RICK WARREN, CHRISLAM AND THE YALE UNIVERSITY COVENANT
I NOW HAVE THE OFFICIAL
YALE UNIVERSITY COVENANT
SIGNED BY RICK WARREN.
This is proof positive
that he is a signed
partner in promoting the
Covenant between Islam
and our Jehovah God as
one God now named
“Chrislam”. I’m simply
printing for you the
entire covenant and also
coping his and other
name from this document.
Below is the exact list
directly from the web
page itself. Please note
the underlined names
mentioned here, and on
the radio program:
Robert Schuller, Rick
Warren, Brian D. McLaren
an David Yonggi Cho.
Check the list for other
names you might be
familiar with. There are
hubdreds of ministers
thet may inlude your
Pastor or leaders in
your denominations.
Check the large list of
names on this offocial
list from Yale.
http://www.yale.edu/faith/acw/acw.htm
While thousands of Arabs and former Islamic believers are coming to Christ and experiencing forgiveness and the “New Birth” by the Cross, American Apostate ministers are turning to Chrislam. Say what you please, but the Bible has made it plain, “seeing they crucify to themselves the Son Of God afresh and put Him to an open shame.” (Hebrews 6:6b) This crowd, unless they repent with great sorrow will spend eternity in a “devil’s hell”.
Rev. Colin Chapman,
Former Lecturer in
Islamic Studies, Near
East School of Theology,
Beirut, Lebanon, and
author of Whose Promised
Land?
Ellen T.
Charry, Assoc. Professor
of Systematic Theology,
Princeton Theological
Seminary
David Yonggi Cho,
Founder and Senior
Pastor of Yoido Full
Gospel Church, Seoul,
Korea
Hyung Kyun
Chung, Associate
Professor of Ecumenical
Studies, Union
Theological Seminary in
New York
Rev. Richard
Cizik, Vice President of
Governmental Affairs,
National Association of
Evangelicals
Elsie McKee, Archibald
Alexander Professor of
Reformation Studies and
the History of Worship,
Princeton Theological
Seminary
Scot
McKnight, Karl A. Olsson
Professor in Religious
Studies, North Park
University, Chicago, IL
Brian D. McLaren,
Author, Speaker,
Activist
C. Edward
McVaney, Retired
Chairman, CEO and
President, J.D. Edwards
and Company
Kathleen
E. McVey, J. Ross
Stevenson Professor of
Early and Eastern Church
History, Princeton
Theological Seminary
Warren C. Sawyer,
President and CEO, The
Caleb Foundation,
Swampscott, MA
Rev.
Dr. Christian Scharen,
Director, Faith as a Way
of Life Program, Yale
Center for Faith &
Culture
Rev. Dr. Robert Schuller,
Founder, Crystal
Cathedral and Hour of
Power
Elizabeth
Schüssler Fiorenza,
Krister Stendahl
Professor of Divinity,
Harvard Divinity School
Francis Schüssler
Fiorenza, Stillman
Professor of Roman
Catholic Studies,
Harvard Divinity School
Charlotte R. Ward,
Associate Professor of
Physics, Emerita, Auburn
University and Life
Deacon, Auburn First
Baptist Church
Charles H. Warnock III,
Senior Pastor, Chatham
Baptist Church, Chatham,
VA
Rick Warren, Founder and
Senior Pastor,
Saddleback Church,
and
The Purpose Driven Life,
Lake Forest, CA
Very
Rev. Debra
Warwick-Sabino, Rector,
Grace Episcopal Church,
Fairfield, CA
Mark R.
Wenger, Director of
Pastoral Studies,
Lancaster Eastern
Mennonite Seminary P.O.,
Lancaster, PA
YALE CENTER FOR FAITH AND CULTURE
IN THE NAME OF THE INFINITELY GOOD GOD WHOM WE SHOULD LOVE WITH ALL OUR BEING. This Title and document is word for word from the following Website: http://www.yale.edu/faith/acw/acw.htm
Preamble
As members of the worldwide Christian community, we were deeply encouraged and challenged by the recent historic open letter signed by 138 leading Muslim scholars, clerics, and intellectuals from around the world. A Common Word Between Us and You identifies some core common ground between Christianity and Islam which lies at the heart of our respective faiths as well as at the heart of the most ancient Abrahamic faith, Judaism. Jesus Christ’s call to love God and neighbor was rooted in the divine revelation to the people of Israel embodied in the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:5; Leviticus 19:18). We receive the open letter as a Muslim hand of conviviality and cooperation extended to Christians worldwide. In this response we extend our own Christian hand in return, so that together with all other human beings we may live in peace and justice as we seek to love God and our neighbors.
Muslims and Christians have not always shaken hands in friendship; their relations have sometimes been tense, even characterized by outright hostility. Since Jesus Christ says, “First take the log out your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor’s eye” (Matthew 7:5), we want to begin by acknowledging that in the past (e.g. in the Crusades) and in the present (e.g. in excesses of the “war on terror”) many Christians have been guilty of sinning against our Muslim neighbors. Before we “shake your hand” in responding to your letter, we ask forgiveness of the All-Merciful One and of the Muslim community around the world.
