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Pope prays in Arabic for first time

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LadyEagle

<b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>
Pope prays in Arabic for first time
Pope Benedict XVI has pronounced a blessing in Arabic at his weekly audience in front of 20,000 pilgrims on St Peter's Square -- the first time the language has been used at such an event.

"The pope prays for all Arabic speakers. May God bless you all!" the pope said in Arabic at the audience, after a bishop read out an Arabic translation of the pope's comments praising the results of the Second Vatican Council.

http://www.france24.com/en/20121010-pope-prays-arabic-first-time


:eek: :eek: :eek:
 

mont974x4

New Member
Because it implies that Muslims worship God and not a god unless extreme care was taken in the translating. If I remember right several months ago the pope made some comments that opened himself up to such scrutiny as he did imply that very thing.

Is there a transcript and translation of the prayer? I would be interested to know how the pope referred to God, or....god.
 

Ryan.Samples

New Member
Because it implies that Muslims worship God and not a god unless extreme care was taken in the translating. If I remember right several months ago the pope made some comments that opened himself up to such scrutiny as he did imply that very thing.

Is there a transcript and translation of the prayer? I would be interested to know how the pope referred to God, or....god.


"The pope prays for all Arabic speakers. May God bless you all!" the pope said in Arabic at the audience, after a bishop read out an Arabic translation of the pope's comments praising the results of the Second Vatican Council.

Wow, that's an incredible leap. The article says Arabic speakers, not Muslims. There are Arabic-speaking Christians, you know... Furthermore, are you suggesting that the Pope (or any other Christian leader) should not pray for Muslims? It would seem to me an evangelical Christian would encourage everyone he or she knows to pray for the salvation of everyone.

Incidentally, which word is it you think that Arabic Christians use when referring to God?
 

poncho

Well-Known Member
I'm more concerned with our government's bipartisan policy of arming our enemies. Those enemies who are known to be Islamic extremists.

Guess that makes me the lone stranger around here again huh?
 

LadyEagle

<b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>
<snipped> More:

The Vatican said the addition was made to show the pontiff’s concern for Christians in the Middle East and to remind both Muslims and Christians to work for peace in the region.

A Vatican statement said the leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics wanted to continue the spirit of his trip to Lebanon last month.

During the trip, the pope made many appeals to both Christians and Muslims to work for an end to the conflict in neighbouring Syria and for peace in the entire region.

In 2006 the pope gave a speech in Regensburg which was perceived by some Muslims as an attack on Islam. The pope said he was misunderstood and later visited a mosque in Turkey and prayed with an imam.



http://www.khaleejtimes.com/kt-arti...national_October315.xml&section=international
 

mont974x4

New Member
Wow, that's an incredible leap. The article says Arabic speakers, not Muslims. There are Arabic-speaking Christians, you know... Furthermore, are you suggesting that the Pope (or any other Christian leader) should not pray for Muslims? It would seem to me an evangelical Christian would encourage everyone he or she knows to pray for the salvation of everyone.

Incidentally, which word is it you think that Arabic Christians use when referring to God?

Yes, there are Arabic speaking Christians. The issue is the normal use of the word allah for God, or is it like the Muslim use of allah for a god. That is the issue.


If you would like to back up and reread what I actually wrote I never said anything about not praying FOR people. The issue is who he is praying TO. Don't be so dishonest as to create a problem that isn't even there. That does not edify anyone and does nothing to foster discussion.

There is a very real movement to convince us that all people who pray are praying to God, or at least the same god. That is the real core of the matter in this thread and what we are concerned about.

Also of concern is the praying with an imam. Would you pray with a buddhist, a satanist, or a mormon like the pope did here?
 
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shodan

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So, where is the rub that the Pope prays for Arabic speaking Christians in their own language? [Incidentally, his prayer did not use "Allah" but a word more like our "Lord"]

So much gossip has surrounded topics like this among Christians.

The English word "God" is "Gott" in German; "Dieu" in French; "Allah" in Arabic; etc.

One Arabic Christian student was particularly upset by ignorant people who claim he is praying to a different God when he uses the Arabic, "Allah."
 
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shodan

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I found an interesting discussion on an issue related to this here:

http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=1062878


The word choice does matter. As a Christian we do not want to ever imply that Islam worships the one true God, but a false god. We do not want to suggest in anyway that everyone prays to God and the only difference is in the name we choose to call Him.

So then, to be consistent, you say that the Jewish people do not worship the same God as Christians? There is a big difference between whether people worship a false god or whether they have a false understanding regarding God.
 

Matt Black

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
What Shodan and Ryan said. Maltese Christians (we have a family of Maltese in our Bible study group), who speak an Arabic-derived language, use the word Alla for God. They are thoroughly Trinitarian and orthodox in their beliefs.
 
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