The church in Baghdad

This Sunday we had a visit to our church from Barnabas Fund’s Patrick Sookhdeo, who spoke graphically about violence and discrimination of christians in Iraq, and about the threatening ideology of Islam against christianity.

And I felt rather unneasy, but not for the reasons he wanted.  I am told that he is apparently an academic authority on jihadist ideology, and is a former muslim.  But I still felt like I was not being given an objective and fair picture of either the violent actions or the motivation.

All I can really add is this article from the New York Times about the newly elevated Cardinal of Baghdad, Emmanuel III Delly.  He is a prominent christian leader from Mosul in Iraq, and surely is worth hearing too:

“Christians and Muslims have lived together here for 1,400 years,” Cardinal Delly said in an interview. “We have much in common; in Iraq, the Christian house is next to the Muslim house.”

“I am not happy when people ask, ‘How is the situation for Christians?’” he said. “Those who kill don’t kill only Christians. They kill Muslims as well — the situation is the same for both.”

So it’s not that things aren’t terrible, but that it’s surely more complicated than ‘nasty muslims’ attacking ‘nice christians’.

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