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Television program profiles friendships between Muslims, Baptists Print E-mail
By Bob Allen   
Monday, January 04, 2010

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (ABP) -- One thing Muslims and Baptists have in common is that they are often identified by their extremists, according to a documentary airing on ABC television stations in January and February.

"Different Books, Common Word" offers an alternative message to both violence by Muslim terrorists around the world and demonizing of Islam by evangelicals in the United States.

The hour-long documentary, produced by a Baptist organization in partnership with the Islamic Society of North America and the Interfaith Broadcasting Commission, instead tells stories of individual Baptists and Muslims motivated to reach out to each other by the mandate of love for neighbor taught by both faiths.

The Baptist Center for Ethics, a free-standing partner organization of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, released the video under the aegis of its website, EthicsDaily.com.

"We hope the documentary provides positive narratives for relationships between Baptists and Muslims, narratives that begin to challenge the negative narratives that dominate American culture," said Robert Parham, executive director of the Baptist Center for Ethics. He co-produced the movie with EthicsDaily.com's managing editor and media producer, Cliff Vaughn.

Shooting for the video began last January when Parham was invited to Boston for a meeting of about 80 Baptist and Muslim leaders from across the country to discuss repairing a relationship marred by comments from high-profile Baptist leaders portraying Islam as a religion of hate.

Filming lasted through June, featuring interviews with Baptists and Muslims interacting in unlikely places like Columbia, Tenn., where an Islamic center was firebombed in 2008, and the Texas-Louisiana state line, where a Muslim businesswoman and African-American Baptist pastor worked together for hurricane relief.

"Viewers will be surprised to see new stories of respect and partnership that are emerging in the United States between goodwill Muslims and Baptists," said Parham, a former ethicist with the Southern Baptist Convention Christian Life Commission who founded the Nashville, Tenn.,-based Baptist Center for Ethics in 1991. "We hope these stories will begin to replace the negative ones about both Muslims and Baptists."

After 9/11, several high-profile Baptist leaders received media attention for comments harshly critical of Islam. Franklin Graham called it a "wicked" religion, Jerry Falwell said Muhammad was a terrorist and one former Southern Baptist Convention president labeled the prophet a "demon-possessed pedophile."

Roy Medley of American Baptist Churches USA and Sayyid Syeed of the Islamic Society of North America share a light moment at a meeting in Boston in January 2009. (EthicsDaily.com)

In 2007 American Baptist Churches USA General Secretary Roy Medley visited Lebanon and the Republic of Georgia, and Muslim and Baptist leaders in both places urged him to seek to improve Baptist-Muslim relations in the United States.

"We need to repair the damage done by Baptists who made hurtful statements about Muslims in the past," Medley was quoted saying in August 2007. "If you believe in religious liberty, you must respect other religions. The best way to witness to your own faith is through humility and service."

After reading those remarks, Sayyid Syeed of the Islamic Society of North America contacted Medley to discuss ways of creating dialogue between Muslims and Baptists. Representatives from the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and Alliance of Baptists joined American Baptists in a first round of discussions with Muslim leaders in January 2008, which led to the formal dialogue a year later.

EthicsDaily.com went to the gathering intending to produce its own DVD. But after filming got underway, the Interfaith Broadcasting Commission, a coalition of faith groups that produces religious content for three major television networks, suggested that the Islamic Society of North America sponsor its release through "Vision and Values," a series available to stations owned by and affiliated with ABC.

"Different Books, Common Word" is the sixth video produced by the BCE but the first aired on national television. Previous projects addressed topics including Baptist-Jewish relations, faith and politics and Baptists and race. The broadcast window began Jan. 3 and lasts through February. Local listings are here.

The program is also for sale for $25 on DVD. The DVD version includes special features and deleted scenes and comes with a study guide for use by groups.

-30-

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it  is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.





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Comments (4)Add Comment
One Word
written by Mark Osgatharp, January 05, 2010
Differnt books, common word? Excuse me, but authentic Christian Bible believing Baptists believe that Jesus is the Word and that He wrote the book.

Baptists and Muslims have nothing in common, other than our common birth in Adam and our common lot to live on this sin cursed earth.

As much as is possible we should strive to live in peace with our Muslim neighbors. But that peace is not to be had at the expense of our faithful testimony to the exclusive authority of Jesus Christ. As Peter told the unbelieving Jews,

"There is none other name given under heaven whereby you must be saved."

And as Jesus said,

"I am the way, the truth and he life; no man comes unto the Father but by me."

Mark Osgatharp
Wynne, Arkansas
...
written by brotherroy, January 05, 2010
I assumed that someone would make such as post as the one above, but that is an easy assumpton to make when it comes to what most Baptists would say on this topic. One suggestion, get to know some Muslims. I have found that as people of faith, Muslims and Baptists do have common ground, beyond our mutual need for redemption. For authentic dialogue to occur, we must move beyond prooftexting (to be applied to both partners in dialogue) and be willing to honestly listen to what others say.

I do appreciate the sentiment that we should strive to live in peace with our Muslim neighbors.
extremists
written by Bobby McCord, January 06, 2010
The programs I have seen such as Law and Order, N.C.I.S. and even some sitcoms have all made the muslims out to be heroes who are downtrodden and discriminated against and even persecuted and killed for their faith. Hollywood hasn't heard about Ft. Hood, or Detroit, or Yemen, or South Africa, or Afganistan, or all of the other places around the world where muslims are killing inocent people in the name of their false god allah. When was the last time anyone heard a story about a Christian pulling out a gun or a bomb and killing people in a tyrade shouting Jesus? The brainwashing of america by liberal hollywood continues to get worse!!!
Amen, Bobby
written by Mark Osgatharp, January 06, 2010
Bobby,

You are right, the media has painted Muslims as the victims, rather than the perpetrators. Let me clarify that when I say we should strive to live in peace with our Muslim neighbors, but not at the expense of our testimony for Christ, that neither should we seek peace with them at the expense of the safety of our nation, our neighbors, or our families.

Prior to the founding of the United States, the Roman Catholic and Protestant establishment of Europe held to the same intolerant and uncivil policies toward other religions that Muslims do today. Today we live in peace in America with our Roman Catholic and Protestant neighbors, not because of compromise, but because our forefathers - both spiritual and political - fought - both in war and in word - to constrain the Roman Catholic and Protestant religions to relinquish their arrogant determination to force other men to bow at their altars.

The only way the Muslim religion can be tamed is for it to be likewise beaten into submission to the principles of civility and acknowledgment of the right of other men dissent from and display public contempt for any religion to which they do not subscribe, including Islam. If and when that happens, Islam will cease to be Islam as historically known, just as Catholicism and Protestantism gave up their historical character when they submitted to the American way of liberty for all.

Mark Osgatharp
Wynne, Arkansas

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