WHEN news came of today's appalling terrorist attack in Paris,
I was in the middle of drafting an Erasmus post with
some thoughts on the question: can we expect Islam to undergo its own
version of the Reformation, or to produce its own Martin Luther? The
subject is addressed, in quite an intelligent way, in the latest issue of Foreign Policy,
an American journal, and it is a topical one because various modern
figures, from the Turkish preacher Fethullah Gulen to Egypt's military
ruler Abdel Fattah al-Sisi have been described, however improbably, as
Muslim answers to Martin Luther.
Today's ghastly events in France
make the question even more pressing, because some people will
undoubtedly say: this is proof, if proof were needed, that Islam
is incorrigibly and by its very nature violent, intolerant and incapable
of accepting the liberal ideal of free speech. And if that view gains
traction, many Muslims will in turn conclude that in the face of such
unremitting hostility, there is no point in even trying to explain
their faith to others or seeking accommodation with their neighbours.
So the stakes are very high.
Nick Danforth, the Foreign Policy
writer, does a decent job of deconstructing the “Luther” question and
showing how posing it reflects a linear, Anglo-Protestant view of
history. According to this view there is a single-file march towards
secular modernity, with reforming Protestants out in front, Catholics
being dragged along a bit reluctantly, and Muslims far behind. “For most
of American history, it would have been self-evident to the majority of
American Protestants that the celebrated separation of church and state
in the United States became possible because the Protestant Reformation
tamed the Vatican in the 16th century.” You don't have to be a
Protestant to argue for this sort of view; you could say, as many do,
that the Reformation's real merit was that it reduced the importance of
religion in general, and ushered in a more rational world. In fact, the
article counter-argues, every religion has it own trajectory and its own
way of negotiating the boundary between revealed truth and changing
reality; it's not helpful to imagine a single track along which people
travel at different speeds.
Here are some of my own thoughts on
the subject. They have to do not with the merits, attractiveness or
truth-claims of any religion, but with the way that religions in general
work.
Martin Luther raised
his voice against the abuse of clerical power by the Catholic
authorities of his time: the ways in which sacraments (in other words,
rituals which require a priest) were manipulated for cynical or venal
purposes, doctrines were distorted, and ordinary people denied the
opportunity to seek religious truth for themselves. He spoke with the
authority of a well trained Catholic monk, versed in the Bible and in
early church history. He wasn't rejecting all religious authority, or
the idea of a sacrament as a ritual in which God was present; if he had
taken that uncompromising view, he probably wouldn't have found many
followers.
In my experience, Muslims' first response to Luther's
protests is usually something like: the abuses that he addressed are
never likely to arise in Islam, because Islam has no equivalent of
sacraments or priests who come between man and God
and monopolise certain rituals. Islam has imams or prayer leaders, but
no bishops or father-confessors. (Shia Islam does have a tradition of
powerful clerics, but the power they now enjoy in Iran is, arguably, a
historical aberration.)
At the same time, many Muslims would
stress that the "reform" or "renewal" of their religion, in the sense of
cutting away unwanted accretions and getting back to Islam's original
inspiration, has been a recurring theme in their history; and they would
probably agree that some reform is badly needed now. But it's worth
stressing that in neither Christianity, Islam, Judaism nor any other
major religion can "reform" be equated with moderation or emollience. A
stripped-down, minimalist religion can be more violent and intolerant
than an elaborate one; just ask Oliver Cromwell or the Pakistani
Taliban.
At this point, many non-Muslims might say, "we don't
really care whether Islam is elaborate or stripped-down, we only care
whether its followers can be persuaded to renounce terrorism,
beheadings, and the pursuit of political power." Well, passionate
arguments against all these things are being heard within the world of
Islam, although they get less publicity than the violent voices. Look,
for example, at the personally courageous stance of Hamza Yusuf, an
American-born scholar with a wide following in the Islamic heart-land,
in denunciation of Islamic State, its aims and methods. In recent weeks
some 300,000 people have used the internet to hear him condemn, in
rigorously Islamic terms, the claim of IS to be authentic
representatives of the Sunni creed. His voice comes from deep inside
scholarly, traditional Islam, just as Luther's came from deep inside
sacramental, episcopal Christianity—and many people are listening.
Islam
will not be scolded, scorned or aerially bombed into reforming by
outsiders; it is deeply immune to external pressure. But it can
and will change from within, as the founding texts and traditions are
reread and refracted by successive generations. Nobody can predict
which way that change will go—and there is not just one,
single historical path along which it will or won't progress.
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