POSTED HERE ON 8/1/2013
SHERIF QUINN'S DISTINCTIONS BETWEEN CHRISTIANITY AND ISLAM
By Sherif Quinn
First Impressions
My
first memories of anything Islamic were when I prepared to start work
in Saudi Arabia. In the United Kingdom I visited my local library and
read some books on the country. The place looked extraordinarily exotic
and once I got there I wasn't disappointed. I vaguely knew that Saudi
Arabia was the birthplace of Islam but as to the significance of the
Ka`bah, Hajj, etc., I knew even less.
Some
Saudi newspapers have a daily question and answer piece on Islam. The
questions submitted by the readers were often extremely specific on
minute, seemly irrelevant practices — for example the salah(ritual
prayer) or ablution — and these questions were often read out in the
work tea room by ex-pats — including myself — for amusement. It all
seemed so incomprehensible — but then everything about Saudi Arabia was a
culture shock, so I never considered the
religion separate from the culture.
Later
I shifted to the United Arab Emirates. Here, it felt almost European,
laid back, sort of quasi-Mediterranean in comparison. This made me look
at Islam differently — it didn't seem so tough and dogmatic as in Saudi.
Inevitably again I debated Islam at work or with friends and I was
impressed with the logic. Logic and religion? These two are not supposed
to coexist.
School Days
Being
brought up from the age of 4 at a Catholic school run by nuns, then
from 11 to 18 at a school run mainly by Benedictine monks, I had
undergone years of formal
religious education. However, except for some various stories from the
Bible, I felt I hadn't a clue as to the relationship between
Christianity and real life. Also, there were just so many inherent
contradictions and "mysteries" that our school teachers veered away from
— so long as you had faith.
So
on the one hand at school we were taught to analyze and question the
rationale behind biology, chemistry, and so on, but religion was above
such earthly proofs. Not surprisingly, my fellow pupils did their best
to
escape from compulsory church services and ceremonies. I found hymns
particularly dreary; saintly statues made me queasy rather than
comforted. Priestly vestments and church ornamentation alienated rather
than satisfied.
Back
to Arabia: I had numerous but always friendly arguments about religion
with Muslims. In hindsight, I was the one who provoked the discussion
(I've always liked a good argument). My curiosity aroused, I started
reading some pamphlets. I was wary of people trying to "convert" me,
although no one
seemed particularly out to proselytize. On the contrary, my friends
patiently went along with my arguments. Religious discussions were
frustrating by my lack of information — I was getting fed up with this,
so I embarked on a refutation of Islam through reading. I searched for
the weak spot — so then I could triumph over these Arabs! I only read
booklets and books that I carefully chose myself, looking only for those
that were as impartial and frank as possible, written by both Muslims
and non-Muslims. By necessity the reading material had to deepen. I
moved on from the Ahmed Deedat type confrontational style of material. I
still wasn't really convinced and kept looking for that one defect that
would unravel it all.
Christianity vs. Islam
Christianity
directs to turn the other cheek; whereas Islam says fight for your
rights, but only when you are oppressed. Christianity says that a rich
man will never enter heaven. Islam says that there is nothing
intrinsically wrong with wealth; it is good so long as it is
acquired legally and a portion ( 2.5 poercent) given yearly to the
poor. Wealth is distinguished from greed. The noble ideals of
Christianity break down in the real world.
Islam
seemed to recognize the grubby imperfect lives we lead but had
relentlessly accurate insight of the strengths and weakness of the human
psyche. For example, respecting others privacy: Hurtful tabloid
newspaper gossip is alien to Muslim countries. The highest standards of
courtesy are found in daily interactions: as-salamu `alaykum ("Peace
be upon you") is the recurrent greeting, compared to the cold and
casual "Hi." Everyone has arguments and fallouts, but for two Muslims,
after 3 days the two sides must patch up — the one who makes the first
gesture is seen as the better person. Consequently, I almost never heard
of the I'm-not-talking-to-him attitude that poisons relationships and
is so energy consuming.
I
began to realize
the astonishing range of issues Islam deals with, particularly on the
social side. From hygiene to education, from war time and economics, to
racism, to nationalism. No matter is too small to escape its rational
instruction. Throughout, the Qur'an addresses mankind, not just the
bickering Arab tribes of the time. It is not limited to the period of
revelation but appears to speak down the ages. I found the tone
consistently serious and majestic but always simple and crystal clear.
