islam?
QUESTIONS and ANSWERS on ISLAM (from the EVANGELICAL ALLIANCE).
What does ‘Islam’ mean? The
word ‘Islam’ is one of a group of words used in Islam, all with the
idea of peace lying behind them. Islam is submission (to Allah) so that
the conflict between Allah andthe sinner is ended, and peace ensues.
Submission to Allah, of course, means acceptingthe teaching of
Muhammad, following the way of life exemplified by Muhammad (the
pathway, or sunna), and submitting to the will of Allah for one’s life.
‘Islam’ is the word used to cover the Muslim religion just as
‘Christianity’ is used to describe the whole of the Christian religion.
A very commonly heard expression used by Muslims is insha Allah, ‘If
God wills.’ Everyhuman act is to be carried out in submission to what
Allah decrees.
What does the word ‘Muslim’ mean? This is another of those words related to the
idea of peace. The Muslim is a person who submits to Allah, and so is
at peace with Allah. Incidentally it is quite wrong to speak of
‘Muhammadans’ as though Muslims worship Muhammad (as Christians worship
Christ). No Muslim has ever worshipped Muhammad.
How did Islam originate? Some
500 years after the time of Christ we find the Arab peoples divided
into clans which were continually in conflict with one another,
worshipping idols, venerating sun, moon, stars, making offerings to
trees and even strangely shaped rocks. They were leaderless, united
only by their language, and even that was divided into many dialects.
They were divided into two very different groups: the urban, city
dwellers, dependingon commerce, and the rural nomads, depending on
their domesticated animals and finding adequate grazing for them. The
Arabian peninsula had little to commend it economically to either of
the two greatempires, the Christian Byzantine empire to the north-west,
and the Persian Zoroastrian empire to the north-east. Across the Red
Sea was Christian Ethiopia, but the Ethiopian Christians had little
missionary vision. Muhammad was born at Mecca into this situation. He
was orphaned at the age of six, so knew what it was like to be of
little account in society. Later he travelled to Syria with Meccan
trading caravans, and saw the strength of the Christian empire.
Probably it was then that he absorbed what would be central to his
teaching: God is One. At the age of forty he claimed to have received a
vision, a revelation from Allah. And he began to preach in Mecca: ‘God
is one! Idolatry is wrong! Take care of the poor, the aged, the widow,
the orphan! Beware: God will judge those who reject my message! It
seems that at first Muhammad thought that he was simply following
earlier revelations: Old Testament for the Jews, New Testament for
Gentiles, Islam for Arabs. But gradually the conflict between some of
the things Muhammad presented as revelation, and what was in the Jewish
and Christian Bible became apparent. The conflict was resolved by asserting that in some way Christians and Jews has allowed
their scriptures to be corrupted. Islam was seen as correcting Judaism
and Christianity, Islam the final revelation from God, and Muhammad the
final prophet.
What are the main sacred texts for Islam?
The main sacred text is
the Qur’an. The word itself comes from Muhammad who claimed that in a
revelation he was commanded to iqra! ‘recite!’ or ‘cry out!’ or ‘read!’
This command is found in sura (chapter) 96 of the Qur’an.The Qur’an has
114 chapters. Originally what is now the Qur’an was simply a collection
of the sayings of Muhammad, some written down, others learned by heart.
And the chapters themselves are composite, not all given at the same
time. According to the most commonly accepted theory, the whole
collection was brought together on the orders of one of Muhammad’s
successors as leader of the Muslim community, Uthman,in 655 or
thereabouts, some 20 years after Muhammad’s death. When the collection
had been completed Uthman is said to have ordered the destruction of
all texts that differed from it. However, it is wrong to suppose that
the Qur’an is the only sacred text for the Muslim. At a slightly lower
level, and much less reliable, are the collections of traditions, folk
memories of what Muhammad had said or done. There
are several collections of these memories, each of them with a list of
names showing how the tradition, the story, was passed from generation
to generation. These are the Traditions, the Hadith. The most important
collection is by Bukhari, and it has been published in ten large
volumes. It is said that because he sensed that many of the stories
were simply untrue or greatly exaggerated he chose his 4,000 stories
from a total of more than half a million. However scholars are
sceptical even about the value of Bukhari’s collection because it was
put together about 240 years after Muhammad…rather like trying to write
a biography of King George II without the benefit of history books,
encyclopaedias or libraries.
