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Cult Watch Title: Islam's 'Reformation' Is Already Here - and It's Called 'ISIS' The idea that Islam needs to reform is again in the spotlight following the recent publication of Ayaan Hirsi Alis new book, Heretic: Why Islam Needs a Reformation Now. While Ali makes the argument that Islam can reform and is in desperate need of taking the extreme measures to do so many of her critics contend that Islam is not in need of reform. The one argument not being made, however, is the one I make below namely, that Islam has already reformed. And violence, intolerance, and extremism typified by the Islamic State (ISIS) are the net result of this reformation. Such a claim sounds absurd due only to our understanding of the word reform. Yet despite its positive connotations, reform simply means to make changes (in something, typically a social, political, or economic institution or practice) in order to improve it. Synonyms of reform include make better, ameliorate, and improve splendid words all, yet words all subjective and loaded with Western connotations. Muslim notions of improving society can include purging it of infidels and apostates, and segregating Muslim men from women, keeping the latter under wraps or quarantined at home. Banning many forms of freedoms taken for granted in the West from alcohol consumption to religious and gender equality is an improvement and a betterment of society from a strictly Islamic point of view. In short, an Islamic reformation will not lead to what we think of as an improvement and betterment of society simply because we are not Muslims and do not share their first premises and reference points. Reform sounds good to most Western peoples only because they naturally attribute Western connotations to the word. Historical Parallels: Islams Reformation and the Protestant Reformation At its core, the Protestant Reformation was a revolt against tradition in the name of scripture in this case, the Bible. With the coming of the printing press, increasing numbers of Christians became better-acquainted with the Bibles contents, parts of which they felt contradicted what the Church was teaching. So they broke away, protesting that the only Christian authority was scripture alone, sola scriptura. Islams current reformation follows the same logic of the Protestant Reformation specifically by prioritizing scripture over centuries of tradition and legal debate but with antithetical results that reflect the contradictory teachings of the core texts of Christianity and Islam. As with Christianity, throughout most of its history, Islams scriptures, specifically its twin pillars, the Koran (literal words of Allah) and the Hadith (words and deeds of Allahs prophet, Muhammad), were inaccessible to the overwhelming majority of Muslims. Only a few scholars, or ulema literally, they who know were literate in Arabic and/or had possession of Islams scriptures. The average Muslim knew only the basics of Islam, or its Five Pillars. In this context, a medieval synthesis flourished throughout the Islamic world. Guided by an evolving general consensus (or ijma), Muslims sought to accommodate reality by, in medieval historian Daniel Pipess words (emphasis added), translat[ing] Islam from a body of abstract, infeasible demands [as stipulated in the Koran and Hadith] into a workable system. In practical terms, it toned down Sharia and made the code of law operational. Sharia could now be sufficiently applied without Muslims being subjected to its more stringent demands[.]
[However, w]hile the medieval synthesis worked over the centuries, it never overcame a fundamental weakness: It is not comprehensively rooted in or derived from the foundational, constitutional texts of Islam. Based on compromises and half measures, it always remained vulnerable to challenge by purists. This vulnerability has now reached a breaking point: millions more Korans published in Arabic and other languages are in circulation today compared to just a century ago; millions more Muslims are now literate enough to read and understand the Koran compared to their medieval forbears. The Hadith, which contains some of the most intolerant teachings and violent deeds attributed to Islams prophet including every atrocity ISIS commits, such as beheading, crucifying, and burning infidels, even mocking their corpses is now collated and accessible, in part thanks to the efforts of Western scholars, the Orientalists. Most recently, there is the internet where all these scriptures are now available in dozens of languages and to anyone with a laptop or iPhone. Against this backdrop, what has been called at different times, places, and contexts Islamic fundamentalism, radical Islam, Islamism, and Salafism flourished. Many of todays Muslim believers, much better-acquainted than their ancestors with the often black and white teachings of their scriptures, are protesting against earlier traditions, are protesting against the medieval synthesis, in favor of scriptural literalism just like their Christian Protestant counterparts once did. Thus, if Martin Luther (d. 1546) rejected the extra-scriptural accretions of the Church and reformed Christianity by aligning it exclusively with scripture, Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab (d. 1787), one of Islams first modern reformers, called for a return to the pure, authentic Islam of the Prophet, and the rejection of the accretions that had corrupted it and distorted it (Bernard Lewis, The Middle East, p. 333). The unadulterated words of God or Allah are all that matter for the reformists, with ISIS at their head. Note: Because they are better-acquainted with Islams scriptures, other Muslims, of course, are apostatizing whether by converting to other religions, most notably Christianity, or whether by abandoning religion altogether, even if only in their hearts (for fear of the apostasy penalty). This is an important point to be revisited later. Muslims who do not become disaffected after becoming better-acquainted with the literal teachings of Islams scriptures, and who instead become more faithful to and observant of them, are the topic of this essay. Christianity and Islam: Antithetical Teachings, Antithetical Results How Christianity and Islam can follow similar patterns of reform but with antithetical results rests in the fact that their scriptures are often antithetical to one another. This is the key point, and one admittedly unintelligible to postmodern, secular sensibilities, which tend to lump all religious scriptures together in a melting pot of relativism without bothering to evaluate the significance of their respective words and teachings. Obviously a