Frederick Speakman had the following...
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Frederick Speakman had the following incident related to him by the chaplain of the University of Edinburgh. The chapel speaker, an Englishman born in India, invited the students to remain after to ask questions. One student, with typical sophomoric attitude, spoke angrily. "I didn't expect to hear this provincial, narrow message from you, of all people! You've seen so much of the world. You've looked at the twentieth century from so many corners of the room. Yet, all you talked about was Christ. Why Christ? Why didn't you bring us some insight from Mohammed, from Buddha?" The speaker from India looked at the student with a disarming smile and said quietly, "Oh, are you a Moslem?" "Why, no," answered the lad. "Then," said the bishop, "just as I thought; Mohammed is not your problem. Are you a Buddhist?" "Of course not," snapped the boy. "Then I was right; Buddha is not your problem. What are you then?" "Why, I don't know." The student shifted uncomfortably, because this wasn't coming out the way he had planned at all. "I suppose I'm supposed to be a Christian." "Well now, isn't that amazing?" concluded the bishop. "I've never heard that vague an answer from a Moslem or a Buddhist. And I've lived and dealt with them all my life. You know, if I were you, I wouldn't worry myself too much about their faith, until I had made up my own mind about Jesus Christ; because it's easy to see that he is your problem." -- Keller
