Episcopal Priest, Practicing Muslim -- Same Thing, No?

Episcopal Priest, Practicing Muslim -- Same Thing, No?...Continued from page 1

Albert Mohler

President, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

These are merely the most obvious foundational contradictions between Christianity and Islam.  Furthermore, these most obvious contradictions are affirmed by all major Christian denominations and both historic branches of Islam. 

That doesn't deter Rev. Redding one bit.  "At the most basic level, I understand the two religions to be compatible. That's all I need," she says.  The important point here is that "the most basic level" to which she points is a figment of her own fertile and heretical imagination.

But, then again, Rev. Redding is clear about her basic doubts about basic Christian doctrines. She denies original sin and admits she has long doubted the deity of Christ.

From the paper's report:

She believes the Trinity is an idea about God and cannot be taken literally.

She does not believe Jesus and God are the same, but rather that God is more than Jesus.

She believes Jesus is the son of God insofar as all humans are the children of God, and that Jesus is divine, just as all humans are divine -- because God dwells in all humans.

What makes Jesus unique, she believes, is that out of all humans, he most embodied being filled with God and identifying completely with God's will.

She does believe that Jesus died on the cross and was resurrected, and acknowledges those beliefs conflict with the teachings of the Quran. "That's something I'll find a challenge the rest of my life," she said.

She considers Jesus her savior. At times of despair, because she knows Jesus suffered and overcame suffering, "he has connected me with God," she said.

So Rev. Redding denies the historic doctrines of the church and then declares herself a Muslim.  In March 2006 she said her shahada or profession of faith, declaring that there is only one God and that Mohammed is his messenger. 

At a Web site published by The Seattle Times, Redding later reponded to questions from trhe paper's readers.  In one answer she offered this:

I believe that Jesus is divine in the same way in which all humans are related to God as children of God. Jesus is different in degree, not kind; that means that he shows me most fully what it means to be in total submission to and identification with God. The significance of his crucifixion is that it is the ultimate surrender, and the resurrection--both his and as it is revealed in the lives of his disciples--shows us that God makes life out of death. That is the good news to me and it is salvation. I don't think God said, "Let me send this special person so that I can kill him for the benefit of the rest of humanity." That's not the kind of sacrifice I think that God desires

Yet again, Rev. Redding denies the central teachings of Christianity and explicity denies what the Bible undeniably teaches. 

This is yet another reminder of the basic principle that religious liberals can negotiate themselves to any position they desire. Once you commit yourself to a methodology of denying Scripture and orthodox Christian doctrine, you can delcare yourself to be a Christian and a Muslim, a Christian and a Druid, or a Christian and an Atheist for that matter. 

The real shame in all this is that Rev. Redding is getting away with this while continuing to be an Episcopal priest in good standing. Adding insult to injury, her bishop, the Rt. Reverend Vincent Warner of Seattle, says that Rev. Redding's declaration that she is both a Christian and a Muslim to be exciting in terms of interfaith understanding. Is there any hope for a church whose bishop considers heresy to be exciting? 

Once again, we are driven to pray for Christ's church to be rescued from such heresies and preserved in the truth in the midst of such confusion.  We must also pray for the faithful Christians in the Episcopal Church and other denominations who are, in effect, paying the bills that sustain these heresies. 

In the meantime, they had better brace themselves for whatever atrocity will come next.

© All rights reserved, www.almohler.com. Used with permission.
Dr. R. Albert Mohler, Jr., serves as president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary — the flagship school of the Southern Baptist Convention and one of the largest seminaries in the world. He is a theologian and ordained minister, as well as an author, speaker and host of his own radio program The Albert Mohler Program

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Here to access Crosswalk Forums' discussion about the Rev. Redding and the ECUSA.

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