President Donald Trump's views on
Islam "continue to evolve," according to Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson, in the wake of the president's address in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,
which is earning him praise among notable Christian figures.
Trump's speech is garnering
significant attention given that this was his first address on an international
trip but especially because of its theological overtones while expressing his
vision for U.S.-Muslim relations.
While more nuanced than many of
his pronouncements about Islam on the campaign trail, his speech in Saudi
Arabia last Sunday nevertheless decried "Islamist extremism,"
challenging leaders from more than 50 Muslim nations gathered for the summit in
Saudi Arabia to confront the "vile creed" and "craven
ideology" of terrorism. Nations of the Middle East are full of potential
but the plague of extremism holds them back, he said.
"Terrorists do not worship
God, they worship death," Trump said, framing the issue as "a battle
between good and evil."
Muslim-majority countries must
drive out terrorists from their communities, their places of worship, their
holy lands, and even off the earth, he added. And religious leaders must make
clear to their faith's adherents that "barbarism will deliver you no glory
— piety to evil will bring you no dignity. If you choose the path of terror,
your life will be empty, your life will be brief, and your soul will be
condemned."
Such an explicit theological
judgment struck Al Mohler, president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary, as highly significant.
Trump's words were "over
against many of the preachers of Islamist theology and ideology, who promise
those who become martyrs for the faith and terrorist acts that they will
immediately go to heaven and, as you recall in the 9/11 events, they're to be
greeted by a harem of virgins," Mohler noted Monday on his daily
podcast called "The Briefing."
That the president chose to use
the term "Islamist extremism" several times is no minor detail, he
added.
"Islamist implies the fact
that the driving ideological energy behind the terrorism is not actually the
religion of Islam, that is to say theology, but rather a political ideology
known as Islamism, thus Islamist."
White House spokespersons
explained that Trump was tired from traveling in response to questions about
why he did not use "Islamic," which he has previously done. Using
"Islamic" preceding terrorism instead of "Islamist," which
he did use Sunday, connotes more of a religious orientation to acts of
terror as opposed to a political one.
"But this much is already
very clear," Mohler said, "the president used the stem word Islam,
and he used it repeatedly and he used in a way that was consistent with his
message."
When asked aboard Air Force One
whether or not the president stands by his previous remarks that Islam
"hates us," Secretary of State Tillerson said he "think[s] the
president's views, like we hope the American people's views, are going to
continue to evolve," and that Trump is "increasing his own
perspectives," as reported Monday by The Hill.
Tillerson added: "Nothing
helps you learn and understand people better than coming to their homes, where
they live and seeing them face to face, seeing their families, and seeing their
communities, finding out we all share the same wants and desires for ourselves
and our people, and our families: peace, prosperity, we want our children to
grow up without fear."
Muslim leaders in the region have
taken note of this shift in tone.
"Trump has moved from 'Islam
hates us' to a friendlier approach of common values and shared interests,"
said former Jordanian Justice Minister Ibrahim Aljazy, according to a CNN report Sunday.
Bestselling author Joel
Rosenberg, who was once a political adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu and now the
heads The Joshua Fund, remarked in several tweets Monday that though he has been critical of President Trump, never before has an American
president spoken so forthrightly about the threat of Islamism, "certainly
not in the epicenter of Islam."
No American President has ever
spoken so directly of the "Islamist" threat, certainly not in the
epicenter of Islam.
The speech was
"well-crafted" and "honest," Rosenberg said, and "respectful of moderate Muslims."
Franklin Graham, who has been one
of Trump's most vocal evangelical defenders, hailed the speech on his Facebook page, calling it "great" and
"extremely diplomatic yet strong, direct, and honest."
"He said the war on terror
was a 'battle between good and evil,'" the evangelist noted.
"He was not timid in talking
about 'confronting the crisis of Islamic extremism and the Islamists and
Islamic terror of all kinds.' God bless him," Graham said.
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