Muslim Faith and Values: A Guide for Christians
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Robert A. Hunt
Robert A. Hunt resides in British Columbia, Canada with his wife and five children. He is the author of the thirteen published titles, including the Genation series, Jasper series and Sasquatch stand alone Legend series and a fun short story. He enjoys writing adventurous tales like science fiction, fantasy and historical fiction They remain unpredictable with new perspectives and clever story twists that distinguish, Robert A. Hunt as an author.
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Muslim Faith and Values - Robert A. Hunt
Introduction
This book has an ambitious intent: to guide non-Muslims into an appreciation of Islam, and more importantly their Muslim neighbors. Explaining the Islamic religion is in principle fairly easy. To a greater extent than many religions, its rituals, ethical and legal principles, and basic beliefs are widely agreed. More difficult than explaining the religion called Islam is uncovering the faith of Muslims. Yet it is an understanding of Muslim faith that is essential to appreciating why Muslims hold fast to their religion, and the ways in which they act out their religious convictions.
In order to keep the focus of this book on the faith of Muslims, the book centers its presentations on Muslim ideals. These are the concrete manifestations of the character of God that Muslims speak about most often when they explain or defend their faith. It is these ideals that lead Muslims to submit to God and God’s guidance, which is another meaning of the word Islam. It is in the course of discussing these ideals that the beliefs and practices of Islam will be presented.
In addition to what they learn in their families and communities, the ideals of Muslims are formed by and articulated in a range of Islamic literature. Most important is the Quran, followed by the sunnah of the prophet, the Sirah of the prophet, hagiographical literature, and books of law. Poetry and fiction also play an important role in shaping Muslim ideals, as does the ritual of prayer and worship. Each chapter closes with review of the key themes of the chapter and a series of readings from these various types of literature.
The intention of this book is to be useful to study groups. Short video lectures are available online on the Muslim Faith and Values YouTube channel for group and personal viewing. Discussion questions are found at the end of each chapter, following the reiteration of key themes. Further questions follow each reading. Groups may want to consider devoting two sessions to each chapter, one for discussing the body of the chapter, and another for discussing the accompanying readings. Groups are encouraged to invite Muslims to participate in the discussion. Not all Muslims will agree with authors quoted, and their viewpoints will help widen the group’s understanding of Muslim faith.
Maps, a list of suggested books, a glossary, and appendixes with information on the pilgrimage to Mecca, major Muslim groups, important Muslim festivals, and the ninety-nine name of God, appear at the end of the book.
Readers should be aware that there is no standard for Romanized spelling of Arabic terms and names in English language publications. In this text the plural and singular of words commonly found in English follow the anglicized usage. Others follow the Arabic spelling and are noted in the text. For simplicity diacritical marks indicating pronunciation have not been used. Muslims terminology for some specific persons and roles differs in different languages. Here Arabic titles have been used, but readers should be aware that Muslims may use Turkish, Persian, Urdu, and Malay equivalents, depending on their own cultural background.
Dates in this book are given in two forms. Dates labeled "ah" are dates according to the Muslim calendar, which begins with the hijrah, or migration of the Muslim community from Mecca to Yathrib (later Medina al-Nabi). The Muslim calendar is purely lunar, and years do not correspond to contemporary Western calendar years. All dates given in the after hijra format are also translated into common Western calendar, and are labeled CE
for common era if they are after the birth of Jesus and BCE
if before.
From a Muslim point of view the Quran as such exists only in Arabic, as it was originally received by Muhammad. English versions of the Quran are regarded as interpretations rather than translations. This work uses the interpretation of the Quran prepared by Yusof Ali, unless otherwise noted. All quotations of the Quran are given in italics, and the chapter and verse are noted at the end. Readers who have, or refer to, other interpretations of the Quran should note that there are small variations in the numbering of verses (āyāt) between different interpretations. Many Muslim authors refer to the chapters of the Quran (surah) by their title rather than number. This work uses the system of numbered chapters common in most English interpretations.
Robert Hunt
Revised, Dallas
2018
Chapter 1: Religion and Faith
On a warm humid afternoon in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, I sat at a table with a dozen students from the University of Malaya. We were talking about Islam, and particularly how Muslims understood Christians, and Christians understood Muslims. As we spoke, different facets of the faith of these students emerged. The name of a professor came up, and someone remarked that, He is Muslim, but not practicing.
A woman quickly replied, Islam is a belief and a practice. If he does not does not practice what Muslims practice, then he is not a Muslim.
Her ideas about Islamic belief and practice were clearly defined in terms of the five pillars of Islam and the commonly accepted Islamic creed. The other students did not contradict her, but many wanted to add to what she said.
One young man was anxious to stress that the central tenant of Islam was the oneness of God, and for him personally Islam was a path of unity with God. Another woman reminded me that Islam was dīn, a way of life that encompassed not only the five pillars, but also all economic, political, family, and personal relationships. For her this was the glory of Islam, and the reason she had become a Muslim although she was born into a Buddhist family.
