
While the debate about the New York City mosque near Ground Zero rages on and some people try to burn the Koran, just a short train ride away in Newark, N.J., Muslims and Christians are worshiping together.
At the Bethel Family and Youth Resource Center, Pastor Reginald Osborne welcomes Christians and Muslims to worship together every Sunday. It is a fellowship that is built around the idea that people of all faiths have trials and tribulations and that religion shouldn't matter when someone is in need.
"I may say Jesus, and the Muslims say Allah, but it's a coming together. Not everyone is happy about what I'm doing. A lot of Muslim elders and pastors think I'm nuts. I've had people say I'm a traitor to the faith and how can I embrace Islam," said Osborne.
But his faith is never in question.
"I'm a Christian. I believe Jesus Christ is the son of God and that he died for my sins. He rose three days later, but everyone doesn't think like me," said Osborne. "There are so many faiths that are divided in the community and it breaks my heart. That's why for years I have been in the street teaching the gospel of unity."
It all started seven years ago, when Osborne started an intensive life-skills program licensed by the state of New Jersey that sent people out in to the streets to help those addicted to alcohol and drugs. The counselors ran in to people of all faiths who were struggling with addictions. Soon Christians, Muslims and Jehovah Witnesses were getting help and some started showing up at Osborne's church.
"All of a sudden, I started seeing kufis in church," Osborne said. "People of all backgrounds were getting help getting clean and they just started coming to church. People told me they still went to the masjid and the Kingdom Hall, but that we all came together in love at my church."
During sermons, the Christians say: "Praise Jesus" and Muslims say "Allah." Muslims and Christians have gotten to know one another. Muslim members of the church have taught some Christians Arabic. The goal is togetherness.
"To me, Hallelujah and Allahu Akbar mean the same thing: God is the greatest. A lot of people are not prepared to see this type of unity, because unity means strength," said Osborne.
Abdul Shabazz, 43, of Newark, says he felt the strength in that unity during a time when he needed it most.
Shabazz, who is originally from South Carolina, had just been released from an eight-year-stretch in prison because of his addiction to heroin. Since he was in his twenties, Shabazz said his life consisted of "drugging" and going in and out of jail along the East Coast, "from Miami to New York."
Even though he had just gotten out of prison, Shabazz felt the lure of his drug of choice, heroin, calling him again. This time, he realized he was on the same path that had led him to prison in the past:
"I had a friend up here in Newark, and he said if you want to change, come here," Shabazz said of Osborne's church. "When I arrived, I knew I was in the right place, because of the embrace. I had no family here. I was a Muslim among Christians, and you normally don't get a warm welcome."
Now Shabazz has been clean for 13 months, and he is studying to become a licensed drug counselor.
"To be honest, I got more help from the Christians than the Muslims. I told myself that no matter what I would stay here because nothing but good can come out of good," said Shabazz.
Instead of fighting among one another, this is precisely the message that Muslims and Christians should be pushing, said Shabazz.
"You being a Christian is not and should not stop me from reaching out and aiding and abetting you. Part of the problem is that Muslims and Christians are hiding in the building and not going in the fields. We have beautiful churches and masjids, but if Christians and Muslims unite, we don't need police," Shabazz said. "Instead, Muslims and Christians are fighting, and [people] are selling dope in front of the masjid and selling dope in front of the church."
That's why the recent controversy surrounding the mosque in lower Manhattan upsets Osborne:
"This is the United States of America. There are people that died in the World Trade Center who are Muslims and Christians, so there shouldn't even be a debate. If the imam has the money and heart and wants to build a place of prayer, he has the right," Osborne said.
"This is not a debate. Let's love one another," Osborne added.



Comments: (19)
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By: rasfanta on 10/19/2010 7:36PM
This is the worst nightmare for the chosen ones. This is good. Maybe there is hope for america yet. This is good, very good. I hope it continues and spreads thruout america and the world. The Quran respects christianity and does not call for its destruction the way the talmud calls for the destruction of christianity.
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By: Dempsey Pappion on 10/16/2010 3:39AM
alleluia!
this is soooooo refreshing to me
this is the way it is supposed to be
i have always felt that satans' greatest victory was making us put our ego ahead of our faith
keeping us stuck on the quarrel "my version of God is greater or better than your version"
has kept us focused on our differences as opposed to our commonalities
the painful truth is we are all in the same boat and it is sinking fast
Alleluia!
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By: alie on 10/16/2010 4:56AM
So Snakes in the pulpit and muslims hold joint worship intresting combination, sorry but God don't dig this.
You remember the ten commandments?
1st commandment reminder: you must not have any other God beside me. This means that we must love God more than anyone or anything else, anything we love more than God beomes our god instead of him.
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By: edujustice2005 on 10/16/2010 12:25PM
# alie; It appears that you are a devil and racit! If you cannot say anything good, keep your thoughts and mouth and fingers inactive! I have noticed, you have nothing to say good, I guess b/c you were beat all the times growing up. But, this show the Teapublicans that GOD is wtill REAL & LIVING in his ppl each day. Thank God for the VICTORY over the devil!
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By: Clifford Dunn on 10/18/2010 8:06AM
Someone please bring the Golden Calf and we can worship together, God wont mind if we break His Laws and Commandmets!!! Blending these two religions together is the same as what the children of israel did whe Moses came down from the Moutain when they blended the worship of the God of Israel with the worship of the Golden Calf.
Lord Hve mercy on these people.
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By: alie on 10/18/2010 9:13AM
Lord help us all the obviously haven't read deuteronomy 6. Another pastor leading his folk astray, why can't people just open and read their bibles for themselves! these pastors are they to be challenged if this goes against scripture.
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By: rasfanta on 10/18/2010 6:28PM
STFU, IDIOT
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By: walt on 10/20/2010 3:02PM
Amen to that! Like I said before, "The Great Apostasy will not be televised"
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By: rasfanta on 10/18/2010 6:29PM
Remember, there is a group of powerful people in this country who have a vested interest in keeping muslims and christians apart and fighting. Then, the true trouble makers will continue un-noticed while we are at each others throats over false lies.
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By: Deebo on 10/20/2010 2:50PM
Any true bible-believing Christian should know that Muslims and Christians can't worship together. One believes in the Christ and his power while the other believes Christ ONLY a prophet and believes Allah and his prophet Muhammad. While it may seem pretty and harmonius, it is destructive and against both faith's doctrines. While I don't wish for there to be a wedge, the doctrines of each faith shouldn't allow for this to happen and while we SHOULD live in peace with our fellow man, that does not speak to the difference that we have in our beliefs. This is a mistake and a mark of the end-times imho
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