|
International News Updates |
|
|
|
10 May 2009 AMMAN: Pope Benedict XVI visited an
Arab state for the first time yesterday, expressing
his “deep respect” for Islam and hopes that the
Catholic Church would be a force for peace in the
region.
The pope was given a red-carpet welcome at the airport
by Jordan’s King Abdallah and Queen Rania. He praised
Jordan as a leader in efforts to promote peace and
dialogue between Christians and Muslims. An honor
guard played bagpipes and waved Jordanian and Vatican
flags.
The trip to the region is the first for the
German-born Benedict, who will travel on Monday to
Israel and the Palestinian territories.
The pope has faced sharp criticism in the Middle East
from both Muslims and Jews.
Benedict angered the Muslim world three years ago when
he quoted a Medieval text that criticized the
teachings of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh).
Dispatch
To Vatican: What Proves The Pope Ignorant
On Sept 12, 2006,
Pope Benedict XIV, delivered a lecture at the
University of Regensburg. The lecture was in German
but was later translated into English by the Vatican
under the title, The Three Stages in the Program of
Dehellenization. My reply is based on that
translation. The main theme of the Papal speech was
the relationship between faith and reason, and it was
mainly about the development of Western thought on
this issue, especially in relation to Christianity.
But for some obscure reason the Pope started off with
something that does not at all seem related to his
central topic. He began by quoting something which the
Byzantine emperor Manuel II Paleologus of the
fourteenth century said about Islam.
“Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new, and
there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such
as his command to spread by the sword the faith he
preached,” the emperor is reported to have said to his
educated Persian interlocutor. He is also reported to
have explained this by saying, “God is not pleased by
blood, and not acting reasonably (”syn logo“) is
contrary to God’s nature. Faith is born of the soul,
not the body. Whoever would lead someone to faith
needs the ability to speak well and to reason
properly, without violence and threats…. To convince a
reasonable soul, one does not need a strong arm, or
weapons of any kind, or any other means of threatening
a person with death….”
To persuade his audience that the emperor whom the
Pope describes as ‘erudite’ did not say what he said
out of ignorance of the Islamic religion, the Pope
goes on to say, “The emperor must have known that Sura
(chapter) 2:256 reads: “There is no compulsion in
religion.” It is one of the suras of the early period,
when Muhammad was still powerless and under [threat].
But naturally the emperor also knew the instructions,
developed later and recorded in the Koran, concerning
holy war.”
These statements are full of mistakes, inaccuracies,
misconceptions as well as misrepresentations of the
Islamic religion.
First, to deny that Muhammad came with something new
and of great value, is a sign either of ignorance of
his message or of blind prejudice. That Muhammad came
with something new and important, especially for the
people of the Book, is stated in many places in the
Quran.
"O people of the Book! There has come to you our
Messenger, revealing to you much in the Book that you
used to hide, and passing over much (that is now
unnecessary). There has come to you from God a (new)
light and a perspicuous Book." [Quran, 5:16]
"Say: 'O People of the Book! come to common terms as
between us and you: That we worship none but God, that
we associate no partners with Him; that we erect not,
from among ourselves, Lords and patrons other than
God.'" [Quran, 3: 64]
Second, the Pope says, “the decisive statement in this
argument against violent conversion is this: Not to
act in accordance with reason is contrary to God’s
nature”. He then quotes the comments on the emperor’s
words of Theodore Khoury who published and edited that
dialogue, “For the emperor,” says Khoury “as a
Byzantine shaped by Greek philosophy, this statement
is self-evident.”
A person doesn’t have to be shaped by Greek philosophy
to know that violent conversion and not acting in
accordance to reason is something that God does not
approve of.
Prophet Muhammad says, “Never has violence entered
into something that it did not make ugly, and never
has gentleness entered into something that it did not
make beautiful.” It is because of this that a Muslim
is enjoined to: "Invite (all) to the Way of your Lord
with wisdom and beautiful preaching; and argue with
them in ways that are best and most gracious: for your
Lord knows best, who have strayed from His Path, and
who (deserve) to be guided." [Quran, 16:125]
Third, the verse alluded to is not of the early period
as the Pope says, on the authority of his experts. It
is a verse in Surat al Baqara which was revealed after
the Prophet had migrated to Madeenah and found the
support of its people, and started to engage in war
against his Makkan enemies. Even the occasion on which
the verse was revealed, as mentioned by authorities
like Ibn Katheer, proves this. Some Madeenan people
who had accepted Islam, but whose sons chose to remain
Jewish, thought of forcing them to join them in the
new faith, but were told not to do so.
