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Bloggers Target Seminary President

Liberty's Ergun Caner accused of false statements in his testimony about converting from Islam.

Liberty University's board of directors has declined to take public action against Ergun Caner, president of the university seminary, as bloggers raise doubts about Caner's account of his childhood as a Muslim.

Elmer Towns, co-founder of Liberty University and dean of the School of Religion, says there will be no official reprimand or demotion of Ergun Caner. Towns, who had a hand in hiring Caner, says the Liberty board has held an inquiry and directors are satisfied that Caner has done nothing theologically inappropriate.

"It's not an ethical issue, it's not a moral issue," Towns told Christianity Today on April 27. "We give faculty a certain amount of theological leverage. The arguments of the bloggers would not stand up in court."

By all accounts, Caner is an energetic, entertaining, and engaging professor who has tripled enrollment at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary since his installation as president of the Lynchburg, Virginia, school five years ago.

Caner and his youngest brother Emir gained prominence as Muslim experts following the September 2001 terrorist attacks. The following year, the brothers wrote Unveiling Islam: An Insider's Look at Muslim Life and Beliefs (Kregel).

In 2003, Jerry Falwell Sr. hired Ergun to teach theology and church history at the Southern Baptist-affiliated seminary's School of Religion. When Caner became the first former Muslim to head an evangelical seminary in 2005, he gained further appeal on the apologetics lecture circuit.

But lately, both Muslims and Reform-minded Southern Baptists are questioning biographical details provided by the 43-year-old Ergun. The blogosphere has been abuzz with critiques of statements Caner has made about himself in speeches, sermons, and online videos.

Foes want Caner to admit to what they label as exaggerations and lies, including claims such as:

  • Growing up in Turkey, when he actually grew up in Ohio.
  • Being raised in a devout Muslim home, rather than a nominal one.
  • Having been involved in Islamic jihad.
  • Having debated dozens of Muslims about the Islamic faith, although there is no video or audio evidence.

Behind the squabble is Mohammad Khan, a 22-year-old London-based computing student who has posted 17 talks by Caner on YouTube. The videos contain slow-motion segments superimposed with Khan's comments. Khan, a Muslim, says among the many troubling aspects of Caner's video presentations are several examples when Caner claims to be reciting the Shehada, part of the Islamic creed, when in actuality he is quoting an important prayer from the Qur'an. The two are very different.

"Christians are under the impression that he is some sort of Islamic expert," Khan told CT. "He isn't."

Both Khan and James R. White, director of the Phoenix-based Alpha & Omega Ministries, a Christian apologetics ministry, say there is no record of Caner's claims that he twice debated Muslim apologist Shabir Ally.

"The president of a large theological seminary has created a myth concerning his background that is incredibly self-contradictory," said White, who teaches on Islam at Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary.

White, who says he has engaged Ally in four formal public moderated debates, sounded the alarm for many Southern Baptists. In turn they have tracked down Caner's conference speeches, sermons, writings, and even court documents to counter the ex-Muslim's statements.

In February, Debbie Kaufman, an Enid, Oklahoma, Southern Baptist laywoman, began blogging about Caner on a daily basis, after watching videos posted by Khan and White. "This matters because we are to win people to Christ," says Kaufman.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 197 comments

Robert Brenner

May 16, 2010  8:01am

R. Fisher - White and others have not scrounged through Caner's life- all this is based on his PUBLIC statements. As a result it's difficult to accuse anyone of misrepresenting what Caner has said, as it has been Caner himself saying it. Again, Caner's own statements raise the issue of his expertise in, and/or level of devotion ot, his former faith. He has made fundamental errors describing basic tenants of the Muslim faith in his PUBLIC addressed on the topic. In addition, the book Unveiling Islam contains essentially incorrect references to the primary Islamic sources. White and others are guilty of nothing other than bringing PUBLIC scrutiny to discrepancies/errors/falsehoods in PUBLIC material that have been previously overlooked for whatever reason.

Fredericka L.

May 15, 2010  9:46am

"Amazing that the power of the internet and blogs can allow a 22-year old nobody to discredit such a good man. . ." Isn't it! The day and age when people can reinvent themselves the way Ergun Caner did after 9/11 is over; there's too much information out there. I'm a new-comer to this controversy, which evidently has been simmering on the internet for some time, but there's no doubt in my mind the bloggers have him dead to rights; just study the evidence. On one of the files I downloaded, he's even rolling his r's; a man who was brought to this country as little more than a toddler 'discovered' a foreign accent post-9/11! By the way it is uncharitable to call someone a 'nobody;' why does Christian charity begin and end with Ergun Caner?

Robert Fisher

May 15, 2010  9:06am

Mr. Brenner, you are confusing categories. Just because Mr. White refutes *theological* errors does not obligate him to scrounge through another person's life in search of alleged ethical misconduct. And if that is his aim, why does he focus solely on Caner? And why does he not cease at raising questions but repeatedly assert that Caner was not devout or knowledgable about Islam? If he only did this once, we might chalk it up to enthusiasm or a slip of the tongue, but given his record it's starting to look like a consistent pattern of slander and misrepresentation on his part. I'm starting to think that he should be reported to his elders at prbc.org so they can evaluate whether he is guilty of misconduct. He is such a big fan of belonging to a local church so as to be accountable to elders, even to the point of asking others who their elders are so he can report them. Why should he get a free pass on being able to engage in this sort of misconduct?

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