APOLOGIA
By Hendrik van der Breggen
The Carillon, September
4, 2014
Islam
I've been thinking about Islam lately, to better understand ISIS/
the Islamic State. Let's look at four topics: Jesus and Muhammad, jihad, "religion
of peace," and terrorists.
1. Jesus and Muhammad
Jesus is an important prophet, according to Islam, but Jesus
is not God in human flesh, contrary
to Christianity.
Also, Jesus didn't die on the cross (somebody else did) and
Jesus didn't resurrect bodily after death—all this according to the Qur'an,
written in another country 600 years after the events. (Note: Christianity's New
Testament evidences are closer to the events geographically and in time because
they contain accounts of eyewitnesses and close associates of eyewitnesses.)
The focus of Islam is the man Muhammad, who is (allegedly) God's
latest and greatest prophet. Significantly, whereas Jesus shed his own blood
for others, Muhammad shed the blood of others.
2. Jihad
Is jihad a holy war against unbelievers (infidels) or merely
a personal spiritual struggle? Consider these observations from Irving Hexham, a
well-respected professor of religious studies at University of Calgary, from his
book Understanding World Religions
(2011):
"[T]he popular milk-and-water version of Islam found in
most religious studies texts [in Western universities] is, to say the least, misleading. Jihad is indeed
primarily a form of warfare in defense of Islam [i.e., it's not merely a
spiritual/ personal struggle against one's carnal desires]."
According to Hexham, "This means that, however much one
may disagree with the methods of people like Osama bin Laden [ISIS, etc.], it
is highly misleading to dismiss them as 'extremists' or argue that they 'don't
understand Islam,' as some writers suggest."
Hexham adds: "The truth is, bin Laden [ISIS, etc.] have
decided that Islam is under threat from the West and that Western values are
undermining Muslim societies. Therefore, in their own eyes, they are fighting a
legitimate war, or jihad, in defense of Islam."
3. "Religion of peace"
When Muslims talk about Islam being a "religion of
peace," peace isn't what we in the West usually think. It's not live and
let live.
Hexham writes: "For Muslims, Islam is a religion of
peace, because the imposition of Islamic rule brings areas under Muslim control
to peace and order in accordance with Islamic teachings about the will of God.
Thus it is a Pax Islamica, which imposes peace by dominating all opponents by
force or arms."
Hexham concludes: "it seems clear that to say that
'Islam is a religion of peace' is not the same thing as saying that 'Islam is a
peaceful religion.'"
4. Terrorists
So, are all Muslims terrorists? Answer: No, definitely not.
Zane Pratt, a Christian missionary to central Asia, is
author of the article, "10 things every Christian should know about Islam."
Pratt (correctly) observes: "The vast majority of Muslims are not
terrorists."
Pratt adds: "In fact, normal Islamic religious law
forbids the intentional killing of non-combatants in battle. It also forbids
suicide. It's a small minority view that allows these things, and it's a
small minority who engage in terrorist activities."
But let's pause a moment. According to Pratt, "it's a
small minority [of Muslims] who engage in terrorist activity." Yet,
according to Hexham, it is "highly misleading to dismiss them [this small
minority] as 'extremists' or argue that they 'don't understand Islam.'"
Enter: the need to think carefully.
Review: (1) Islam denies the Lordship of Jesus Christ, who spread
his message peacefully, but Islam admires Muhammad, who spread his message
violently; (2) those Muslims who take jihad as killing non-Muslims understand
Islam and are not extremists; (3) Islam, as a "religion of peace," tends
to view "peace" as submission to, i.e., forceful domination by,
Islamic rule; (4) the vast majority of Muslims are (truly) peaceful.
What should we do? I recommend that we show love to Muslims,
pray for them, discern truth, plus speak truth with gentleness and respect.
I also recommend Nabeel Qureshi's book Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus: A Devout Muslim Encounters Christianity (2014).
(Hendrik van der
Breggen, PhD, is associate professor of philosophy at Providence University
College. The views in this column do not always reflect the views of Providence.)