What is the basic understanding of God in Islam? The fundamental tenet of Islam is: God is One. This is clearly presented in the Muslim confession: ‘There is no god but God, and Muhammad is his messenger.’ This doctrine is called ‘Tawhid’ which comes from an Arabic word meaning ‘One’.
The Muslim sees the Christian doctrine of the Trinity as rejecting the One-ness of God: to most Muslims it looks like tri-theism. This fact has a serious consequence: the unforgivable sin for the Muslim is ‘Association’, shirk, associating, linking, anyone with God. And of course linking Jesus with God appears to be shirk. God is the great Other, the Creator. We cannot really use human language to describe him. He is best known by his names: Islam usually refers to the ninety-nine
beautiful names of Allah. But as the Vatican Council expressed it,
although Allah has these beautiful names, God always remains the Other:
he is never ‘God with us’. Allah is omnipotent, all-knowing,
all-seeing. There is a strong current of fatalism in Islam, because
since God is all-knowing, omniscient, he knows the future: my future is already determined by Allah, and it
is my duty to submit to it. Perhaps the most commonly heard phrase
spoken by Muslims is insha allah, ‘If God wills.’ Allah is also the Compassionate. All except one of the chapters of the Qur’an begins with the phrase ‘In the name of God the Merciful, the Compassionate’ (translations vary in just how they render this phrase). But Islam claims that Allah is also the God of the Old Testament and the God of
the New Testament. However not the Old and New Testaments as we now
have them…according to Islam they are corrupt. But Muhammad did see
Islam not as a new religion, but as the final fulfilment of Judaism and
Christianity.
Why is Muhammad’s life often divided between Mecca and Madina?
The first reason is because Muhammad’s move from Mecca to Madina in 622 is taken by Muslims as year one of their calendar. The second reason is because
the move to Madina marks a dramatic change in his life. In Mecca he was
opposed, ridiculed, and his followers were persecuted. In fact there
was a complicated plot to assassinate him. In Madina he was accepted as
the leader of the community, and in place of failure he experienced
almost unbroken success. The number of his followers multiplied.
Thirdly there is a difference apparent between those parts of the Qur’an which come from Mecca and those parts which come from Madina. In the Meccan period the emphasis was on warning Meccans of the folly
of idolatry, and setting out the new teaching of the One God. In Madina
the emphasis is more on the affairs of the new Muslim community. The
Meccan chapters are generally short, emotive, poetic, while the Madinan
chapters are lengthy, involved and seem to be laboured. Fourthly, in
Mecca Muhammad and his followers submitted passively to persecution. In
Madina he first encouraged fighting back when his people were attacked
by the Meccans, and then encouraged fighting as a means of spreading Islam. In fact there is what has been called a trajectory of violence
running through the Qur’an, from submission, to defensive fighting, to aggressive fighting.
How does Islam view Jesus? Jesus
is greatly respected both in the Qur’an and in popular belief. Muslims
believe in the virgin birth of Jesus: accounts of the virgin birth
appear in 2 suras (‘chapters’) of the Qur’an. However it must be said
that these accounts mix the facts as recorded in the Bible with later
legends. Jesus is seen simply as one of a long line of prophets, going back through the Old Testament and concluding with Muhammad, who
is described as the ‘seal’, the last, of the prophets. The Qur’an
explicitly rejects the idea of the Trinity: ‘O people of the Book!
Commit no excesses in your religion: nor say of Allah aught but the
truth. Christ Jesus the son of Mary was a messenger of Allah, and his
word which he bestowed on Mary, and a spirit proceeding from him: so
believe in Allah and his messengers. Say not “Trinity”: desist.’ (Sura
4 verse 171) There is reference in the Qur’an to the fact that Jesus
performed miracles of healing and bringing the dead back to life,
although no actual miracle is recorded. And there is no reference to any
of the parables that Jesus used in his teaching. In popular belief the
prophets are all believed to be sinless, so that Jesus, too, is seen as
being sinless.
Incidentally this is one of the reasons why Islam
believes that the Old Testament is corrupt: David could not have
committed the sins described in the Bible. For the Christian the most
significant point about the Muslim beliefs about Jesus is the rejection
of the crucifixion. Sura 4 verse 157 of the Qur’an says flatly about
the Jews, ‘They said, ‘We killed Christ Jesus the son of Mary, the
messenger of Allah’ – but they killed him not, nor crucified him…of a
surety they killed him not.’ The Qur’an itself does not explain what
actually happened but a popular explanation isthat Jesus was taken away
to heaven by four angels just before the arrest, and that Judas was
made to look like Jesus so that he was arrested and crucified instead
of Jesus. This leads on to another popular belief about Jesus, that he
will return to earth to complete his life, to establish Islam as the
world religion, to destroy Christianity, and to signal the nearness of
the end of the world. He will then die and be buried, in Madina, next
to Muhammad.
