Reflections on a Christian-Muslim dialogue

Peter Riddell  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Aug 2008
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This dialogue between Christians and Muslims could have happened in virtually any Western English-speaking country: Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, as well as the USA.

In actual fact, it took place at a suburban mosque in Melbourne. A colleague and I took a group of 15 of our students for the purposes of exposure to Islam and meeting Muslims in the flesh, rather than just reading about them. On arrival, we were greeted by the local Sheikh, a Pakistani by origin, his son, born and bred in Australia, and another Sheikh who was visiting from Egypt

The Sheik and his son

We were all led into the prayer room where we sat in a large circle, with all eyes trained on our Muslim hosts. After introducing ourselves by name, the Sheikh and his son addressed us for 15 minutes, presenting the basic information about Islamic belief and practice: the Five Pillars and the Core Articles of Faith. However, this seemingly gentle introduction included a sting in the tail, as we were informed that the Bible we hold dear is not in fact the original version: Jesus was given a single gospel, declared the Sheikh. He added that as there are now four gospels, plus one by Barnabas, it is obvious that Jesus’s original has been lost.

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