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The Natural Way — War within



Are you a committed, convinced, convicted Christian? Do you believe the Bible to be true and absolute? Do you try your level best to follow what God says in it?

If you said yes, then you will understand what I am about to say: If you sincerely feel in the very deepest place of your heart that your religious beliefs are true and absolute, you can’t live in peace if your lifestyle doesn’t line up with what your heart tells you. Instead, you will have constant turmoil dominating your soul. War within.

It makes no difference if your religious beliefs are correct or not. What you unequivocally believe to be true is what drives you. As a committed and convinced Christian and a licensed clinical professional counselor, I take the liberty to say something else: If Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan fully embraced the Islam religion, he was living in constant confusion.

True, he was in a ministry of healing some unimaginably wounded and maimed soldiers throughout his career, which can cause tremendous trauma to the caretaker alone. But if, as I said, he truly embraced his Islamic beliefs, his spiritual being was taking an even greater beating.

In a recent article by Michael Moss in the New York Times, an acquaintance of Hasan’s said, “(Hasan) said he should quit the Army. In the Koran, you’re not supposed to have alliances with Jews or Christians or others, and if you are killed in the military fighting against Muslims, you will go to hell.”

Webster defines alliance as the duty of being loyal to one’s country, etc; devotion, as to a cause.

At the start of the attack, Hasan reportedly jumped on a desk and shouted, “Allahu akbar,” which is Arabic for “God is great.”

I believe Maj. Hasan was so very twisted by what he was doing and what he believed he should be doing that it became the ruination of him. And the 13 dead and 30 wounded.

I believe that to expect devout Muslims to fight a war with people of the same religion is insanity. I believe to do so will cause more of what we saw at Fort Hood last week.

For comments or questions, contact Janice at Christian Counseling Services, 100 S. Iowa Ave., Fruitland, ID 83619, (208) 452-4378. The opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of the Argus Observer.




Comment Blog - Note: All Comments Subject To Approval

hooey wrote on Nov 14, 2009 12:13 PM:

" It didn't matter what this man's ethnicity, race, or religion was. He was an unstable personality in the absolute wrong place at the absolute wrong time. He exploded emotionally and physically and we are all the worse for it.

To say that this happened because he was Muslim in the Army of the United States is not only ignorant but dangerously close to racial profiling. We have thousands of brave men and women in our armed forces that follow the Muslim faith. They do not seem to all be planning on rampaging against their military brethren.

It seems to be a fact that people just go nuts when it comes to war. As a psychologist you should be very familiar with the cases.

If anything were to send a person over the edge it would be the very act of war itself. There is no more evil "thing" that I can think of than war. The unfortunate men and women who fight on either side are not the evil doers, but the leaders who shout from the mountain tops that their god tells them to go kill others. This is where I see conflict between the Old Testament and New Testament. God in the Hebrew scriptures is very militaristic, telling Israel to go here and there and kill the people living in such and such place. The coming of Jesus but an end to this kind of teaching, though. Jesus taught peace and understanding. He taught us to offer the other cheek when one is slapped. He taught us to "cut" out our eye, hand or foot if it caused us to stumble. I take this to mean, "Change what you can to avoid sin."

Sorry to get long winded, but I am very bothered by folks that blame a group composed of hundreds of millions of people for the evil actions of a very few.

"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference. Thy will, not mine be done." "


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