|
February 19, 2010,
(Michelle A Vu, Christian Post): A frontier mission
strategist who worked among Muslims in the Philippines
for 10 years weighed in on the debate over the
controversial Camel method of reaching Muslims, calling
it “very useful”.
David Taylor (a pseudonym), senior editor of the Global
Mission Database and author of Operation 10/40 Window,
said the method is bearing “remarkable fruit all over
the world”.
“Unfortunately some (mostly people with no field
experience working with Muslims) don’t understand it,
and are misrepresenting it,” Taylor told The Christian
Post.
The Camel method uses a legend from Islam to introduce
Jesus to Muslims. The legend says every good Muslim
knows 99 names for Allah, but the 100th name was only
revealed to the camel. The 100th name is Jesus, or in
Arabic “Isa”. Muslims are then pointed to verses in the
Quran that show Isa is holy, has power over death, and
knows the path to heaven, before the evangelist connects
the Islamic feast of sacrifice, Eid al-Adha, with God’s
plan of salvation for mankind.
Taylor pointed to Acts 15 in the Bible, where Apostles
Paul and Barnabas debated believers who belonged to the
party of the Pharisees about gentile believers needing
to be circumcised. Taylor said both in the case of Acts
15 and in the Camel method, the Holy Spirit “led field
missionaries to use a certain approach that minimises
misunderstanding with those they are trying to reach,
and ultra-conservative people back at home get wind of
it and try to stir up trouble for them.”
International Mission Board strategist Kevin Greeson
developed the Camel method after working among Muslims
for several years without success. The IMB is the
mission arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, the
largest protestant denomination in the United States.
Greeson says the method treats Muslims with respect
while challenging them to confront their own sacred
writings as a bridge to the Good News revealed in the
Bible.
The method has proven to be very effective in engaging
Muslims in a conversation about Jesus.
But recently, the president of Liberty Theological
Seminary denounced the method as heretical. Dr Ergun
Caner, a former Muslim, in an interview with SBC Today
blog said the God in the Bible and the Allah of the
Quran have nothing in common. He said to suggest they do
is “absolute, fundamental deception”.
“You can’t start an evangelistic enterprise based on
deception,” Caner said. “I just can’t imagine that type
of lying, and that’s exactly what I call it.”
Taylor, however, defends the Camel method, saying that
it builds on what Islam already affirms about biblical
truth, and uses that as a bridge to the Gospel.
“In our work with Muslims in the Philippines we found
that those who used approaches like the Camel method saw
disciple-making movements get started that continue to
grow to this day,” Taylor said. “Those that did not, who
lead with an antagonistic approach to the Quran and
Islam, saw little or no lasting fruit.”
He added, “Generally speaking, the most effective way to
reach Muslims is to keep the conversation going and let
the Holy Spirit gradually begin to reveal truth to
seekers.”
Taylor is the son of missionaries who worked in the
Philippines and grew up listening to mission strategies
on how to share the Good News with unreached people
groups.
About 1.3 to 1.5 billion people, or about one-fifth of
the world population, are Muslims.
|