It all seemed rather practical and sensible. Religion was just not
supposed to be like this. Could all this be thought up by an illiterate
man 1,400 years ago? Well, maybe.
I
dug a little deeper. As for the famous literary brilliance of the
Qur'an that I had read of, "that inimitable symphony" described by
Marmaduke Pickthall, I had no idea and could only guess at from the
inadequate English translations from the original Arabic.
Doctrinal Indigestion
As
I said, I had an extensive religious education. These are a few of the
creeds of Catholicism that I had always found difficult:
- The Christian clergy of priests, bishops, archbishops, cardinals, etc. Why do we need a hierarchy? Could a religion operate without one?
- Divinity of Christ. Did he actually claim divinity? What was that first commandment again?
- Doctrine of the Trinity. Sorry, I just don't get it. Anyway, some prominent Christian leaders now openly doubt it, as do some Christian sects, for example, the Unitarians.
- Church statues. Idols are breakable. Anyway, what was that second commandment again?
- Infallibility of the Pope. But he did make errors, for example when condemning Copernicus for saying the Earth revolved around the sun.
- Original sin. A newborn baby has inherent sin and needs forgiveness (baptism)? Again, somehow difficult to understand.
- Worshiping "saints." Do we need an agent to reach God?
- Transubstantiation. Where bread and wine are transformed (literally) into the flesh and blood of Christ during the Mass. Are there elements of paganism here?
- Christ died on the cross for the "sins of the world." If Christ died for our sins in advance, then why bother trying to be good? Anyway, did he really claim this?
And there's more, but I'll spare you.
Islam
graciously cut through this ideological nightmare. One by one these
muddled dogmas were clearly debunked as I dug deeper in my research. I
was interested to learn that the central Christian tenets above were
trashed out by a conference 300
years after Christ died. The conference was heavily prejudiced by the
powerful Roman emperor of the time: not exactly divine. The monks must
have forgotten to mention all that. Surprisingly, in Islam, Christ is a
highly revered prophet. Also, like Muhammad, he would never be termed
divine. In fact many Muslims are named `Isa (Arabic for Jesus), and
Christ and Mary are mentioned in the Qur'an more times than Muhammad.
So,
contrary to Christianity, Islam appeared (to me anyway) simple and
clear. Today Christianity is
all but dead in the West — this is scary and probably precedes an era
of spiritual nihilism. The only growth area is in evangelism — where
emotions are let rip. It is known by anyone who has had to reason with
someone in an ecstatic or angry state, that logic and emotion do not
make good bedfellows — any rational thought is thrown out the window.
Some churches hire discos in a desperate attempt to attract the punters;
others are becoming bingo halls. Good Christians are staying at home in
droves on Sunday: for many of them, cutting the grass seems more
meaningful.
I
remember a Christian friend of mine complained that the Mass never
seemed the same when they switched over from Latin to English — it was
better when you couldn't understand it.
So, this is the sorry state to Christianity today.
Relief
My
hunches that these were man-made doctrines were finally proven right.
It was quite a relief. Whatever issue I examined in Islam, I could not
find error nor did I have to stretch my credibility. Surely then it
cannot be of human origin? No wonder the monks at school kept it all
well hidden. However, my stubbornness held out another year or so.
I
tried to read the Qur'an, which initially I found heavy and intense. I
soon realized that this was because it was so concise and concentrated —
there was no padding out. It appeared strangely succinct, like a
telegraph message. Surely, I wondered, if written by Muhammad, it would
be full of the narrow stories of the times, not to mention mistaken
scientific beliefs of the time.
In
comparison, the Bible goes in great detail regarding local events,
internal wars, what so-and-so did, and local politics. All very
fascinating at the time, but hardly an eternal guide for all mankind.
The Bible was, of course, composed by men — and reads like a diary of
the times. For example, the Gospel according to
Saint… . I long wondered how that makes it divine. There are few grand
concepts. The text is addressed to the small tribes of Judea. The
statements authentically
attributed to Christ himself are but a few dozen, and even those are
colored by St. Paul and others. Also, the version we read today is
translated through from Aramaic to Hebrew to Greek to Latin to English.
What text could possibly have survived unchanged —especially when so
many had a vested interest in the content? The many conspicuous
contradictions are well known, even by Christians.
