By Rudy
Barnes, Jr.
Calls
for an Islamic Reformation have coincided with the 500th anniversary
of the Protestant Reformation. Perhaps
Islam is in the midst of its own Reformation and the world hasn’t noticed. The Protestant Reformation was not a
liberating event. Instead it initiated Christian
sectarian conflict between religious leaders like Luther, Zwingli and Calvin
and their political patrons, similar to Islamic sectarian conflict in the Middle
East today.
The
libertarian reforms of the Enlightenment were not given serious consideration
in the Western world until after 1648, when the Treaty of Westphalia ended those
religious wars that plagued Europe for more than a century after the Protestant
Reformation. If Islamic sectarian conflict
in the Middle East and Africa is analogous to the Christian sectarian wars that
followed the Protestant Reformation, then perhaps they portend a coming Islamic
Enlightenment.
There
are other analogies between current Islamist sectarian conflict and Christian
sectarian wars. Leaders of the
Protestant Reformation like Luther, Zwingli and Calvin opposed religious
reforms and used political alliances and violence suppress dissent, much like
radical Islamists today. And just as
Luther used the first generation media printing press to promote his ideals,
radical Islamists are using the internet and current social media to attract supporters.
The
role of Islamic Law (Shari’a) is at the heart of Islamic violence toady. Islamists argue for the strict enforcement of
Shari’a, but Mustafa Akyol has noted that Islamic values “are much better
protected in Western democracies than in ‘Islamic’ states” and that “…Shariah
should be translated into a doctrine of the inalienable rights of all
people.” To that end, Akyol has suggested
that the Jewish Enlightenment provides a useful precedent for Islam.
Islamic
scholars remain divided on whether to accept libertarian democracy, human
rights and the secular rule of law. While
there seems to be a trend toward human rights, Shari’a continues to be an
obstacle to political freedom and justice with the enforcement of apostasy and
blasphemy laws and discrimination against women and non-Muslims in Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, Pakistan, Iraq and Afghanistan—all U.S. allies in the Middle East.
Many
Islamic scholars have agreed that the
greatest commandment to love God and their neighbors—including those of
other religions—as they love themselves is a
common word of faith for Muslims and Christians. If that love command is accepted as a
principle of Shari’a, then those Muslims who love their freedom will feel
obligated to share their freedom with others, and interpret Shari’a to give
non-Muslims the fundamental freedoms of religion and speech.
Equal
justice under law requires fundamental human rights that provide political
freedom. There is no place for religious
law in a libertarian democracy, where religious standards of legitimacy must be
voluntary moral standards, not coercive laws.
Loving others is a moral obligation that cannot be enforced by law, and that
allows immorality. The test of any religion
is whether its followers obey its moral standards when they are free to disobey
them.
Some
Islamic scholars argue that moral decadence in libertarian democracies is
evidence that Shari’a should limit political freedom to protect people from undesirable
immoral behavior. But radical Islamists
and authoritarian rulers in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Pakistan have used that
same rationale to suppress their political opposition with blasphemy laws.
Current
Islamic sectarian conflicts in the Middle East and Africa are similar to those
Christian religious wars that followed the Protestant Reformation of 1517. Perhaps Islamist sectarian violence is but a
prelude to an Islamic Enlightenment that will allow political freedom and redefine
justice under Shari’a with democracy, human rights and the secular rule of law.
Notes:
In reviewing Jared Rubin’s Rulers,
Religion and Riches: Why the West Got Rich and the Middle East Did Not,
Christopher Kissane of The Guardian considered Rubin’s view of the
Reformation (and printing press) in Europe and how it related to Islamic
culture:
“The
driving motivation of most rulers is not ideology or to do good, but to
maintain and strengthen their hold on power: “to propagate their rule”. This
requires “coercion” – the ability to enforce power – and, crucially, some form
of “legitimacy”. In the medieval world, both Islamic and Christian rulers
claimed part of their legitimacy from religious authorities, but after the
Reformation, Rubin thinks that European governments had to turn away from
religion as a source of political legitimacy.
…Islamic
rulers, by contrast, continued to rely on religious legitimation and economic
interests that were mostly excluded from politics, leading to governance that
focused on the narrow interests of sultans, and the conservative religious and
military elites who backed them.
…The
source of Europe’s success, then, lies in the Reformation, a revolution in
ideas and authority spread by what Martin Luther called “God’s highest and
ultimate gift of grace”: the printing press.
…Europe’s
long reformations were more a maze than a path. As Rubin notes, “getting
religion (mostly) out of politics took centuries” – centuries of radical social
upheaval and destructive warfare. He argues persuasively for the importance of
both religion and secularization in economic history, but religious change
affected not just politics but culture and ideas.
In
the Middle East the powers of state and religion were fused by Ottoman sultans
intent on legitimising their rule and expansion through Islam. Unity that had
been a medieval advantage became an early modern hindrance: with no political
need to negotiate with economic interests, the Ottomans failed to pursue
modernizing reforms in finance, currency and law.” See https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/aug/04/rulers-religion-riches-jared-rubin-review.
Alan Wolfe has described the
merger of Christianity and other religions in Western democracies with the
secular libertarian values of the Enlightenment, and projected that Islam will
follow suit.
For reforming trends and movements in modern Islamic history and misunderstanding Luther’s Reformation,
see https://www.juancole.com/2017/09/should-islamic-reformation.html.
