is "the fifth pillar of Islam, a moral obligation....The Hajj is a demonstration of the solidarity of the Muslim people, and their submission to Allah."

My reaction to this poster was strong and, frankly, hostile, given what happened earlier this month at Ft. Hood, where the pastoral care staff has, I imagine, been occupied with comforting the wounded and the families of soldiers who were murdered by a fellow soldier who believed he was carrying out a moral obligation on behalf of Allah, and who believed that solidarity with fellow Muslims should be put ahead of loyalty to the country he volunteered, volunteered, to defend with his life.

Given what just happened at Ft. Hood, inviting U.S. soldiers to celebrate a Muslim religious obligation seems insensitive in the extreme. 

Since seeing the poster, I've been doing my best to analyze my reaction to it. I think that for the most part, I'm just angry at the political correctness that led to the Ft. Hood massacre. (See the Weekly Standard's in-depth piece, which reveals that Major Nidal Malik Hasan all but screamed "I'm going to kill the infidels!" and nobody did anything about it except worry about being viewed as a bigot. I'm angry because members of my own family might have been victimized by this lunatic--my husband was once stationed at Walter Reed, where Hasan worked for a number of years, and my children and I obtained our medical care there until we switched to the Navy Hospital a few years ago. I'm angry because who knows how many other Hasans there are out there, at U.S. bases all over the world, plotting slaughter while our leaders celebrate "diversity" in the military and shy away from making hard decisions.  And I'm angry at the fanatics who encourage others to murder for Allah's sake.

In the end, I suppose I'm angry that we live in a fallen world and must endure the consequences of that fallenness.

That poster seemed to suggest that nothing had changed--that we're all going to keep pretending that Islam is a religion of peace, and that anyone who thinks otherwise needs diversity training. Just for fun, can we balance the "celebrate Islam" posters with ones telling soldiers where to report soldiers of ANY faith who appear to interpret faithfulness to their god as an obligation to slaughter their fellow soldiers?

 
  • Into the Fray

    We are very excited about all the great commenting that goes on The BreakPoint blog. It is growing and more people are getting engaged. Only one hitch -- it is pretty much "among Christians."

    I'd like to invite you (even those have not commented here yet) to go out to the front lines with us -- to the Colson Center YouTube channel. Click below to find out why.

    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • That masculine feeling

    John Piper has created a ruckus with a talk he gave at the Desiring God 2012 Conference for Pastors, titled "'The Frank and Manly Mr. Ryle' -- The Value of a Masculine Ministry."

    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • Mark Steyn on the High Priests of Tolerance

    The thing I really like about Mark Steyn's writing is that however horrible the news, his clever wording makes me laugh.

    Here's Steyn's take on the Komen debacle and other noteworthy matters, namely religious freedom.

    In case you don't know, Steyn has felt the wrath of "tolerance." He was tried for intolerance by Canada's Human Rights Tribunals.
    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • Bringing Down the House

    Eric Metaxas, who for two years was a member of the BreakPoint writing staff, was the guest speaker at this year's National Prayer Breakfast, held a few days ago at the Hilton in D.C. See him pictured here, making President Obama laugh. But after the jokes, Eric gently spoke truth to power regarding abortion, just as Mother Teresa did some years ago when she spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast.

    You can watch Eric's 30-minute talk by clicking here.
    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • The Death of Religious Liberty

    It's Not Just about Healthcare

    Have we taken religious liberty for granted? In universities and school campuses across the country, Christians are having their rights taken away.

    Here's a case that opened the door to abusing Christians: Christian Legal Society vs. Vanderbilt.

    In another case, a 15-year-old Wisconsin student was threatened and verbally abused by school superintendent of Shawano High School for writing an op-ed in opposion to gay adoption. Ironically, the article was a school assignment.


    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • Is What You Believe Really Real?

    Five or six years ago Focus on the Family released “The Truth Project” DVD series, and I went through it as a discussion leader of a small group. I haven’t looked at it since, so when a friend of mine said a group was going to go through it and invited me, I agreed. I thought it would be good to refresh what I learned from the DVDs and maybe learn some new things I missed the last time.


    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • Happy bicentennial, Mr. Dickens!

    You're all welcome to come over to my other blog for a celebration. Oh, and don't miss today's Google doodle in the great man's honor!
    READ FULL ARTICLE »
  • A Festival for Death

    What a sad statement about the growing culture of death in the Netherlands: Advocates for euthanasia and assisted suicide are celebrating a decade of their legality by hosting a weeklong film festival called the "Week of Euthanasia."

    Sadly, after getting their foot in the proverbial door, the advocates continually redefine the criteria for which people "request," voluntarily or involuntarily, suicide.
    READ FULL ARTICLE »

The Point Radio

  • Francis Schaeffer, Part 2

    What is God’s kind of love? I’m John Stonestreet, and this is The Point.


    Listen Now | Download