Therefore,
it was almost unbelievable to learn that the Muslim sacred book, the
Qur'an, was written down during Prophet
Muhammad's lifetime, was checked numerous times by himself to ensure
accuracy, and has remained exactly in the original language and text
ever since. I was interested to read that when several thousand copies
of the Qur'an were printed in Egypt with just one dumma (vowel
mark) missing, they were immediately pulped. Why should a tiny dash
make any difference? How did anyone spot it so quickly?
Being
scientifically
trained, I was interested in the scientific references of the Qur'an.
These included meteorological, astronomical, physical, medical
references and more. Many of these are tantalizingly subtle, for example
[We made every living thing of water] (Al-Anbiyaa' 21:30). So
far, no one has found any discrepancies; however, I still looked for one
indisputable scientific fact that would clear up the issue: The size of
the universe or the distance to the sun for example would do nicely. I
could not find anything that specific, of course. Maybe that is the
point: Humans always like evidence on a tray, clearly labeled.
Islamic Dogma?
I
often felt Islam was dogmatic, loaded with tough restrictions and
regulations. Was it all necessary? Can't we just go out and have a good
time and do what we want? But upon closer examination, I saw that those
who "suffer" most by such restrictions are the strongest of society. Who
are these? The wealthy, young, healthy, usually male. Who are
vulnerable? Women, the
poor, the sick, the very young and the very old. All are strongly
protected by Islamic Law, centuries before the welfare state was dreamed
of. For example
Who
drinks and enjoys alcohol the most? Men. However, who actually suffers
most from alcoholism? Battered wives and abused children, not to mention
the thousands killed or maimed by drunk drivers.
Who's
restricted most by the prohibition of sexual promiscuity? A man can
walk
away from pregnancy. Women are biologically inclined to monogamy. So
who pays the real price of promiscuity? The unwanted baby born to a
single mother left to fend for herself.
Who
benefits from the clothing restriction on women? Hardly the men. Women
are protected and respected from predatory males, rape, and pregnancy.
Who
enjoys and profits financially from pornography? Throughout history
this has always been a male thing. Not many magazines seem to be owned
or bought by women. It's well known that rapists and child abusers (men
again, I'm afraid) are often driven and seduced by explicit pornography.
Who suffers by giving obligatory charity? The rich.
Who
wants to care about the elderly in a society that worships youth?
It's such a nuisance to hedonistic young people. Muslims are obliged to
look after their parents and all the elderly. Again the weak are given
security.
The list goes on.
It's
clear that "harsh" Islamic rules actually protect the weak and those
without a voice in society. It's not surprising, then, that the
abhorrence against Islam, even from the very beginning at the time of
Muhammad, came from the high and mighty of society. The entertainment
moguls of Hollywood and elsewhere today see Islam as a severe threat to
their profit margins. It's not so surprising, then, that the vast
majority of those reverting to Islam are women. Also, I noticed that it
was the under-trodden of society, such as the destitute Hindus of India
and blacks in racist America, who feel that only Islam's ideals can
address their problems.
Regarding
women, I thought I had hit on the weak spot of Islam until I discovered
that women enjoyed inheritance and divorce rights 1,400 years before
the West discovered "Women's Lib." A wife even keeps her own name after
marriage. Some of the richest people in the Muslim world are women.
Contrary to my image of Muslim women being "oppressed," my personal
observation was that women were not simply equal to men but in some ways
held in a distinguished, almost reverential position in society. They
didn't behave a bit oppressed. On the contrary, I personally cannot
recall ever hearing a disparaging or sexist remark from a Muslim man
regarding any woman.
Decision time
So
what to do with this information? I had two choices: either to do
nothing (which was tempting) or change
my religion. Also I wanted to break with the Catholic Church which had
lost credibility to me. I didn't want to forever be a lapsed Catholic.
As far as I know, it's not possible to resign (what would I send back —
my confirmation medal?). I mulled over the issue for a year or more
before one spring Friday deciding to take the plunge. Now several years
have passed and I have realized that far from being the end of the
matter, the hard work had only just begun on that Friday. I look ahead
with interest and some trepidation at the resurgence of Islam around the
world — I wonder how the West will react to the inevitable rise of
Islam in the next century: submit or feel threatened? Many vested
interests will fight it, particularly the powerful entertainment
lobbies. Whatever happens, Islam is not going to go away.
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