Further, why would someone who is “powerless and under
threat” advise his followers not to resort to force to
convert people? Why would he tell them not to do
something that they are not in a position to do
anyway?
Fourth, this often quoted verse, is not an isolated
one as the words of the Pope intimate. It emphasizes a
fact that is stated in many other verses, and that
constitute a fundamental Islamic teaching. This
teaching is that faith resides in the heart, and that
no created beings, neither Prophets nor devils, have
any control over the human heart. No one except God
has the power to instill faith in a person’s heart or
deprive him or her of it.
Prophets like Noah, Moses, Jesus, may Allaah exalt
their mention, and Muhammad are repeatedly reminded
that their role is only to convey the message in the
best of ways. They guide people to the truth only by
conveying it to them, and by attempting to persuade
them in the best of ways to accept it; they do not and
cannot guide them by forcing them to accept it. Many
verses in the Quran state and emphasize this fact.
Here are some examples:
"Remind them, for you are but a remembrance. You are
not at all a warder over them." [Quran, 88:21-22]
"Is it you who can compel people until they are
believers?" [Quran, 10:99]
"You do not guide whom you love (to guide), but Allah
guides whom He wills." [Quran, 28: 56]"However much
you are keen (on them), most people will not believe."
[Quran, 12:103]
Would a person who is told this by the God who sent
him try to force people to become believers? One might
say that the Prophet did, however, engage in war with
some people and did encourage Muslims to fight wars
similar to his, and that these wars are called jihad.
Indeed he did, but it must be clear now that he could
not have done so in contravention to those clear
Divine instructions.
Those wars must have therefore been engaged in for
reasons other than forcing people to accept the
Islamic faith. This is not the place to go into the
details of the circumstances that led to them or the
conditions for waging war. Suffice it to say that they
were waged against aggression, against all kinds of
aggression: against those who attacked Muslims because
of their faith; against those who used their power to
try to prevent people from accepting that faith; and
against those who breached the covenants they had made
with Muslims. All other non-Muslims who did not fall
into those categories, including Jews and Christians,
did live in peace with and among Muslims from the time
of the Prophet until now. Being non-Muslim has never
been considered by itself a reason for killing
someone. Even organizations like al-Qaida give other
justifications for their attacks on those whom they
attacked.
Fifth, in his attempt to make the Christian faith
compatible with reason, the Pope had to fall back on
the interpretations of those, like the emperor, who
attempted to marry Christianity with Greek philosophy.
A profound encounter of faith and reason is taking
place here, an encounter between genuine enlightenment
and religion. From the very heart of Christian faith
and, at the same time, the heart of Greek thought now
joined to faith, Manuel II was able to say: Not to act
“with logos” is contrary to God’s nature
This means that the nature of God becomes contrary to
unreasonableness only if, with the help of Greek
philosophy, God is identified with Logos, Modifying
the first verse of the Book of Genesis, John began the
prologue of his Gospel with the words: “In the
beginning was the ‘logos’ “. In the beginning was the
Logos, and Logos is God, says the Evangelist.
This means that the God whose nature is compatible
with reason is not the traditional God of
Christianity. It is not God the Father, or God the
Son, or God the Holy Ghost, or a combination of the
three. The Pope must have had to resort to this
understanding of God that identifies Him with reason
because he cannot say about the traditional God of
Christianity that unreasonableness is contrary to His
nature.
He cannot say so because he knows that
unreasonableness characterizes the traditional
conception of the nature of that God. This has always
been Islam’s main objection to Christianity. The Quran
tells them that the claim that God has a son is not
compatible with reason and cannot therefore be
compatible with God’s true nature. To explain this let
us start with a preliminary understanding of God, an
understanding that is shared by almost all those who
believe in His existence. The minimum that they say
about Him is that He is the Creator.
The Quranic arguments against God being a father are
based on this essential attribute of Him. These
arguments can be paraphrased as follows:
1. Firstly, if God is the creator of every thing He
must be the creator of the person called His son. A
father does not however, create his child, he begets
it. One cannot be a father of someone whom He
creates.
2. Secondly, a father can have a son only if he has a
wife, “How can He have a child seeing that He has no
spouse?” says the Quran. Muslims agree with the
Christians that Mary is Jesus’ mother. But Mary is not
God’s spouse; she is one of His creation.
3. Thirdly, If God is the creator of everything, He is
necessarily self-sufficient. But if He is
self-sufficient, He is not in need of having a child.
“They say that God has a child. Exalted above that be
He. He is the Self-sufficient,” says the Quran.
4. Fourthly, This problem is further aggravated by the
belief that Jesus is coeternal with God the Father.
