
Catholic  Cardinal Theodore McCarrick offered Islamic religious phrases and  insisted that Islam shares foundational rules with Christianity, during a  Sept. 10 press conference in D.C.
 
 “In the name of God, the Merciful and Compassionate,” McCarrick  said as he introduced himself to the audience at a meeting arranged by  the Muslim Public Affairs Council. That praise of the Islamic deity is  an important phrase in Islam, is found more than 100 times in the Koran,  and is akin to the Catholic prayer, ”In the name of the Father, and of  the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
 
 McCarrick next claimed that “Catholic social teaching is based on  the dignity of the human person… [and] as you study the holy Koran, as  you study Islam, basically, this is what Muhammad the prophet, peace be  upon him, has been teaching.”
 
 McCarrick was 71 when 19 Muslims brought Islam to the public eye  by murdering 3,000 Americans on 9/11. He is one of the 213 Cardinals of  the Catholic church, but is too old to vote in church debates.
 
 “Either the cardinal has studied the whole thing and does not know  what he’s talking about, or he is making a somewhat misleading  statement,” said Michael Meunier, head of the U.S. Copts Association.  “The practice of the Muslim majority people that adhere to the Koran…  have proven that [claim of equivalence] is not correct,” he told The  Daily Caller during a Sept. 11 trip to Jordan.
 
 “Has Cardinal McCarrick converted to Islam?” asked a scornful  critic, Robert Spencer, the best-selling author of many books on Islam.
 
 “‘Peace be upon him’ is a phrase Muslims utter after they say the  name of [their reputed] prophet… [so] probably he is unaware of the  unintended Islamic confession of faith he has just made,”said Spencer,  who runs the Jihadwatch.org website.
 
 McCarrick is wrong to say “that Islam teaches the dignity of every  human person,“ Spencer said. “Actually, it teaches a sharp dichotomy  between the Muslims, [who are called] ‘the best of people’ and the  unbelievers [are called] ‘the most vile of created beings,’” Spencer  told TheDC.
 
 “The Koran also says: ‘Muhammad is the apostle of Allah. Those who  follow him are merciful to one another, harsh to the unbelievers,’”  Spencer said.
 
 The same warning came from Archbishop Amel Nona, who was head of  Chaldean Catholic Archeparch of Mosul in Iraq. In a August comment made  to Europeans, he said that “You think all men are equal, but that is not  true: Islam does not say that all men are equal  [and] your values are  not their values.”
 
 “If you do not understand this soon enough, you will become the  victims of the [immigrant] enemy you have welcomed in your home,” said  Nona, who is now exiled — along with surviving Chaldean Catholics — in  the Kurdish city of Erbil.
 
 Islamic societies have routinely persecuted non-Muslims, including  Christian Armenians in Turkey and Christian Copts in Egypt, said Taniel  Koushakjian, a spokesman for the Armenian Assembly of America
 
 During the First World War, more that 1.5 million Armenians were  deliberately killed by Turkey’s Islamic government, he said.
 
 In Egypt, Copts “seem to bear the brunt of the persecution…  [which] comes from the religious divide [and] is an interpretation of  the theology in which people who are not of the same [Islamic] belief  are cast out as infidels, as unrighteous,” he said.
 
 The Islamic Society of North America says Islam “recognize[s]  plurality in human societies, including religious plurality.” The  section of the Koran that endorses plurality, it is claimed, include  verses 10:19, 11:118 and 11.19.
 
 “Mankind was not but one community [united in religion], but  [then] they differed. And if not for a word that preceded from your  Lord, it would have been judged between them [immediately] concerning  that over which they differ,” says verse 10:19, which ISNA says shows  Islam’s tolerance for other religions — chiefly, Judaism and  Christianity — that supposedly split off from Islam at least 2,000 years  ago.
 
 The Koran has some welcoming messages, but they’re from Islam’s  early period, Meunier said. “When Islam became strong and had a strong  army, the tougher verses came down from heaven — apparently — and  according to Islamic teaching, those later verses abrogate the earlier  verses [so] moderate Muslims have an uphill battle saying Islam is  tolerant.”
 