Another student added that Muhammad and the early leaders of Islam were an inspiration to him. He believed that only by imitating their charisma and moral leadership could modern Muslims shake off the last vestiges of colonialism. Quoting the ideas of several modern Muslim writers, another young woman stressed that Islam was a methodology for solving problems and organizing human life, not just a fixed set of rules. Finally one young man put forward that the key to Islam was the Quran. He used the prefix hafiz
with his name, to indicate that he could chant the entire Quran from memory. For him the Quran was a miracle whose power had transformed ignorant and warlike tribes into a great civilization.
The ideas expressed by these students can be found over and again in the modern Islamic literature that most of them are reading. All of them would, at least in public, assent to the importance of the five pillars of Islam and basic Muslim beliefs. Yet it wasn’t these basic beliefs and practices that most excited them most about their own faith. They were animated by a set of ideals that inspire them both to share their faith, and to work actively through various student groups to make it the dominant force in shaping their society and nation. Understanding these ideals is the key to understanding the motive power of Islam in the modern world, and why Islam has such an attraction not only for young people raised in Muslim families, but a growing number of converts as well. To introduce some of these ideals we’ll look at a few of the most popular Muslim writers of this century; the ones whose books can be purchased in almost any Muslim bookstore, and which are available in scores of languages.
1. Mawlana Sayyid Mawdudi
Mawlana Sayyid Mawdudi was one of the founders of the influential Jama’at-I Islami, a Pakistan-based movement for the reform and renewal of Islam. Mawdudi’s scholarship, and his commitment to making Islam the driving force behind Pakistani government, law, and society, made him a figure much admired by Muslim youth. His most popular and widely read work, Toward Understanding Islam, is both a primer in basic Islamic beliefs and an apologetic for the need, in the twentieth century, for a reexamination of the foundations upon which society is built.
Mawdudi articulates powerfully a central idea, and ideal, of Islam: that God’s progressive and universal revelation reached its final and perfect form in Islam, and that Islam is thus the world’s only truly progressive
religion. He presents a vision of Islam as rational, forthright, and humane. It is the religion that restores God and God’s law to the central place in human affairs, and thus restores both just social relations and a proper human attitude toward creation.
The focus of Mawdudi’s writing is always on the principles that underlie both law and belief, and the ways in which these promote human ethics and scientific advancement. His apologetic work is frequently quoted as Muslims seek to affirm that their religion yields to no ideology in the advancement of peace, security, and human dignity. It is also controversial in asserting Islamic principles of human relationships in preference to universal understandings of human rights. But Muslims and non-Muslims are uncomfortable with his concept of a an Islamic state run on theocratic principles.
Most Muslims live in countries that are materially poor, yet have a social memory of being part of one of the world’s greatest civilizations. Their powerlessness and poverty are strongly at odds with the sense of individual self-worth, responsibility, and dignity instilled by their religion. At the same time the apparent decadence, violence, and vice of the Western civilization (which Muslims see on television and read in about in their newspapers) is wedded to overwhelming power and wealth. One common explanation for this situation, adequately borne out by historical fact, is that the Muslims are victims of Western colonialism and imperialism. But why? Why should the followers of God’s perfect religion be so degraded?
The answer presented by Mawdudi in his book Come, Let Us Be Muslims, and by many other Muslim leaders, is that Muslims have not perfectly realized their religion. Thus the solution to the Muslim problem is that they return to the roots of the religion, and rebuild on those sure foundations. They must more perfectly implement the great and complex system of Islam found at the height of classical Islamic civilization. Then despite their present condition, it will be Muslims alone who are destined both to shape the future of civilization and enjoy the pleasures of heaven.
One could argue that Mawdudi’s vision of Islam leaves out many of the internal conflicts that so divide the Islamic world, as well as the many ways in which Muslim law and belief seem outdated and superstitious. For example, he does not talk of the problem of the Shī‛ite Muslims, their persecution by the Sunni majority in Pakistan and elsewhere, or how Shī‛ite beliefs fit into his model of Islam. Nor does he answer women’s rights advocates apart from asserting that Islam insures a woman’s honor.
But it should be remembered that Mawdudi was a reformer, not merely a defender, of the classical Islamic tradition. The inspiration he has given to generations of young Muslims came by asserting to them and for them that their tradition and their faith could build on the science and technology of twentieth-century society, while overcoming its brutality and inequality.
2. Sayyid Qutb
Sayyid Qutb’s book Milestones was written while he was imprisoned in Egypt in 1965. It was widely banned, and widely read, in the Muslim world. Its popularity was fanned by Qutb’s death by hanging in 1966. It was Qutb’s role in the Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt, his fierce opposition to the government, and his powerful call for the renewal of the Muslim community that led to his death at the hand of Egypt’s government.
His call for renewal was based on an appeal to what he calls The Quranic Generation,
or the generation of leaders who knew the Quran and Muhammad from the beginning of the Islamic movement. These leaders knew firsthand the profound contrast between Islam as knowledge of God and the jahilia or spiritual and material ignorance that preceded it. Qutb believed that later generations, and particularly the current generation of political leaders, had compromised and blended the Islamic with the non-Islamic. He maintained that the twentieth-century world, including the Muslim world, was in a state of ignorance equal to that of the pre-Islamic Arabic tribes. The only solution was a radically new leadership for the Muslim community: a leadership that, like the Quranic generation, would renounce everything and start fresh with the Quran and the Prophet in rebuilding a proper Islamic society.