How can someone who is coeternal with another be his
child? A child must necessarily come after its
father.
5. Fifthly, Christians also believe that Jesus died
and was resurrected. How can someone who is eternal,
who has no beginning, die? Muslim intellectuals have
long ago pointed to the logical truth that eternity
(having no beginning) logically implies
everlastingness (having no end). Why? Because a being
that has no beginning is necessarily self-sufficient;
that it does not depend for its existence on something
outside itself. It cannot therefore cease to exist,
because a thing ceases to exist only when it lacks
some of the external conditions of its existence. But
if it is itself the cause of its existence, it cannot
cease to exist.
When faced with such rational arguments, some
Christians retort by saying, “but you are taking the
word “son” literally” OK, we say, we will not quarrel
with you over words. Give us the non-literal meaning
of ’son’ that is immune from those contradictions.
That non-literal meaning has never been forthcoming.
Sixth. In Islam we do not have to resort to any source
outside God’s Book to prove that faith is compatible
with reason because this compatibility is demanded by
faith itself. The Quran acknowledges the testimony of
rational principles, of empirical evidence and of
sound moral values, and uses them to prove that it is
the word of God.
The Quran says about itself in 4:82 that, “had it been
from other than God they would have found therein much
discrepancy”
It censures those who deny the testimony of the
senses, in 6:7 “If We had sent down to you a written
(message) on parchment, so that they could touch it
with their hands, the Unbelievers would have been sure
to say: “This is nothing but obvious magic!”
It stresses the fact that God enjoins good and never
does he enjoin shameful deeds. In 16:90, it reads,
“God commands justice, the doing of good, and
liberality to kith and kin, and He forbids all
shameful deeds, and injustice and rebellion: He
instructs you, that you may receive admonition”
Biblical scholars tell us however that there are many
contradictions in the New Testament and that there are
factual mistakes in it. The Old Testament imputes to
prophets like Lot and David the sort of immoral
behavior that only the most deviant of human beings
would commit. It is partly because of this that many
people, including some Christians and Jews, no longer
believe that every thing in the Bible is the word of
God.
Seventh, the Pope quotes professor Khoury as saying,
“But for Muslim teaching God is absolutely
transcendent. His will is not bound up with any of our
categories, even that of rationality.” God is indeed
absolutely transcendent, and cannot therefore be bound
by any thing external to himself. He is the creator of
everything including our categories. But being
absolutely free from any external influence does not
mean that His actions are haphazard, that he says or
does something that is contrary to the reason with
which He endowed us.
God is absolutely free, but His actions are governed
by His attributes of perfection. He does not therefore
contradict himself; he does not enjoin something that
is immoral, he does not say something that is belied
by the empirical facts which He himself created. Can
He do otherwise? Of course He can, and He is praised
because He can, and because He chose not to behave in
ways that are contrary to reason or moral principles.
This has to be so. You do not praise someone for not
doing an evil that he is incapable of doing anyway.
Eighth, true religion is a religion based on a message
from God conveyed to us by His chosen Messengers. Our
task is to endeavor to understand this message and to
act according to its dictates. We may make mistakes in
doing so, but we should not intentionally make any
changes in it by additions or subtractions, because
once you do this you will not be following a divinely
revealed message but a message of your own making. “O
Messenger, convey what has been sent down to you from
your Lord; if you do not you will not be conveying His
Message.” [Quran, 5:67]
A religion that is tampered with becomes a man-made
religion, an ideology like any other secular ideology.
But this tampering is what Jews and Christians have
always been accustomed to doing. And this is exactly
what the Pope is now doing with what has remained of
Christianity.
He wants to mould it into a Eurocentric ideology of
which Greek philosophy and the renaissance are
inseparable elements. What about Christians in other
parts of the world whose cultures have no affinity to
European thought? Would they now be obliged to study
this thought and make it part of a religion which they
know had its origin in the East?
It might be said that some Muslims are now doing the
same with their religion. Indeed they are. But the
consolation is that their attempts are futile. Islam
is a religion that God promised to preserve and make
available for truth seekers until the end of this
world. “It is we who sent down the message and it is
we who will preserve it.” [Quran, 15: 9] The original
text of the Quran will always be available; the Sunnah
of the Prophet that explains it will always be
preserved.
And there will always be honest learned people who
would present this religion as it truly is. There will
be deviations from this truth, and there will be many
people who would believe in and follow them; but those
deviations will never replace a truth that God has
promised to preserve. He has preserved it for fourteen
hundred years, and is sure to continue preserving it
for the rest of time on this earth. |