Penn State Professor Philip Jenkins, writing in The American Conservative, describes the Third World War as a war between Christians and Muslims. He doesn’t say who wins.
Along the line drawn in the sand
At the tenth degree of latitude
The old and new faiths take their stand
With quite a reversed attitude
For Islam, land that once was theirs
Is changing faiths today
A state of perilous affairs
For the Islamic way
Professor Jenkins seems to think
We’re on the Christians’ side
And posits that there is a link
With Western Christian pride
Professor Jenkins, I’ve got news
No Western pride exists
The West has no one in the pews
And Marxism persists
When Africans give up the gods
Their fathers loved and feared
For someone else’s faith, the odds
Are that that faith has seared
A fire in their souls that must
Have seemed to burn so bright
A faith of love and for the just
A faith of warmth and light
There is a war between the faiths
Says Mr. Jenkins here
Indeed there is, that’s why the wraiths
Whisper in professor’s ear