What are the main branches of Islam, and how do they differ? Some 80% of all Muslims are Sunni. They claim to follow the ‘sunna’, the pathway followed by Muhammad. The second major group are the Shi’a, the ‘followers’ or the ‘party’, originally the followers of Ali who was Muhammad’s nephew. Their belief is that only a blood descendant of Muhammad can be the leader of Islam, where the Sunnis believe that any capable Muslim can lead. After Muhammad’s death there was disagreement over who should succeed him. Some supported Ali, Muhammad’s nephew who had married Fatima, Muhammad’s favourite daughter. At one point there were two Caliphs, Ali in the south and Muawiyya in Syria. The disagreement came to a climax when
Ali’s son, al-Husayn. The climax came at Karbala, near Baghdad, when
al-Husayn’s followers were massacred. Al-Husayn was killed, decapitated, and the head sent to Damascus and
put on public display. And yet this was Muhammad’s grandson! Shi’a
Muslims all over the world re-enact the events of Karbala every year, and it is probably this that has made the
two groups of Muslims such bitter enemies. There is a third group, the
Sufis. These are best described as Muslim charismatics. They add to the
rather legalistic practices of orthodox Islam a search for a direct
experience of Allah: getting from the outside of Islam to the inside,
to the real thing. Pilgrimage to Mecca is on the outside: anyone can do
that, but the real pilgrimage is to Allah and a Sufi teacher or
‘Sheikh’ can show how this may be done. Any Muslim, Sunni or Shi’a,
might also be a Sufi, and it is sometimes said that 40% of all Muslims
are also in some way involved in Sufism. A fourth group, the Ahmadis, is considered by the rest as
heretical because they believe that their founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad,
was a prophet. The orthodox Muslim belief is that Muhammad was the last
of the prophets. The Ahmadis also teach that Jesus was crucified, but
did not die on the cross, revived in the tomb, travelled to India and
died in Kashmir.
How does Islam understand the relationship between religion and the State?
For the Muslim his religion covers every aspect of his life, so there ought to be no separation of his religion and the government of the country he lives in. Islam has its own ideas about the law, divorce, inheritance, the punishment of criminals, murder, theft, war and peace, and even banking. But many Muslims live in a country which does not
have a Muslim government. They then have a problem because some parts
of the law don’t agree with Muslim ideas. Muslims want to live under
Muslim laws. This produces a further problem for some Muslims: is their
first loyalty to the government of the country they live in, or is it
to Islam? Obviously the government would say that the first loyalty is
to them. As we have seen recently, the problem is worse if the
government of a non-Muslim country is involved in fighting with a Muslim country. If a Muslim then acts on the belief that his first
loyalty is to Islam and supports that Muslim country, then the
government of the country he is living in would count that as treason.
Probably most Muslims would say that if they accept citizenship and all
its privileges in a non-Muslim country then they must be loyal to that country. In contrast to the Muslim view, Christianity largely separates church from government,
and leaves the government to make its laws, and leaves the economists
to decide on how banks should operate.
What is Shari’a Law? The Muslim expects to live in a Muslim society. Any society needs some kind of law code. Islam has produced a complete system of law which all Muslims are expected to obey. Actually the Qur’an itself does not contain much instruction on law for the Muslim, but the Traditions concerning what Muhammad is supposed to have said or donesupplement this. Some two hundred years after Muhammad, complete law codes began to come together. There are four schools of law, Maliki, Shafi, Hanifi and Hanbali, all named after the scholars who put the codes together. Shari’a law deals with both criminal matters and civil matters: theft, manslaughter, murder, marriage, divorce, inheritance.
How did Islam spread across the world so fast!
