Book of the Month: June 2016

Sharing Options

My selection for this month’s book of the month is David Garrison’s A Wind in the House of Islam. Meticulously researched, this book provides necessary background information for Christians who want to understand anything Muslim-related in the modern world. Whether we are talking about world mission, terrorism, or immigration, or America’s drone warfare in Muslim territories, there is information here that you simply must have if you want to be informed.Wind Islam

The subtitle of the book is “How God is drawing Muslims around the world to faith in Jesus Christ,” and the stories involved are fascinating, thrilling, odd, and full of courage.

Dar al-Harb (House of War) is the Islamic phrase that describes the non-Islamic world, which helps to set the stage. Garrison provides much needed information on the history of Islam, the history of Christian mission attempts to the Muslim world, and a copious number of testimonies from every part of the Muslim world. Something remarkable is happening.

Garrison divides the “house of Islam” (Dar al-Islam), a region stretching from West Africa to Indonesia, into nine “rooms,” and he demonstrates how the wind of the Spirit of God is blowing through each one of them. He only counts a movement to Christ if it involves “at least 100 new church starts or 1,000 baptisms that occur over a two-decade period” (p. 5).

The “rooms” are not primarily political, although politics do affect it. They are what Garrison calls “geo-cultural.” Working from west to east, the rooms are: West Africa, North Africa, East Africa, Arab World, Persian  World, Turkestan, Western South Asia, Eastern South Asia, and Indo-Malaysia. Movements to Christ are occurring in all of them.

The House of Islam encompasses 49 countries and 1.6 billion adherents. Compared to this size, and this number, the movements to Christ that he reckons up seem (on the one hand) almost entirely insignificant. The number of Christian converts ranges somewhere between 2 and 7 million people — a drop in the bucket. But, as Garrison shows, reckoned in another way, this is actually a thunderbolt development in the long and conflicted history of Christianity and Islam. In short, what is happening now is something that has never really happened before.

Using Garrison’s criteria, from the 7th to the 18th century, there were no movements from Islam to Christ. In the 19th century, there were 2. In the 20th century, there were 11. And in the first 12 years of the 21st century, there have been 69.

What is causing this? Involving that much territory, and the number of people concerned, the answer to that question has to be astonishingly broad. God’s work in the modern world is as messy as it has ever been. He has used Constantinian-like decrees (as in Indonesia), but He is also using satellite television, the JESUS Film, dreams, personal relationships, translations of the Bible into local languages, the Internet, and (perhaps surprisingly) translations of the Qur’an into local languages.

If you can read these (numerous) testimonies without being deeply moved, then you need to seek out pastoral counseling.

One last comment. These movements to Christ do not need to be huge in order to establish a counter-narrative that poses a significant challenge for the devout Islamic mind. For many reasons, the first thousand years of Islam provided the established Islamic narrative with nothing but reinforcement. The theology of Islam and the victorious successes of Islam fit together, hand in glove.

But then it fell apart. The first sign of trouble was found in some key military battles — Malta, Lepanto, Vienna. The tide had begun to turn, and then after the First World War, the European powers just divided up the Middle East like it was a pie. The problem is that Islam has no theology of exile, and so the whole thing set up a profound theological discordance. It is not supposed to be this way. Another great book to help understand this would be Bernard Lewis’s What Went Wrong?

If you couple that understanding (that Islam has no theology of weakness) with a realization of what this book describes, you realize that another huge “discordance” is taking shape. Millions of Muslims becoming Christian is not primarily a demographic problem. They have lots of people. It is a theological problem. And in order to be a pressing theological problem, it only has to be big enough to notice. Once noticed, if there is no answer forthcoming (and given the nature of the Qur’an, there can be no answer), the process can only accelerate.

In short, while the extreme behavior of Islamo-fundamentalists is certainly dedicated and all-in, it is not confident. The kamikaze pilots of Japan were committed, but that kind of tactic is actually a sign of desperation. As this book shows, the answer for such desperation cannot be Western secularism, but rather Christ. And when Christ is proclaimed to the Dar al-Islam, there are many there who are ready to listen.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
10 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
RandMan
RandMan
7 years ago

“He is also using satellite television, the JESUS Film, dreams, personal relationships, translations of the Bible into local languages, the Internet, and (perhaps surprisingly) translations of the Qur’an into local languages.” I will say this for god, unlike some of my older relatives, at least he is showing SOME interest in getting on board the tech-revolution. (All joking aside, the future is in streaming content. Maybe one of you guys who is in direct intercessory contact could hip him to this?) Aslo glad to see he is not abandoning the classic relationship model btw with the revelations in dreams etc.,… Read more »

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  RandMan

??????
So if you read this book, before I do, (quite likely ) let us know your opinion as well!????

Michael Hoffman
Michael Hoffman
7 years ago

Where is the book of the month related to the errors of Talmudic Judaism? May I recommend, Prof. Alexander McCaul D.D., “The Talmud Tested, “and this writer’s “Judaism’s Strange Gods.” Both books are largely ignored by those who promote polemical texts confronting Islam. And to anticipate the standard canard: neither is anti-Semitic. They represent acts of love and attempts at liberation.

B. Josiah Alldredge
B. Josiah Alldredge
7 years ago

I don’t think Wilson would have an issue looking at the errors of Judaism, but compared to Islam, Judaism is small potatoes in the sheer numbers of the thing. It’s errors are older and have largely been confronted already by Christianity victoriously. That’s why there are comparatively so few that would name themselves Jewish believers as opposed to Islamic.

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago

That’s true, and it’s also true that someone responding to a book review with “Why didn’t you review the book I wanted you to review” usually is more interested in grinding an axe than reading book reviews.

Michael Hoffman
Michael Hoffman
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

In lieu of the huge disparity in recent years between well-publicized and promoted Christian polemics with regard to Islam and almost no notice being taken of the few Christian books that offer accurate information regarding Talmudic Judaism, it is perfectly legitimate and indeed necessary to raise this issue without being accused of having an “axe to grind.”

Capndweeb
Capndweeb
7 years ago

Can’t wait to read this one. God tells us that we should bless and not curse our enemies, so I have been praying for some time that the enemies of the cross would be blessed with salvation. Every act of terror they commit reminds me to keep praying this. Recently, I learned that more Muslims are coming to Christ right now than in the entire history of the Muslim world. HALLELUJAH!

Kevin Bratcher
7 years ago

Reading about this, I rejoice for the work the Lord is doing.

But I also had a cynical thought:
It occurs to me that with thousands of Muslims converting to Christianity, liberals and progressive activists may finally begin denouncing them for being hateful…

Mark Hanson
Mark Hanson
7 years ago

I heartily second the recommendation of Bernard Lewis’ book. It really opened my eyes about how Islam got to where it is.