Well over a third of Americans fear that the establishment of an
Islamic court in Texas means that harsh sharia law soon could spread
throughout the United States.
A poll by LifeWay Research discovered that 37
percent of Americans fear Islamic courts soon will be handing down
rulings across the country.
Ed Stetzer, executive director of LifeWay Research, said, "In a
nation that has long espoused religious freedom, Americans are
thinking long and hard about the kind of society Islam fosters,
especially the more radical groups that say they are Islamic, and
whether Sharia law would ever be adopted here."
The Islamic Center of Learning in Irving, Texas, recently announced
the formation of the first sharia court in the U.S.
Irving Mayor Beth Van Duyne stated, "Recently, there have been
rumors suggesting that the city of Irving has somehow condoned,
approved, or enacted the implementation of a sharia law court in our
city,"
the Christian Post reported.
"Let me be clear, neither the city of Irving, our elected officials
or city staff have anything to do with the decision of the mosque
that has been identified as starting a sharia court."
However, the LifeWay poll suggests that Americans are very
concerned.
Older Americans are more concerned, with nearly half of those over
age 45 surveyed, or 47 percent, expressing worries, while just 27
percent of Americans between 18 and 44 years old worry about it, the
study found.
Women, at 42 percent, were more concerned than men, at 33 percent.
Slightly more than half, or 51 percent, of evangelicals voiced
concerns, while only 34 percent of Catholics and 21 percent of those
with no religious preference shared their concern.
Imam Moujahed Bakhach of the mosque in Irving told
Christian News Network, "We are not here to
invade the White House or invade Austin. We are humble and want to
settle a problem between Muslims. Maybe in [America's] mind, the
misconception about what they see through the media is that Sharia
means cut the head, chop the heads, cut the hands, and we are not in
that."
In the LifeWay poll, nearly half of Americans, or 48 percent,
disagreed with President Barack Obama's Sept. 10, 2014, statement:
"[ISIS] is not Islamic." Only one in four, or 22 percent, agreed
with him.
However, 43 percent of those polled agreed that Islam "can create a
peaceful society," LifeWay states. Only 27 percent believe that ISIS
shows what life looks like when Islam controls a society, while 47
percent believe it does not.
Van Duyne, the mayor of Irving, said, "Texas Supreme Court precedent
does not allow the application of foreign law that violates public
policy, statutory, or federal laws. I am working with our state
representatives on legislation to clarify and strengthen existing
prohibitions on the application of foreign law in violation of
constitutional or statutory rights," Christian News reported.
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