Mustafa Akyol has noted that
“…polls show that most Muslims living in the West, especially the U.S., are
happy with liberal laws and norms;” and that because Islam shares an emphasis
on religious law with Judaism, it is likely that Islam will likely follow the precedent
of the Jewish Enlightenment and embrace libertarian values through a
progressive interpretation of the Qur’an and Shari’a. See https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/13/opinion/shariahs-winding-path-into-modernity.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-left-region®ion=opinion-c-col-left-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-left-region. See also, free
speech is good for Muslims at https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/27/opinion/is-free-speech-good-for-muslims.html?rref=collection%2Fcolumn%2FMustafa%20Akyol&action=click&contentCollection=Opinion&module=Collection®ion=Marginalia&src=me&version=column&pgtype=article.
Dr. Shuki Friedman has noted the
similarities between Jewish and Islamic Law:
“…the
most significant…similarity of the holistic religious-legal worldview in both
Judaism and Islam [is]…both religions seek to regulate every
aspect of reality, from the most marginal details of daily life to the
organization of the state and the world as a whole.
Both
religions organize reality through total legalization. Almost all human
behavior is addressed, in either positive or negative terms. And the believer’s
world is framed by a long list of commandments and prohibitions which govern
his private conduct, his conduct toward his God and his conduct toward those
around him: family, neighbors, business partners, community, city and country.
In
both religions, this legal code brings religious law into every corner of
people’s lives and gives great power to religion and religious leaders, be they
muftis, rabbis or imams. They are the authorized interpreters of the sacred
texts; they are the final arbiters of the believer’s most personal questions;
and they (in both religions’ ideal world) influence the conduct of believers
and their countries.
Therefore,
in both religions, a similar religious-legal conversation has developed. One
finds the same considerations in making rulings, the same efforts to cope with
problems like science and modernity, the same deliberations over the loss of
believers to other ideologies. In both faiths, the religious arbiters’ goal is
to keep power in their own hands to the extent possible.” See https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.816831.
On the differing views of Islamic
scholars on human rights and democracy under Shari’a, see Barnes, Religion, Legitimacy and the Law: Shari’a,
Democracy and Human Rights at pages 10-18, posted at https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4qPfb4MvEswV2ZHS3hyWTcwbmc/view.
Nour Soubani has asked, Does Islam need saving? and provided an
analysis of human rights in Islam. See https://yaqeeninstitute.org/en/nour-soubani/does-islam-need-saving-an-analysis-of-human-rights/.
On how Saudi Arabia promotes
intolerance of fundamental freedoms in its textbooks, see https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/09/13/saudi-arabia-religion-textbooks-promote-intolerance.
On a recent poll that indicates
most Muslims continue to believe in the American dream and that Islam is
subject to interpretation, see http://www.pewforum.org/2017/07/26/religious-beliefs-and-practices/?utm_source=Pew+Research+Center&utm_campaign=6e48ccb6e9-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_08_30&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_3e953b9b70-6e48ccb6e9-399971105.
Related
Commentary:
(12/8/14): Religion and Reason
(12/15/14): Faith and Freedom
(1/11/15): The Greatest Commandment: A Common Word of Faith
(1/18/15): Love over Law: A Principle at the Heart of Legitimacy
(4/12/15): Faith as a Source of Morality and Law: The Heart of Legitimacy
(1/23/16): Who Is My Neighbor?
(1/30/16): The Politics of Loving Our Neighbors as Ourselves
(2/27/16): Conflicting Concepts of Legitimacy in Faith, Freedom and Politics
(6/18/16): A Politics of Reconciliation with Liberty and Justice for All
(6/28/15): Confronting the Evil Among Us
(7/5/15): Reconciliation as a Remedy for Racism and Religious Exclusivism
(8/2/15): Freedom and Fundamentalism
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Responsibilities
(2/7/16): Jesus Meets Muhammad on Issues of Religion and Politics
(7/9/16): Back to the Future: Race, Religion, Rights and a Politics of
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(1/23/16): Who Is My Neighbor?
(1/30/16): The Politics of Loving Our Neighbors as Ourselves
(4/30/16): The Relevance of Religion to Politics
(5/7/16): Religion and a Politics of Reconciliation
(8/5/16): How Religion Can Bridge Our Political and Cultural Divide
(9/10/16): Liberty in Law: A Matter of Man’s Law, not God’s Law
(9/17/16): A Moral Revival to Restore Legitimacy to Our Politics
(11/19/16): Religion and a Politics of Reconciliation Based on Shared Values
http://www.religionlegitimacyandpolitics.com/2016/11/religion-and-politics-of-reconciliation_19.html
(11/26/16): Irreconcilable Differences and the Demise of Democracy
(2/25/17): The Need for a Revolution in Religion and Politics
(3/4/17): Ignorance and Reason in Religion and Politics
(4/22/17): The Relevance of Jesus and the Irrelevance of the Church in Today’s
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(6/24/17): The Evolution of Religion, Politics and Law: Back to the Future? http://www.religionlegitimacyandpolitics.com/2017/06/the-evolution-of-religion-politics-and.html.
(7/1/17): Religion, Moral Authority and Conflicting Concepts of Legitimacy
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(8/5/17): Does Religion Seek to Reconcile and Redeem or to Divide and Conquer?
(8/19/17) Hate, History and the Need for a Politics of Reconciliation
(9/2/17): The Evolution of the American Civil Religion and Habits of the Heart
http://www.religionlegitimacyandpolitics.com/2017/09/the-evolution-of-american-civil.html.
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