This should come as no surprise, for Islam is a universal religion, with its ambitions and methods set for all time. This is why, wherever significant numbers of Muslims appear, their kaffir neighbours become all too familiar with the same problems: the fanatical drive to sweep away all other faiths by whatever means possible, the endlessly reoccurring pogroms against Unbelievers, the use of ‘charity’ as a weapon for piecemeal imperialist conquest, the destruction of the places of worship and monuments of the conquered, and the sexual exploitation of girls from other communities.
Archbishop Okoh made his controversial comments about Islam in a sermon in Beckenham, Kent, in July, but it has only just come to light in an article in The Times. He said that there was a determined Islamic attack in African countries such as Uganda, Kenya and Rwanda.
“They spend a lot of money, even in places where they don’t have congregations; they build mosques; they build
hospitals; they build anything.
“They come to Africans and say, ‘Christianity is asking you to marry only one wife. We will give you four’!”
Archbishop Okoh described this as “evangelism by mass-production.”
He said: “That is the type of evangelism they are doing: mass-production, so if you have four wives, four
children, sixteen children, very soon you will be a village.”
Africa was “surrounded by Islamic domination,” he told the congregation. “I am telling you, Islam is spending in Uganda and in other places; it is money from the Arab world,” he claimed, condemning the clergy for abdicating their responsibilities. “Who is the leader in the Christian world? There is no leader.”
Meanwhile, another bravely outspoken non-European cleric is also warning us of the dangers ahead by drawing attention to the murderous persecution of Christians in Pakistan. Under section 295c of the country’s penal code, those accused of blaspheming against the Prophet Mohammed may be sentenced to death or life imprisonment. They are fined in addition.
“The law is sometimes used for a personal agenda that has nothing to do with blasphemy — e.g. an interest in a neighbour’s property” said Dr Michael Nazir-Ali, who last weekend stepped down as bishop of the Kent diocese of Rochester.
In August alone, eight Christians were burnt alive, and a further 20 attacked when a 3,000-strong Muslim mob
attacked the Eastern town of Gojra. Gangs in the nearby village of Korian set fire to more than 70 Christian
homes and two Protestant churches.
Full article...
HERE