A minority group of radical Islamic terrorists is causing the Muslim majority to take a closer look at their beliefs and actions. ISIS and other such groups are causing Muslims to become radicalized in their ideologies and actions, or causing them to vehemently defend a more secular embracing peaceful Islam (which I do not believe is true Islam), or to seek out other belief systems that will bring them true peace. In this last camp are those who are finding Jesus Christ to be the Son of God and their Savior from sin, a belief for which they are ready to give up their lives. President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi of Egypt has spoken out a number of times about the detrimental effects of radical Islamic terrorists on the rest of the Muslim world (see article).
This brings to mind Omar Mateen, the man responsible for the deaths of 49 men and women in Orlando on the weekend. Was Mateen a radical Islamic terrorist? I would have to answer yes and no. From what I have read so far I see Mateen as a confused angry man who decided to commit suicide with the guarantee of entrance into paradise if he took unbelievers to death with him.
I see Omar Mateen as a young man who was oppressed by his strict and radical religious upbringing which produced in him a great deal of anger and rebellion. Being raised in the permissive society of America, Mateen experimented with the pleasures of this world and perhaps even homosexual tendencies which added guilt to his conflicted mind and increased his anger and self-hatred. Coming from a religious system which could provide no power to live according to its demands (and this goes for all religious systems with strict demands and little mercy and forgiveness) Mateen's self-hatred from his own hypocrisy and moral failures, and anger reached the point of self-destruction. Unfortunately Mateen saw in his religious upbringing a solution to his anger and self-hatred, jihad which provided an immediate and guaranteed entrance into paradise. So Mateen pledged his affiliation to ISIS and bought his ticket to paradise. So yes Mateen found a way out of his anger and self-hatred by declaring himself to be a radical Islamic terrorist but his actions were more a result of his strict religious upbringing and his conflict of trying to live in two cultures both of which provided no peace and lasting joy, and a religious system that was powerless to provide any remedy for his sin. Death by jihad was the only way out.
We have seen the same kind of mass shootings by men who have been raised in strict, oppressive religious Christian homes where anger and rebellion have been the result and the outcome taken out on the lives of others and their own suicide. I am not defending the actions of Omar Mateen but only seeking a fuller understanding of his actions. It is too easy to label Mateen as a Islamic terrorist. Much more influenced this man's mind. He was the result of home life, a dual culture, and his radical religious upbringing which produced anger, self-hatred, and ultimately the desire to destroy himself and other.
A true Christian home filled with a genuine love of God, and a loving Christian community provide what is truly needed to nurture a child into a loving and godly man and for that I thank God for His Word, His love, His people, and His church. I look to the day when love and justice prevail forever. Until then we will live in a confusing, chaotic, angry, sin seeking world which has no lasting eternal hope apart from the change that a relationship with Jesus Christ brings.
PS: A good message from Albert Mohler (click here)
You seem to have articulated well what probably was involved in this man's thoughts leading to the shooting. God is moving in the Muslim world I believe. As always, God's movement in this present age is polarizing: many of these Muslims will have to turn against their families and cultures. Praise God for His work.
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