Religious Peace—World Peace
“Muslims and Christians together make up well over half of the world’s population. Without peace and justice between these two religious communities, there can be no meaningful peace in the world.” We share the sentiment of the Muslim signatories expressed in these opening lines of their open letter. Peaceful relations between Muslims and Christians stand as one of the central challenges of this century, and perhaps of the whole present epoch. Though tensions, conflicts, and even wars in which Christians and Muslims stand against each other are not primarily religious in character, they possess an undeniable religious dimension. If we can achieve religious peace between these two religious communities, peace in the world will clearly be easier to attain. It is therefore no exaggeration to say, as you have in A Common Word Between Us and You, that “the future of the world depends on peace between Muslims and Christians.”
Common Ground
What is so extraordinary about A Common Word Between Us and You is not that its signatories recognize the critical character of the present moment in relations between Muslims and Christians. It is rather a deep insight and courage with which they have identified the common ground between the Muslim and Christian religious communities. What is common between us lies not in something marginal nor in something merely important to each. It lies, rather, in something absolutely central to both: love of God and loveof neighbor. Surprisingly for many Christians, your letter considers the dual command of love to be the foundational principle not just of the Christian faith, but of Islam as well. That so much common ground exists – common ground in some of the fundamentals of faith – gives hope that undeniable differences and even the very real external pressures that bear down upon us can not overshadow the common ground upon which we stand together. That this common ground consists in love of God and ofneighbor gives hope that deep cooperation between us can be a hallmark of the relations between our two communities.
Love of God
We applaud that A Common Word Between Us and You stresses so insistently the unique devotion to one God, indeed the love of God, as the primary duty of every believer. God alone rightly commands our ultimate allegiance. When anyone or anything besides God commands our ultimate allegiance – a ruler, a nation, economic progress, or anything else – we end up serving idols and inevitably get mired in deep and deadly conflicts.
We find it equally heartening that the God whom we should love above all things is described as being Love. In the Muslim tradition, God, “the Lord of the worlds,” is “The Infinitely Good and All-Merciful.” And the New Testament states clearly that “God is love” (1 John 4:8). Since God’s goodness is infinite and not bound by anything, God “makes his sun rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous,” according to the words of Jesus Christ recorded in the Gospel (Matthew 5:45).
For Christians, humanity’s love of God and God’s love of humanity are intimately linked. As we read in the New Testament: “We love because he [God] first loved us” (1 John 4:19). Our love of God springs from and is nourished by God’s love for us. It cannot be otherwise, since the Creator who has power over all things is infinitely good.
Love of Neighbor
We find deep affinities with our own Christian faith when A Common Word Between Us and You insists that love is the pinnacle of our duties toward our neighbors. “None of you has faith until you love for your neighbor what you love for yourself,” the Prophet Muhammad said. In the New Testament we similarly read, “whoever does not love [the neighbor] does not know God” (1 John 4:8) and “whoever does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen” (1 John 4:20). God is love, and our highest calling as human beings is to imitate the One whom we worship.
We applaud when you state that “justice and freedom of religion are a crucial part” of the love of neighbor. When justice is lacking, neither love of God nor love of the neighbor can be present. When freedom to worship God according to one’s conscience is curtailed, God is dishonored, the neighbor oppressed, and neither God nor neighbor is loved.
Since Muslims seek to love their Christian neighbors, they are not against them, the document encouragingly states. Instead, Muslims are with them. As Christians we resonate deeply with this sentiment. Our faith teaches that we must be with our neighbors – indeed, that we must act in their favor – even when our neighbors turn out to be our enemies. “But I say unto you,” says Jesus Christ, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be children of your Father in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good” (Matthew 5:44-45). Our love, Jesus Christ says, must imitate the love of the infinitely good Creator; our love must be as unconditional as is God’s—extending to brothers, sisters, neighbors, and even enemies. At the end of his life, Jesus Christ himself prayed for his enemies: “Forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34).
The Prophet Muhammad did similarly when he was violently rejected and stoned by the people of Ta’if. He is known to have said, “The most virtuous behavior is to engage those who sever relations, to give to those who withhold from you, and to forgive those who wrong you.” (It is perhaps significant that after the Prophet Muhammad was driven out of Ta’if, it was the Christian slave ‘Addas who went out to Muhammad, brought him food, kissed him, and embraced him.)
The Task Before Us
“Let this common ground” – the dual common ground of love of God and of neighbor – “be the basis of all future interfaith dialogue between us,” your courageous letter urges. Indeed, in the generosity with which the letter is written you embody what you call for. We most heartily agree. Abandoning all “hatred and strife,” we must engage in interfaith dialogue as those who seek each other’s good, for the one God unceasingly seeks our good. Indeed, together with you we believe that we need to move beyond “a polite ecumenical dialogue between selected religious leaders” and work diligently together to reshape relations between our communities and our nations so that they genuinely reflect our common love for God and for one another.
Given the deep fissures
in the relations between
Christians and Muslims
today, the task before
us is daunting. And the
stakes are great. The
future of the world
depends on our ability
as Christians and
Muslims to live together
in peace. If we fail to
make every effort to
make peace and come
together in harmony you
correctly remind us that
“our eternal souls” are
at stake as well.
We are persuaded
that our next step
should be for our
leaders at every level
to meet together and
begin the earnest work
of determining how God
would have us fulfill
the requirement that we
love God and one
another. It is with
humility and hope that
we receive your generous
letter, and we commit
ourselves to labor
together in heart, soul,
mind and strength for
the objectives you so
appropriately propose.