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R.R. Reno

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Our Muslim Allies

In the book of Exodus, Moses confronts Pharaoh, giving a sign of God’s power by turning his staff into a serpent. Pharaoh is nonplussed, and he gathers his magicians to prepare a counter assault. They turn their staffs into serpents as well, but the serpent that comes from the rod of Moses swallows them all (Exod. 7:8–13).

In the Qu’ran, the encounter unfolds in the same way (Sura 7:103–127, with a much shorter version in Sura 79:15–25). What is fascinating however, is the ending. In Exodus, all attention falls on Pharaoh. His heart is hardened. In the Qu’ran, the Egyptian magicians become the focus of the story. They have an epiphany of sorts. In spite of the threats of Pharaoh, who bitterly resents their turn toward the God of Moses and threatens them with punishment, the magicians recognize Moses as a true prophet. They repent of their old ways, bowing down and confessing belief in God, the source of all reality: “We believe now in the Lord of the Worlds; the Lord of Moses and Aaron” (Sura 7:121–122).

In the Spring 2008 of the Islamic journal Seasons, Ibrahim N. Abusharif offers an engaging exegisis of the Qu’ranic text that powerfully demonstrates the ability of the Islamic tradition to make vital contributions to contemporary American culture.

On Abusharif’s reading, the defeat of Pharoh’s magicians illustrates the triumphant power of truth. The magicians are in the pay of Pharaoh, and doubtless they fear his ruthless power. Nonetheless, they are won over, and they commit themselves to the truth. Indeed, the power of their conviction steels them against Pharaoh’s threats. The deeper theological message is clear. There is something in the human heart that can recognize and respond to true signs, true prophecies, true teachings. We are made for truth, so much so that the fear of death itself cannot conquer truth and its power to command our loyalty.

Abusharif’s theological explanation of the magicians’ surprising change of heart reflects a mainstream Islamic interpretation of the human condition. Drawing on various passages in the Qu’ran, Islamic theology teaches that Adam was the first prophet. God does not just create. He also reveals himself. Therefore, the truth about God is woven into the fabric of human history, always percolating under the surface, always informing our minds, even in our worst moments of delusion and unbelief. Just as Augustine marveled at the Creator’s ineffable intimacy with the creature (God is “nearer than I am to myself” Confessions 3.6.11), so the Qu’ran proclaims that God is closer to man “ than his jugular vein” (Sura 50:16).

This theological claim about an original Adamic revelation is the key to Islamic humanism. Like Christianity, Islam recognizes a preexisting aptitude for faith. Indeed, by my reading, Islam is even more optimistic than Christianity. In Adam, all human beings receive the prophecy repeated and sealed by Mohammed. Therefore, the message of Mohammed engages and fulfills a universal human memory of revelation.

The Islamic theology of primal revelation calls to mind to Karl Rahner’s controversial notion of a supernatural existential—that is, the notion that there is a universal human orientation (but not, strictly speaking, an essential or natural one, making it a work of God’s supernatural grace) toward the God of Christian revelation. Similarly, Muslim theologians teach that we are all, in Adam, infected with the divine, so to speak. The upshot is an Islamic confidence that prophecy finds a receptive heart: Like seeks like. This gives Islamic humanism, like Christian humanism, an aggressive edge and a tendency toward triumphalism. To echo Rahner, everyone who has not heard the Prophet’s message is an “anonymous Muslim.”

Our age is unsympathetic to both the Christian and Muslim views, however different they may be, and however nuanced within their own traditions. Our secular culture does not like to be told that it is part of a much larger divine story. Nor do the critical intellectuals of our day wish to hear that the inner dynamism of their work is oriented toward fulfillment in Mohammed’s prophecy (or Christ’s death and resurrection).

Enlightenment rationalism was happy to confront religious claims directly, refuting them and substituting a grand narrative of reason and progress as the true context for understanding our lives. Postmodernity takes a different approach. Abusharif turns to one of Richard John Neuhaus’ long time friends, the Lutheran theologian Robert Jenson, to explain the contemporary strategy. “Jenson,” Abrusharif writes, “correctly laments postmodern pressures that try to dismiss the notion of an unbroken sacred narrative that permeates the entirety of time.” There is no singular, unifying truth, we are told.

In a passage that could have come from Pascendi Dominici Gregis (the 1907 papal encyclical condemning modernism), Abusharif puts his finger on the way in which prevailing intellectual strategies of critique tend to undermine our confidence that our lives have a transcendent reference. “Postmodern insistence that truth is closely attached to historical currents and, therefore, should be deconstructed and reinvented as the ‘times’ and history change,” he writes, “seriously threatens modern man’s receptivity to divine signs and, yes, epiphanies. At best we are left with indifference or the nebulous sensations of religion or some ‘spirituality’ disconnected from the original spring.”

