Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

World|Fri, Aug. 03 2007 05:32 PM EDT

America's Pro-Gay Culture and Its Effects on Iraqi Christians

By Michelle Vu|Christian Post Reporter

Debates over Iraq and whether the United States should immediately pullout or should have even gone in the first place have raged on for years. Yet Christian leaders are increasingly calling attention to the too-often overlooked Iraqi people, urging Americans to halt their arguments among themselves to look at the effects of their actions on the suffering people in Iraq.

America has long claimed to be the world’s leading champion for freedom, but what they consider freedom in the United States has adverse effects overseas, noted the pastor of one of Iraq’s largest churches.

In the first panel of Iraq religious minorities ever assembled by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom last week, the Rev. Canon Andrew White – vicar of the 1,300-member St. George’s Anglican Church in Baghdad – shared about the struggles of the depleting Iraqi Christian population and the effects of being associated with a “Western religion.”

During the question and answer session, White spoke about Western culture and values and their detrimental effects on Iraqi Christians.

“Whether we like it or not, the fact is that the Christians are targeted because they are seen as belonging to a Western religious tradition,” said White, who noted that in actuality Christianity originated in the Middle East.

“It is seen as an immoral tradition. It is seen as a tradition that does not uphold values. It is seen as a tradition that does not uphold the respect for the kind of issues that the Islamic religion holds as very significant to them,” said the Anglican priest who has worked in Iraq for over a decade.

White said that the previous day he had received an email from some of the Christians in Baghdad asking him if it was true that the Church in America supported homosexuality.

“You see, what may happen here in fairly a benign way is seen there as particularly offensive,” said the Baghdad church head.

“These positions often held by Western Christians are not held by Iraqi Christians,” emphasized White. “They are very, very different. My people say the Creed and they believe it. My people live a very upright, courageous and respectful life,” said the pastor who had 36 of his congregants kidnapped with only one returned in the past month.

White’s message echoed similar explanations from Middle East experts on why Muslims have such a negative view of Christianity. One such expert is Brother Andrew, founder of the Open Doors ministry and a legendary missionary who has worked extensively in closed societies such as those under communist regimes or in the Middle East.

“What they see on television Hollywood-style is exposing our way of life which they deeply resent,” explained Brother Andrew in an interview with The Christian Post last month.

“I think the main reason for their aggressive action and attitude towards us is their protest against our lifestyle…. They see the immodest way of dress and the loose way of living and they say ‘We don’t want this because we want to keep Islam pure,’” he explained.

White also pointed out that Mideast Muslims do not only consider the attitude of the church, but of the entire Western society as representing the Christian faith. He said in the Middle East there is no sense of distinction between religion and state. Therefore what happens in America is associated as being part of Christianity by Muslims in Iraq and beyond. Continue »

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  • Fri Aug 10, 2007 11:32 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    There is unthinkable human rights violations committed by Americans against Iraqis every day. Our president has rejected the Geneva Convention protocols against torture. Chemical weapons have been used against civilians. Dangerous weapons have been introduced to people who are desperate - and thousands of poor people are fleeing out of Iraq, including the Christian poor - because the conditions are not safe. This has nothing to do with American gay culture. It has everything to do with a government that is out of touch with human rights issues that have made America a great nation! It has been blinded by oil interests to seeing the needs of the poor in Iraq, the children of Hagar, the children of Abraham!

  • Thu Aug 09, 2007 5:16 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    This article makes a good point. Our church recently had a missionary speak to us who travels to Sudan(Muslim country), and he stated just as this article did, that Muslims closely tie the actions and events happening in America with that of Christianity.

  • Tue Aug 07, 2007 10:40 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    It had media attention before. The kidnappings of Iraqi Christians is nothing new, and they were not kidnapped 36 at once. (That's probably why it was not that striking in the media.) It's part of daily life in Iraq. Unlike Afghan Taliban, the Iraqi kidnappers are less inclined for negotiation.

  • Sat Aug 04, 2007 1:56 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    In light of the attention on the Korean's kidnapped in Afghanistan, this article does not mention why the 36 congregants were kidnapped.

    Only one has been returned. What is the fate of the others?

    Why doesn't this have the same media attention that is being given to the Koreans?

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