Source: Religion News Service
(RNS) Amid heightened tensions over ISIS-fueled terror attacks and anti-Muslim rhetoric, a prominent U.S. cardinal says Islam “wants to govern the world” and Americans must decide if they are going to reassert “the Christian origin of our own nation” in order to avoid that fate.
Cardinal Raymond Burke, a Rome-based prelate known as an outspoken conservative and critic of Pope Francis’ reformist approach, said in an interview on Wednesday (July 20) that Islam is “fundamentally a form of government.”
While Catholic teaching recognizes that all Abrahamic faiths worship the same God, Burke criticized Catholic leaders who, in an effort to be tolerant, have a tendency “to simply think that Islam is a religion like the Catholic faith or the Jewish faith.”
“That simply is not objectively the case,” he said.
Burke, who was once archbishop of St. Louis, stressed that he did not want to be “disrespectful” of Islam or “generate hostility.”
But he said he worries that many people do not understand that, in his view, “when they (Muslims) become the majority in any country they have the duty to submit the whole population to Shariah,” as the Islamic code of law is known.
Categories: Christianity, Immigration, Islam, The Muslim Times
@Cardinal Raymond Burke: You show an awareness of the Abrahamic ‘faiths(?)’. A closer look would tell you that the Bible, (Christian, Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Mormon), and the Koran, (Mohammadan, Muslim, Islamist). You may have overlooked the origins of the Bible and Koran: The Bible – RCC, then broken up through time, under pressure of Judaism. The Koran – broken up through time under pressure of Judaism. (foretold in the Bible “a house devised against itself cannot stand”). My point is: Both Bible and Koran are means of psychologically controlling those who blindly comply with them, bearing in mind that compliance is lifelong from birth in ignorance of the contents (translated from the jews scriptures, is therefore Judaism forced upon us through the Bible and Koran, whilst living in ignorance of each other (contents of the Bible/Koran).