That sounds right to me. Countless progressive Christian thinkers have wanted to chuck dogma. Remember Rudolf Bultmann and his claims that modern man can no longer believe old-fashioned claims about the resurrection? The legacy lives on. Contemporary revisionists continue to presume to free the kernel of gospel truth from the husk of traditional dogma. The results are been pretty much as Abusharif suggests: indifference and nebulous sensations.

Abusharif’s reflections on Moses’ confrontation with Pharoah’s magicians offers no programmatic alternative to the postmodern habits of critical dissection and the presumption of historical relativism. Nonetheless, a sentiment emerges, one that affirms the integration of piety into the intellectual life. The sacred narrative calls for reverence. Faith seeks understanding; understanding cannot find its way to faith.

Once again, I find myself agreeing. We cannot hold ourselves aloof. We cannot grow to see something we refuse to search for. Even worse, the cynical soul that insists on looking for hidden motives, expressions of power, or histories of oppression cultivates a dangerous blindness. The histories of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam offer many episodes filled with all too human failures. There is plenty of material with which to feed our postmodern suspicions, tempting us to forego the nourishing possibilities of the transcendent and lasting truths that are woven into the fabric of the sacred past.

Undoubtedly, countless points of theological disagreement separate Muslims from Christians, just as a great deal separates Christians from Jews. The last thing I want is easy bonhomie, which is just another form of modern (and postmodern) indifference. The sharp edges and searching demands of revealed truth necessarily drive us apart. Christianity and Islam (and perhaps Judaism, but in a very different way) proclaim a universal truth that is magnetic. Each seeks to gather humanity around a single point rather than bless diversity and difference with the magic wand of postmodern rhetoric. Disagreements about this single point rightly engage our religious commitments and passions. Differences that matter invariably matter.

Yet our age presents a unique challenge that has the power to draw Jews, Christians, and Muslims together. For the first time in human history, there is a party that is not fighting over which truth to believe. Instead, Western culture now features a powerful and articulate elite that argues against something so compelling, so comprehensive, and so existentially powerful as religious truth. “Fundamentalism” is this elite’s “F” word. It is a label widely used to smear any who approach sacred history with reverence, whether Jew, Christian, or Muslim.

First Things was founded to combat the elite Western presumption that religious faith is somehow a threat to intellectual sophistication, critical intelligence, and the survival of a democratic, pluralistic society. Anyone picking up Seasons will recognize that Muslims in America struggle against exactly the same anti-religious presumption. The articles follow along lines familiar to First Things readers—a vigorous affirmation of the life-giving power of divine truth in concert with a nuanced engagement with Western culture.

The familiar feel of the arguments should not be surprising. The dictatorship of relativism is no respecter of persons. It seeks to submerge faith of all sorts in a sea of indifference. When compared with Richard Rorty there can be little doubt: Jews, Christians, and Muslims are on the same side.


R.R. Reno, features editor at First Things, is an professor of theology at Creighton University.


 

Comments:

7.29.2009 | 2:27am
Bill James says:
Thank you. This is one of the best contributions to the First Things blog that I have read. I myself am Roman Catholic, yet I too realize that Jews, Christians and Moslems are allies in a common struggle against secular nihilism and neo-paganism. Might I propose a transnational, pan-monotheistic movement?
7.29.2009 | 6:40am
Joe Legris says:
This is indeed great stuff for fuzzy-thinking one-worlders. Islam is a hostile and alien creed. Try reading the QUR'AN, TAHRIKE TARSILE version, then follow-up with Benedict's Regensberg Address. Jihad is the disease of Islam, Mr. Podsnap.
7.29.2009 | 7:56am
Great aqrticle. As a frequent visitonm to the Middleeast, and a participant in several conferences, at Albaath and Tuniv Universities in Syria, it is my bioew that there is mopre common ground between Islam and Christianity than there are differences, and that we can lear from each other.

I have had many discussion, about this issue with my fiends, and conclude that at some time, the God in whom we both believe will shine His light on true believers, and we will become as one.
7.29.2009 | 10:15am
A Pecksniffian comment: 2nd paragraph, last sentence, the reference is to Exod 7:121-122.