 “We have to encourage moderate Muslims to present a more moderate  version of Islam and the Koran,” but they’re outgunned by Saudi clerics  who have used petrodollars to make Islam tougher and less tolerant, he  said.
 
 But the Saudi clerics “won’t do it [because] they don’t believe in it,” he added.
 
 For Muslims, the Koran is the unimpeachable transcript of commands  from Allah, the single and all-powerful deity. Muslims believe that the  Koran was dictated by an angel to Islam’s final prophet, Mohammad,  1,400 years ago. This rigidity sharply constrains Muslims’ use of  alternative ideas, including elements of Christianity, or secular ethics  and philosophy.
 
 The Koran also include many passage urging the use of violence.  “The penalty for those who wage war against Allah and His Messenger and  strive upon earth [to cause] corruption is none but that they be killed  or crucified or that their hands and feet be cut off from opposite sides  or that they be exiled from the land,” says Verse 33 of the Koran’s  fifth book.
 
 In contrast, the Christian Bible, including the almost-2,000  year-old New Testament, is based on the statements of witnesses. For  example, Matthew the disciple provide the main account of the Beatitudes  sermon, which includes the famous lines, “Blessed are the merciful, for  they shall be shown mercy. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will  see God. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called the sons  of God.”
 
 The Christians’ reliance on witnesses allowed perpetual debate  over the meaning and purpose of words from the twinned deity of Jesus  and God. It also spurred a Christian search for evidence of God via the  “natural sciences,” which gradually evolved into science. Christianity  also endorsed separate roles for church and state, where Islam assumes  that states’ laws and personal behavior comply with Koranic rules.
 
 McCarrick, however, blended the two distinct religions in his comments at the press club.
 
 “We are together on this against evil, we are against killing, we  are against destruction… God bless you in this work you do,” McCarrick  said to the Muslim speakers, which included representatives from one  group — the Islamic Society of North America — that was implicated in a  conspiracy to smuggle funds to the Hamas terror group that recently  launched another bombardment of thousands of rockets at Israeli Jews.
 
 “We believe that Islam is a religion which helps people, not kills  them… the Muslim community has always taught this,” McCarrick said.
 
 “I’m privileged to be able to lend my voice to the voice of many  of my friends here,” he said about the Sept. 10 meeting, which was  designed to help U.S.-based Islamic groups avoid the public disgust with  The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
 
 Since early this year, the Islamic State group has killed and  murdered thousands of Iraqis that don’t accept rule by the brutal Salafi  variant of Islam. The victims include Shia Muslims, Christians and  adherents of the pre-Christian Yazidi religion. Tens of thousands of  non-Muslims have also been driven from their homes and fields.
 
 McCarrick, however, downplayed ISIS’s attack on Christians in  Iraq, and expressed more concerns for Muslim victims of ISIS attacks.  “The truth of the matter is in these terrible massacres of the Islamic  state, most of the victims have been Muslims, most of them have not been  Christians,” he told his Sept. 10 audience.
 
 “Many Christians, obviously, have suffered, so I am here to say  that we stand with our brothers and sisters in the Muslim community, who  here in the United States have been giving leadership in a very strong  way,” he declared.
 
 “They are proud to be Americans… they love America,” he said,  without retuning to discuss the fate of his fellow Christians under  Muslim rule.
 
 Spencer urged McCarrick to challenge his Muslim hosts.
 
 “Cardinal McCarrick, rather than indulge in this fond and ignorant  wishful thinking, would have done better to have challenged his Muslim  friends to match their lofty words with real action to combat the  Islamic State and other Muslim persecutors of Christians,” Spencer said.
 
 McCarrick should have “asked them to institute programs in mosques  and Islamic schools to teach against the literal meaning of the verses I  quoted above and others like them, so that they no longer incite  Muslims to violence,” in the U.S. or abroad, Spencer said.