Engage

Terry Jones…Again?

I can’t believe I am writing about Terry Jones again. The pastor who threatened to burn Qur’ans last year made good on his word last month. Apparently the reasons to abstain from this particular public display (public safety, protection for our troops) were outweighed by the importance of the message of warning the world against Muslim extremism.

On the other side of the world, at least a dozen people have been murdered as a result of riots in Afghanistan in reaction to Jones’ Qur’an burning.

I can’t believe I am writing about Terry Jones again. The pastor who threatened to burn Qur’ans last year made good on his word last month. Apparently the reasons to abstain from this particular public display (public safety, protection for our troops) were outweighed by the importance of the message of warning the world against Muslim extremism.

On the other side of the world, at least a dozen people have been murdered as a result of riots in Afghanistan in reaction to Jones’ Qur’an burning.

I am dumbfounded that one act by one man in Florida can spark incendiary ripples that influence people he’s never seen or met in Afghanistan. I am grieved and disappointed by how he chose to use that influence. We live in a country where the right to burn Qur’ans is protected, even if not condoned. At the end of the day, Terry Jones can burn whatever books he wants.

But that doesn’t mean he should.

In reading and listening to interviews with this pastor, I have been disturbed by his automaton-like response to the deaths of UN workers – “The responsibility should be laid upon the people who committed the acts….The recent events are an example of the violent nature of Islam. Just because a book was burned, they used this as an excuse to retaliate.”

This “see! They are violent!” response lacks any compassion for the people who were killed, deflects any responsibility for inciting the riots, and ultimately preaches a “gospel” of passive-aggressive hate-mongering. This is a far cry from what Paul spoke of in 1 Corinthians 9:19-23. Paul is free, and he uses his freedom not to burn books, but to become a slave to all so that he might be a participant of the Gospel.

Terry Jones didn’t pull a trigger. He didn’t lay hands on people and murder them. It would be condescending to suggest that the murderers who did this are so incapable of independent thought that they are absolved of responsibility. Hear me: they are culpable. They are despicable.

But Terry Jones has influence, God help him. And what did Terry Jones do with his influence? Did he share the Gospel of Jesus Christ, His grace and salvation? Has the word “Jesus” even come up at all in any of his interviews? Let’s say people watch Terry Jones burn Qur’ans and somehow are led to accept the message that Islam is violent. Then what? What are they turning to?

In Acts 19:23-46, Paul is involved in inciting a riot, and this is the kind of influence I pray that believers strive for. Businessmen and shrine makers are disturbed by Paul’s message because people are being pulled toward Gospel and away from the shrine of Artemis. Paul didn’t hold a public shrine-burning. Paul preached the Gospel.

Terry Jones’ message is more about sensation than salvation, more condemnation than compassion. Our quest as Christians is to aid in saving lives through sharing the healing and transformative message of the Gospel.

Sharifa Stevens is a Manhattan-born, Bronx-raised child of the King, born to Jamaican immigrants, and currently living in Dallas. Sharifa's been singing since she was born. Her passion is to serve God's kingdom by leading His people in worship through music, speaking and writing, and relationships with people. Her heart is also unity, inspired by John. Sharifa hates exercise but likes Chipotle, bagels with a schmeer and lox, salmon sushi, chicken tikka, curried goat (yeah, it's good) with rice and peas, and chocolate lava cakes. She's been happily married to Jonathan since 2006...and he buys her Chipotle.

5 Comments

  • jackie j.

    I recently posted this

    I recently posted this comment in response to reading about the ill behavior and tactics  of Terry Jones:

    If you live your life according to the principles of your faith/beliefs, you will not have to preach against another faith/beliefs to prove any point, as your life will be a priceless testimony to the righteousness and truth of your faith/beliefs.

    He fails miserably in doing the above.

     

    Great blog, as usual.

    • Sharifa Stevens

      Thank you…

      …and may our lives be a priceless testimony to the Lord's grace and truth.

  • cAPSLOCK

    Silly Terry

    This is not Jesus.  It is not the way God desires for us to act.  It is not the impudent who he said will inherit the Earth.

  • Stephen J. Drain

    Good points

    Good points Sharifa,

     

    I don't know whether this man is a believer or not. We cannot judge that, but God knows. And there is a part of me that sides with him, the part that is angry at all the false religions, philosophies, and "isms" that are leading hundreds of millions, billions astray. And there is something to righteous anger… But there are sinful parts in each of us which can take a righteous anger, twist it, and run with it.

    There probably would have been a time in my life I would have been like, "You go, burn that Koran!" But that was because I was immature. (And in many ways I still am… still in the process of being sanctified.) There is also something that we all struggle with as humans: Many of us tend to see some truth about God somewhere and latch onto it. We found something true and real and we want to love it and hug it and squeeze it and tell everyone about it- but it may not be the whole picture. We find one facet of God and we want to run with that and tell everyone. It's like embracing God's love and forgetting completely about hell. It's like running around telling everyone I'm a Calvinist or a Dispensationalist or a Premillenialist or a Charasmatic. We find something, we latch on to it, and we are sometimes so contented with it that we want to stay there and not move on or grow any more.

    So perhaps this pastor found one facet, one grain of truth: The Koran is false… Even to quote Franklin Graham, "Islam is evil…" But this cannot be the place anyone lives or pitches their tent. There's God's redeeming love. There's living as a faithful witness. There's meekness. There's humility. Perhaps if you or me had the platform he had we would not have used it to burn the book, but to debate it, or teach against it, hopefully in love.

    Steve