Surely that should be Sura 7:121-122?
7.29.2009 | 10:44am
miasarx says:
There are some things we can agree about with Muslims. But the differences are huge and insuperable, e.g.: all schools of Muslim jurisprudence approve the doctrine of abrogation, which renders any peaceful verses of the Koran moot. There is no freedom of speech, or freedom of conscience in Shariah law. Women and non-believers are second-class and worse. Honor killing is expressly permitted by the scholars at Al-Aznar (sp?) in Cairo. Anti-semitism is rampant and rabid, in the Koran itself. Mohammed was a charismatic but terrible man. A warlord, a caravan raider, a polygamist. He beheaded hundreds of Jews.
First Things has published articles and commentary warning that Islam can be seen as a pagan monotheism. As in paganism there is no difference between the sacred and the secular. The treatment of women, the allowance for slavery, all this is paganism.
Let us be very clear about Islam.
7.29.2009 | 11:04am
Howard Kainz says:
I agree with Joe Legris that this is a superb example of fuzzy thinking. The author is apparently unfamiliar with the vilification of Judaism and Christianity in the Medinan segments of the Qur'an, and in the Hadith, as well as Mohammad's defense of lying for the sake of spreading Islam.
7.29.2009 | 11:52am
Steve Golay says:
In societies not dominated by post-modernist, paganist, irreligious elites - with the public square squared off by competing monotheisms - what then? Will the P.S. yield to the monotheism that is the most totalitarian in matching a crushing oneness of state and society to a God (or Allah) whose Oneness comes smashing down leaving nothing not Allah not standing?

What keeps man's society from being a crushing, totalitarian oneness. Certianly that is not how man images God.


Maybe I should spend more time attending conferences, dialogue teas, and reading literary reviews - in my common conversation with Muslims, it is the hoped for totalitarian triumph of Islam that dominates the "exchanges".
7.29.2009 | 12:28pm
Kevin Hughes says:
Well said, Rusty. How far would it stretch FT to get some more Muslim contributors?
7.29.2009 | 12:57pm
Sheldon Mann says:
We must never forget our civility in public discourse nor when times call for saying what must be said, "Islam is a false religion."
7.29.2009 | 2:04pm
Jimbo says:
I really think that many of the commentators have missed the point of this article. I am pretty sure that Rusty Reno would would oppose a transnational, pan-monotheistic movement . Equally, I think he would agree with many of the theological critiques of Islam presented by the commentators. However, these same people are missing the critical point of this article which is this: that on a certain level, Islam is epistemologically superior to secular modernity, as well as post-modernity. It has answers that secular elites cannot give to a population. I would say that this is not an article for fuzzy one-worlders either. All of our critiques of fundamentalist Islam contain a thread that the self-limiting reason of the West is incompetent to deal with Fundamentalism because in self-limiting itself it has dissolved theology. Thus to cite Regensburg is to miss a large point of the address,deeply married to the point about the use of violence, which is focused on the self-limitation of reason and how it cannot participate in the "dialogue of cultures".
7.29.2009 | 5:20pm
mark hobart says:
Qur'an (5:51) - "O you who believe! do not take the Jews and the Christians for friends; they are friends of each other; and whoever amongst you takes them for a friend, then surely he is one of them; surely Allah does not guide the unjust people."
7.29.2009 | 7:25pm
miasarx says:
Jimbo says some of us have missed the point of the article. No. It's just that the point of the article is not going to get us very far. For example, it's great that some Muslims would support anti-abortion measures. It's nice that they are religious and understand that secularism is a dead -end. Many pagans would agree, at least to the latter point.
But that is not enough. We might be able to join hands on a few things. A very few. But that will not mean that in the end Islam is a religion of peace, or that it is true, or that it does not want to make us all dhimmis.
7.30.2009 | 10:52am
Kevin says:
Oh good heavens, Miasarx and Joe Lesgris. If you'll notice in the Regensburg address, Benedict points to a similar problem in Christian theology in the wake of Scotus, and any effort to understand Islam will show that Ibn Hazm does not represent *the position* of Islam on the relation between God's power and God's word any more than Ockham does within Christianity! If Ockham had the final word on God's power and God's truth, I'm not sure I'd be interested in Christian faith... Good thing he doesn't.

There's a difference, of course, between alliance and communion. Miasarx seems willing to grant some commonalities, but won't even care to begin a discussion there. How does Miasarx know how 'very few' things we can join hands on?

