Islamic beliefs are just as broad and varied as Christian beliefs or any other beliefs. Some Muslims are very relaxed, broadminded, socially and politically progressive and all-round good eggs. Some are narrow minded bigots with some seriously horrible views.
Christian beliefs are not so varied; it's the PRACTISE that is varied.
Christian beliefs come from the Holy Bible, but Christian practices are a mish-mash of scripture, tradition, culture, etc.
One cannot be both gay, and devoutly Christian, because the tenants of Christianity do not allow a person to be gay. Period. Full stop. However, many people accept those who are gay, and continue to consider themselves Christians because they also accept or believe other tenants of Christianity.
We have people who were born into Christianity, attend church every week, and say "amen" at the end of every sentence but have never read the Bible and have never given any serious consideration to the roots of the religion.
We have people who read every word of the Bible two or three times every year, follow many of the old laws, take some passages to extremes, and will not accept those who do not. These are often lauded by their fellows as being "Great Christians" and "on fire for Jesus" and "a sterling example of Christian values".
It is what it is, and it's not a particularly bad thing,
until someone uses it as a platform for violence.
I would be quite shocked if Islamic people are any different. I suspect you have those who read the texts, pray every day, follow every tenant of the religious laws to the letter, and take some things to extremes. I'm also coming to the conclusion the more extreme views are more mainstream, or at least more mainstream in some areas.
I don't think I have ever met any of the latter, but I have certainly met plenty of the former.
To the highlighted: would you know if you did? We have plenty of Christians in the USA who seem very relaxed, broadminded, socially and politically progressive and all-round good eggs around outsiders, but are much more narrow minded and bigoted when they're at home with their families or surrounded by those of the same mindset.
Well it's hard to find 'unbiased' opinions depending on what you mean by unbiased and I'm not sure what data could be shown to convince you.
Yes; it is, and I'm not sure, either. I'm willing to hear whatever argument you want to make, and read whatever data you want to point to.
How many gay Muslims for example would be evidence that Islam is not one monolithic block of belief and Muslims are not all one big mass of adherents to a narrow ideology?
A million, trillion, septaoctofilliongrillion gay Christians would not be evidence that the Bible is not against homosexuality. I suspect the same with Muslim/Islam beliefs.
Again, the TENANTS of the belief does not vary; despite how widely the PRACTISE might.
Part of my view is informed by spending time with Muslims, mixing with them in the workplace and socially, and living beside them in my community. From personal experience I would say the Muslims I have met are much more likely to be 'good easy going people' than the white folks but I don't pretend that's in any way representative or scientific.
Fine. I live waaaaay out in the boondocks, so I personally don't know a single person who claims to be either Muslim or Islamic. Nor do I have enough interest in the subject to travel an hour plus to someplace I might find one. Everything I *think* about the whole religion comes from reading on the internet or watching the news.
Another way I look at it is to consider what would the world actually look like if all or a majority or even a decent sized minority of Muslims actually believed they were at war with non-Muslims and that killing us was the right thing to do. It would be a hell of a lot different to what it looks like now that's for sure.
In what way would it look different? A huge number of Christians believe the whole USA is in the hands of Satan. They believe the separation of church and state is an abomination, the acceptance of gay marriage is a one-way trip to Hell.
But they don't act on these beliefs because of various pressures from the outside -they want to keep their jobs, keep their homes, send their kids to school (in some cases just to avoid "persecution"), and lobby the supreme court to make their beliefs into laws.
You could say the same about any murder. It's only a few people who are murderers but it continues to happen. Therefore the few murderers must be being replenished by the many. What does that tell us about whether the many think murder is OK?
True; but the subject under scrutiny at the moment is murders being committed to bring our attention to a religious tradition.
I'm beginning to suspect these attacks are being seen by the larger Islamic community as the works of "Great Believers". Just like the FLDS communities of polygamists; even those who do not participate are standing aside and allowing it to happen.
I think we are all sick of these attacks. I think you have misidentified the root of the problem. I don't even think there might be ONE root of the problem I think it's become a complex mish-mash of influencers and drivers which definitely includes religious teachings but also includes various social and political factors.
Sure; I can agree with that. Very little human behavior has just one cause. We can say "humans eat because we starve if we don't" but that doesn't speak a word about the huge range of diets, traditions, health issues and lifestyles that have grown up around this basic drive. So to say "there's one root cause of eating" is narrowly true, but obviously it's only the tippy-top pointy part of any discussion of food.
Religion and belief systems are all the same in that regard: we have a basic need to believe there is something beyond our selves, and from there on it's a mish-mash of influencers, drivers, teachings and traditions that can vary so widely it can be nearly impossible to identify them all.
Thankfully, we're only looking for ONE right now.
Turn it on it's head as well and consider that we in the West are continuing to kill many more Muslims through our attacks on them and other actions (if that's how you want to define the 'sides') than they are killing of us through their attacks. Regardless of the rights and wrongs of those military actions (put that debate to one side) its worth bearing that in mind and reflecting on it.
(nods) This is true. However, would that remain true if we just put down the weapons and tried to walk away from the situation? Or would we find ourselves on the receiving end of even more attacks?
It's also worth remembering that many more people were being killed by terrorists in Europe during the 80s when the terrorists were almost all 'homegrown' Europeans and nobody had ever heard the word Jihadi. I don't think the Quran has changed much in the last 30 years so I think there must be more to it than that.
I agree that something happened to cause the scales to tip and get this ball rolling. But as whatever it was is done, how do we UNDO it now? Or how do we mitigate the effects to try to right the situation?
I think it has to start with identifying the absolute root cause. So for me, the first question is still:
Do the Islamic peoples see these terrorist acts as a problem?
Do they privately and quietly express disapproval for these fringe extremists 'round the dinner tables and in their prayer group discussions? Or do they privately and quietly express outright or tacit approval for the actions of these "Great Believers"?
If the latter, then we have a huge problem, and our easy-going live-and-let-live attitudes are going to have to change.