It expanded first of all by fighting, and by its traders, and more
recently through ‘Call Societies’. Just as Christianity has the idea of
mission (‘Go and make disciples of all nations’), so Islam has dawa,
‘calling’. Muslims are expected to call, invite, non-Muslims to convert
to Islam. Muhammad believed that Jews and Christians had lost their
way, misrepresented their religions, and Islam was to replace them. So
when most of the Arab peoples were converted to Islam the Muslims began
to move out, northwards through Palestine and Syria, and as far as
Constantinople, and west, across North Africa, into Spain and then
France. In 732 there was the battle of Poitiers in France, when the
advancing Muslims were defeated, and that marked the high point of
Islam’s spread into western Europe. In Africa and Asia Islam was spread
more by Arab traders than by Muslim ‘missionaries’. They often took
‘folk Islam’ with them: orthodoxy plus some popular practices: advice
on what to do if someone was ill, for example. The basic teaching of
Islam is easy to understand: God is one, say the prayers, give alms, go
on pilgrimage if you can…so that people seem quite readily to have
abandoned their old religions for the new. Now there are the ‘Call
Societies’, partly based on Christian missionary societies. They run
schools and clinics, youth clubs and social centres. The recent growth
of Islam is striking. In 1900 the world population was about 1,620
million, there were some 200 million Muslims and 558 million
Christians. In the year 2000 it was 6,055 million, there were 1,188 Muslims and two billion Christians. So world population increased by 270%, Muslim population by 490% and
the Christian population by 260%. These approximate figures suggest
that Islam is growing very rapidly.
How has Islam developed in Britain? The first
Muslims were sailors, from Somalia and Yemen, who settled in Liverpool,
Manchester, Birmingham. In 1889 the Woking mosque was built, in 1977
the Regents Park mosque, and now there are more than 2,000 mosques. Of
course many are small, in houses adapted for the purpose. In the 1960s
there was a steady flow of Muslims into Britain from Asia. It was easy
for them to find work, as there were many unskilled jobs which the
British did not want to do. We are only now realising the problem
caused by the fact that these immigrants tended to build their own
communities rather than integrating into the rest of society, adopting
British culture. The birth rate amongst Muslims is more than twice that
of the rest of Britain. One major issue is education. Many Muslims want
schools to be single-sex. Others compromise the education system by
sending their children both to the State school and to the local Qur’an
school. Inevitably the children are overworked. The problem is made
worse in those homes where English is not the language. As the number
of Muslims has increased so Muslim organizations appeared. There are
the Barelwi, the ‘Light-Bearers’, originating in India, the Ismailis,
Shi’a Muslims. From Pakistan Jamat i-Islami appeared with its very
conservative approach to Islam. The heretical Ahmadis began to spread
their ideas through their London Mosque and their literature. Hizb
ut-Tahrir moved onto the University campuses, and were often banned
because of violent anti-semitism. The Muslim Parliament was established
in 1991 to bring Muslim demands to the attention of Westminster. They
want Sharia Law brought alongside the existing system of law, demanding
that any legislation affecting Muslims should be referred to them
before being approved by Parliament. It has not been treated very
seriously either by Westminster or by Muslims in general because of the
unreal nature of their expectations. One leading figure amongst the
Muslim moderates is Dr Zaki Badawi, born in Egypt 1922, Principal of
the London Muslim College, and Chair of the UK Council of Imams and
Mosques. It is interesting to see the great change in UK Muslim
thinking in the 10 years between the 1995 Bradford riots, involving
1,000 Muslim youths, and the 2005 London bombings. When the causes of
the Bradford riots were examined 5 were identified: all local issues.
When the London bombings were analysed, nearly all the justification
for the violence related to Britain’s actions abroad:supporting Israel
against Palestine, the Gulf War, Afghanistan, and our involvement in the Coalition forces that invaded Iraq.
What are the key spiritual disciplines in Islam?
(1) Prayer. He is expected to pray 5 times a day, using the actions and words believed to have been used by Muhammad. The prayers include the affirmation: ‘There is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is his messenger.’
(2) Every year there is a fast in the month of Ramadan. During the day he is expected to eat and drink nothing. but he may eat and drink freely in the evening and morning! (in Arabia it was harder). Ramadan is the month Muhammad received his first revelations. Many try to read the Qur’an right through during Ramadan.
(3) Once in his lifetime he is expected to make the pilgrimage to Mecca, where Muhammad was born, following the pattern of what he did on his final pilgrimage.
(4) Jihad,‘struggle’(spiritual & physical) is often said to be one of the ‘Pillars’ of Islam.
(5) The duty of calling people to become Muslims.
How does Islam view violence, war and conquest? There are several different ideas amongst Muslims on these issues. There is general agreement that if Islam is attacked it has a duty to
oppose violence with violence. But although there have been many
attempts to portray the early invasion of Palestine, Syria, Egypt,
Spain as attempts to defend Islam against the Christian empires based
on Rome and Constantinople, in fact these were offensive wars for the forceful expansion of Islam.