Look, if you're a Christian, you'd have to, ipso facto, be convinced that Islam does not possess the fullness of truth, because the fullness of truth is in Christ. Why not just stipulate that and move on? Faithful Christians are quite used to being in conversation with others who, in our conviction, do not receive the fullness of truth... we've done it from the beginning. Allies can disagree, even about some fundamental things, without ceasing to be allies.
8.13.2009 | 12:46pm
Our Christian theological notions might give us categories that skew Islamic self-understanding but the dialogue with, and the defense against, an invasive Islam have been going on since the very beginning of this religion. Accordingly, our critique in our terms is a very necessary work that we need to accomplish ad intra, for the formation of Christians. Thank you for an interesting article.
The French Dominican Islamic scholars and founders of their school in Cairo, Anawati and Jomier, spoke often of the "psychological tranquility" of Muslims. It seems appropriate to evoke it. Jacques Jomier held that it was linked to the fact that Islam makes no demands on the human intelligence that go beyond what natural reason can discover. This ties in with the idea you pin-point that creation (nature) and revelation (grace) are not distinguished as such in Islam: Adam being seen as the first prophet 'nabi' of a revelation from Allah; humanity being accompanied by 'rasul' that bring messages of certain truths of Allah throughout human history; the refusal of anything other than a personal "original sin" and not the fallen human condition of the Christian narrative - and this in a context where we are all Muslim souls having already made the shahada to Allah prior to creation in time: so a revert fulfils, as you say, pace Rahner, what he was always was prior to his earthly creation.
This resolute reduction of the genuinely autonomous ontology of creation to mere instances of Divine volition - the infamous occasionalism that other commentators have pointed out is similar to certain medieval Franciscan theories - transposed to the human level means that ONCE ALLAH'S WILL IS SUBMITTED TO a quietist serenity is engendered that Anawati and Jomier noted amongst believers of Islam. Instead of working out his salvation in fear and trembling, the Muslim seeks what is permitted and avoids what is forbidden - halal, haram.
All this, I grant, makes for a more optimistic anthropology, superficially at least, because the consequences of Original Sin are reduced to nothing in the immensity of the Divine Presence and its all powerful fiat. There is no salvation history as such, there is no covenant - there is only Allah's will which is irresistable. That said, he will never say to those who are submitted to him, "I call you servants no longer but friends."
Similarly, the conflation of the natural with the supernatural that you underline - might it not be, very curiously, yet another form of that ancient nostalgia for a terrestrial paradise?
Why, I think it very well might be. Question is, can you see why?

On a more personal note your article troubled me deeply - because you sounded surprised by how well certain Islamic ideas chimed with your own deepest intuitions. You sounded, well, not to put a too fine a point on it: intrigued, attracted even. There was a different tenor in the way you expressed that admiration than in the very real cultural possibility of finding common ground in a secular society and that set alarm bells ringing in my sense of the Faith. Quite why I should be so impertinent to point that out to you, I do not know. An imaginative projection on my part, perhaps, or some kind of mystical illumination! But for what it's worth: Take up your Cross.

This is a narrative that both Islam and Secular Relativism agree on:
the Cross is not to be abided.
And therein lies a very interesting article.
I look forward to reading it!
8.27.2009 | 12:20am
I really appreciated this piece. Ibrahim AbuSharif is a friend of mine, and a very eloquent writer.

I think I was particularly happy to see this piece, because though I find many of the articles in First Things to be insightful, very often the analysis of Islam and relations with the Muslim world is quite poor, to the point that one can't help wonder whether behind these misunderstandings, lies ignorance or malevolence. This piece, no doubt, is a definite step in the right direction.

I would suggest that in order to get beyond such absurdities like the following (quoted by a previous commentator): "it was linked to the fact that Islam makes no demands on the human intelligence" there be a real genuine dialogue between Muslim and Christian thinkers. Statements such as these can't really be entertained in good faith, and it gives the impression to Muslims that Christians are arrogant racists whose imperial enterprise is yet to have come to a close. Dialogue, if done with sincerity, can overcome such ill-will, misunderstanding and misinformation (it obviously can't overcome doctrinal difference), certainly I think your own Christian faith would demand of you to not content yourself with wild caricatures of the other.
9.15.2009 | 3:08pm
Some really ugly comments below, with some nice thoughtful ones. Those who make banner statements about jihad, disease, false religion, what the Prophet of Islam said, scriptural verses (that cannot be understood except in "context," if that concept has survived), enemy religion, and so on, exhibit a pungent ignorance of not only Islam but of religion itself. It is impossible for any of those things to be true, particularly about Islam's relationship with other religions, and still see a brilliant civilization with an extraordinary record of relations with the "other" in times that had no scent of political correctness, especially when we look at Christian and Judaic history and the extraordinary violence and stinging polemics against rival religions and even denominations. Really.
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