COMMENTARY
		
		Why Christian Women   Marry Muslim Men
		
		Courtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                 
            with Charles Colson
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
                It was while   vacationing in Turkey that Miriam, a British   subject, became fascinated with Islam. She was mesmerized by the beauty of the   mosques and spellbound as she heard the daily calls to prayer. Miriam had been   raised a Christian, but had turned against God when her mother died. The   simplicity and security that Islam seemed to offer appealed to her: She decided   to convert and married a Muslim man. 
              But within a few   years, cracks began to form in her new faith. She felt that she could never be   good enough to earn a place in Paradise, and   that God did not love her. One day Miriam picked up her old Bible, and a few   months later, re-embraced her commitment to Christ. But when Miriam told her   husband what she had done, he promptly left her and their little girl. Islamic   law required it: She was now an apostate. 
              Miriam tells her   story in a new book by Rosemary Sookhdeo titled Why Christian Women Convert to   Islam. What is shocking is how many of these women come   from strong, evangelical backgrounds. Many converts, like Miriam, are brought up   by Christian parents, accept Christ, and get involved in church activities. But   as they grow older, their commitment fades, or they become disillusioned with   Christianity. Islam, they think, may offer the   answer. 
              Younger women often   meet Muslims at college—men who convince them that there is really not much   difference between Islam and Christianity. When their wives discover the truth   that Christianity is not the same as Islam, it is often too late. Any children   they have will be raised Muslim-and great pressure is put on wives to   convert. 
              Some women marry   with the best of intentions: Their husbands are recent Muslim converts to   Christianity. The women learn later that they should have put off wedding plans   in order to test the strength of this commitment, because all too often, these   men convert back to Islam when their families pressure   them. 
              The sobering truth   is that the number of Christian converts to Islam is growing rapidly. Sookhdeo   says that when her husband recently spoke at a major Christian conference, he   asked the audience how many of them knew someone who had converted to Islam.   Fifty percent of the audience raised a   hand—astonishing! 
              Sookhdeo believes   that some 30,000 Westerners have converted to Islam in the last decade—the   majority of them women. Clearly, our churches need to do something about this.   In Sunday school classes and youth groups, we need to teach our kids, especially   our daughters, about the difference between Islam and Christianity. And we   cannot forget the role that Christian education plays here. We must remind them   of the Apostle Paul's admonition in Second Corinthians that we not be yoked with   unbelievers. 
              As more and more   Muslims immigrate to Western countries, Christians will likely find themselves   mixing with them at work, in the college classroom, and in their neighborhoods.   While we should welcome opportunities to develop friendships and share our life   and faith, marriage is altogether different. 
              If you know young   Christians tempted to marry outside the faith, talk to them. Pray for them. And   ask your church family for support. We must do all we can to help our children   remain faithful to the one true God and His only Son, who alone died for our   sins: Jesus the Christ. 
               
              From BreakPoint, Copyright  2007 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                web site at http://www.breakpoint.org.               
              This commentary was delivered by PFM President Mark   Earley. 
               
              
              
          
		   
 
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