Is This a Move Toward One World Religion?
A devout Muslim, His Royal Highness Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan is begging for intervention to protect Christians, according to an op-ed he penned in The Telegraph.
“Christianity has been part of the essential fabric of the Middle East for 2,000 years. Far from being a Western import as some, incredibly, now seem to suggest, it was born here and exported as a gift to the rest of the world. Christian communities have been intrinsic to the development of Arab culture and civilization,” bin Talal wrote with Woolf Institute’s Ed Kessler.
The two, who are not believers in Jesus, recognize the Islamic State’s genocide of Christians. Kessler and bin Talal find evidence in the most recent issue of Dabiq, ISIS’ publication, which demands radicals “Break the Cross.”
“Between the release of this issue of Dabiq and the next slaughter to be executed against them by the hidden soldiers of the Caliphate—who are ordered to attack without delay—the Crusaders can read into why Muslims hate and fight them, why pagan Christians should break their crosses, why liberalist secularists should return to the fitrah (natural human disposition), and why skeptical atheists should recognize their Creator and submit to (Allah,)” the new issue reads.
Words like this horrify bin Talal and Kessler.
“Daesh peddle an apocalyptic vision that harks back to a mythic Golden Age which is solely the creation of the warped minds of today’s jihadis. They are in the same mold as those whose misguided zeal turned Christian Europe in the Middle Ages into a byword for fanaticism and oppression. Daesh want to take us to a new Dark Age, an age made even darker by the dangers that the gifts of science and technology pose in their hands,” they write.
They call for Christians, Muslims and Jews to work together to stop the Islamic State, which could be part of the prophesied one world religion.