point-by-point comparison of the scriptures of Islam and Christianity is inappropriate for an article of this length (see my Are Judaism and Christianity as Violent as Islam for a more comprehensive treatment). Suffice it to note some contradictions (which naturally will be rejected as a matter of course by the relativistic mindset): It is precisely because Christian scriptural literalism lends itself to religious freedom, tolerance, and the dignity of women that Western civilization developed the way it did despite the nonstop propaganda campaign emanating from academia, Hollywood, and other major media that says otherwise. And it is precisely because Islamic scriptural literalism is at odds with religious freedom, tolerance, and the dignity of women that Islamic civilization is the way it is despite the nonstop propaganda campaign emanating from academia, Hollywood, and other major media that says otherwise. The Islamic Reformation Is Here and Its ISIS Those in the West waiting for an Islamic reformation along the same lines of the Protestant Reformation, on the assumption that it will lead to similar results, must embrace two facts: 1) Islams reformation is well on its way, and yes, along the same lines of the Protestant Reformation with a focus on scripture and a disregard for tradition and for similar historic reasons (literacy, scriptural dissemination, etc.); 2) but because the core teachings of the founders and scriptures of Christianity and Islam markedly differ from one another, Islams reformation is producing something markedly different. Put differently, those in the West calling for an Islamic reformation need to acknowledge what it is they are really calling for: the secularization of Islam in the name of modernity, and the trivialization and sidelining of Islamic law from Muslim society. That is precisely what Ayaan Hirsi Ali is doing. Some of her reforms as outlined in Heretic call for Muslims to begin doubting Muhammad (whose words and deeds are in the Hadith) and the Koran the very two foundations of Islam. That would not be a reformation certainly nothing analogous to the Protestant Reformation. Overlooked is that Western secularism was, and is, possible only because Christian scripture lends itself to the division between church and state, the spiritual and the temporal. Upholding the literal teachings of Christianity is possible within a secular or any state. Christ called on believers to render unto Caesar the things of Caesar [temporal] and unto God the things of God [spiritual] (Matt. 22:21). For the kingdom of God is not of this world (John 18:36). Indeed, a good chunk of the New Testament deals with how man is not justified by the works of the law
for by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified (Gal. 2:16). On the other hand, mainstream Islam is devoted to upholding the law, and Islamic scripture calls for a fusion between Islamic law sharia and the state. Allah decrees in the Koran that [i]t is not fitting for true believers men or women to take their choice in affairs if Allah and His Messenger have decreed otherwise. He that disobeys Allah and His Messenger strays far indeed! (33:36). Allah tells the prophet of Islam, We put you on an ordained way [literarily in Arabic, sharia] of command; so follow it and do not follow the inclinations of those who are ignorant (45:18). Mainstream Islamic exegesis has always interpreted such verses to mean that Muslims must follow the commandments of Allah as laid out in the Koran and the example of Muhammad as laid out in the Hadith in a word, sharia. And sharia is so concerned with the details of this world, with the everyday doings of Muslims, that every conceivable human action falls under five rulings, or ahkam: the forbidden (haram), the discouraged (makruh), the neutral (mubah), the recommended (mustahib), and the obligatory (wajib). Conversely, Islam offers little concerning the spiritual (sidelined Sufism the exception). Unlike Christianity, then, Islam without the law without sharia becomes meaningless. After all, the Arabic word Islam literally means submit. Submit to what? Allahs laws as codified in sharia and derived from the Koran and Hadith the very three things Ali is asking Muslims to start doubting. The Islamic reformation some in the West are calling for is really nothing less than an Islam without Islam secularization, not reformation; Muslims prioritizing secular, civic, and humanitarian laws over Allahs law; a reformation that would slowly see the religion of Muhammad go into the dustbin of history. Such a scenario is certainly more plausible than believing that Islam can be true to its scriptures and history in any meaningful way and still peacefully coexist with, much less complement, modernity the way Christianity does. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 12.
#4. To: TooConservative (#0)
The most radical expression of the Reformation was Puritan Revolution in England. Very violent.
Against a very violent tyrant king who was executed. Cromwell was a great man.
Against a very violent tyrant king who was executed. Cromwell was a great man. Cromwell was not a great man.
I hope you guys didn't conclude I posted this thread just so we could rehash the Reformation. You guys lost. Get over it.
The joke is on you. I am not Catholic and the Orthodox need no reforming. What happened between Catholics and Protestants was a fight between cave dwelling barbarians who painted themselves blue as far as my ancestors were concerned.
Yeah, I noticed you weren't taking sides when you took a potshot at Cromwell. Because you don't care so much.
Yeah, I noticed you weren't taking sides when you took a potshot at Cromwell. Because you don't care so much. Cromwell carried outa near genoicde on the Irish, banned public music an theater and was a dictator - it has zero to do with him being Protestant. And talk about war on Christmans, Cromwell banned Christmas. He banned drinking in public, he banned sports. He was like a Muslim fundamentalist - he sounds like a Wahhabist in his puritanical views. The Brits were glad when he died.
#13. To: Pericles (#12)
I'm glad to see you still aren't taking sides in the English Reformation. My only criticism of Cromwell is that he failed to create an opportunity to execute that treacherous pope along with the king. I don't doubt that he would have executed the pope if given any chance to do so; I fault him for not finding a way to do it. I assume you want to keep posting off-topic about the English Reformation instead of posting a comment on the futility of the much-wished-for but illusory Islamic Reformation we hear bandied about by the libs and academics.
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