Qutb’s appeal was revolutionary, and many credit him with having given the ideological basis for radical Islamic movements such as Hamas and Al Qaeda, as well as having provided a justification for terrorism. Yet it must be remembered that his message gained emotional strength and credibility from the fact that Muslims had for centuries idealized first four rightly guided caliphs.
All Muslim children know their heroic deeds and great works by heart. Other reformers had sought in that golden age the principles for rebuilding Islamic law and belief. Qutb focused instead on the personal transformation and commitment of those who build their entire life and life work on God’s revelation to Muhammad. For Qutb’s followers the golden age was neither an object of scholarly study nor a source of nostalgic comfort in the face of present-day humiliation. It was a living possibility for those who chose to dedicate themselves to the cause of Islam against a world (Muslim and non-Muslim) sunk in ignorance and degradation. Radical as he was, his radicalism was rooted in the idealism of almost every Muslim who had marveled at the victories of Muhammad and his first followers.
3. Ayatollah Khomeini
The image of Ayatollah Khomeini, which was burned into the consciousness of Americans and Europeans during the Iranian revolution of 1977, is almost impossible to reconcile with his popularity and influence among Muslim youth of that and later generations. In part this is because reporting on Khomeini in the West tended to focus on his anti-American and anti-Western polemics, and of course the enormous political and economic losses caused by the overthrow of the Shah of Iran. In part it was an issue of images. Muslims, and particularly Muslim religious leaders, had been caricatured in Western media for many years: until any picture of a turbaned, bearded, religious teacher was likely to summon up images of despotism, religious zealotry, and corruption. Muslim youth were not so negatively affected by either his polemic or his image. In most of the Muslim world his was the image of a respected community leader, even a saint. And his rhetoric was a declaration of independence for Islamic culture, values, and dreams.
Perhaps most importantly, he actually succeeded in setting up an Islamic republic, however problematic. For many Muslims the Ayatollah Khomeini managed to establish the beginnings of a renewed Islamic civilization. While the shortcomings of Iran have been highlighted in the West and are well recognized by Muslims, for some it has also succeeded in important ways. One of these was simply the humiliation of the United States, whose overwhelming economic and cultural influence are much resented in the Muslim world. More recently attaining nuclear power and even the possibility of nuclear weapons can be seen as restoring the power and prestige of Islam. Beyond this Khomeini managed to set up government institutions that seemed to give place to both the ideals of democracy and theocracy, neither of which existed under the rule of the Shah. And the enforcement of Islamic law in daily life seemed to create what many Muslims had always idealized, a place where Islam was truly a way of life that embraced everything from personal dress to political institutions.
The Islamic republic has not lived up to all its promises since 1979, and among Muslims and non-Muslims it is criticized for its oppression of religious minorities, lack of political freedom, and support of terrorism. It is nonetheless the only Muslim country in the world whose political, legal, and social structures are visibly based on Islamic law and tradition, and which has maintained its economic and political independence from non-Muslim nations. Khomeni’s luster has dimmed with time, but the ideals of independence and fidelity to an Islamic political vision he seemed to embody still grip the Muslim world.
4. Fazlur Rahman and Said Nursi
Fazlur Rahman, an intellectual educated in the West, and a professor at the University of Chicago, is in many ways the antithesis of the figures mentioned above. He has not been a political revolutionary or a polemicist, and his ideas have been much appreciated by Christian and Western scholars. What makes him popular and influential in Muslim circles is his careful re-evaluation of the roots of the Islamic tradition, and his call for a systematic Islamization of knowledge.
He and others like him have tried to point out a path for rebuilding the Islamic intellectual tradition so that in its metaphysics, epistemology, and methodology it can replace the secular, scientific system of the West. Moreover, by working within the Western intellectual framework, and criticizing it from within, Rahman seems to point the way forward not only for Muslims, but for a larger humanity. The Islamization of knowledge as Rahman saw it wasn’t just a project for Muslims, but is the restoration of human knowledge to its rightful relation with the Divine revelation.
Less known in the West, yet important in Turkish and thus European Islam, is the work of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi (1876–1960). Said Nursi received a classical Islamic education as well as learning from a number of Sufi leaders and maintaining a lifelong study of esoteric spirituality. In the late nineteenth century he was able to study modern science and philosophy and from that point onward he directed his energies to developing a theoretical basis for integrating the strengths of traditional Islamic learning, Sufi wisdom, and secular/scientific learning. He would also become active in founding schools that would put into practice the unique curriculum he envisioned.
From the advent of Kemel Ataturk’s government of Turkey in 1922 Nursi was at odds with the thoroughgoing secularism of the prevailing political movement, and he often faced restrictions on his movement, or arrest. In this climate his approach to educational philosophy shifted from an emphasis on saving Islamic knowledge from its own narrowness to infusing secular knowledge with an awareness of the transcendent. What would become his most important work, the Risale-i-Nūr, was banned in Turkey. He was nonetheless able to establish