http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/HI19Aa02.html

Sep 19, 2006 


Jihad, the Lord's Supper, and eternal life
By Spengler 


Jihad injures reason, for it honors a god who suffers no constraints on his 
caprice, unlike the Judeo-Christian god, who is limited by love. That is the 
nub of Pope Benedict XVI's September 12 address in Regensburg, Germany. It 
promises to be the Vatican's most controversial utterance in living memory. 

When a German-language volume appeared in 2003 quoting the same analysis by a 
long-dead Jewish theologian, I wrote of "oil on the flames of civilizational 
war". [1] Now the same ban has been

 

preached from St Peter's chair, and it is a defining moment comparable to 
Winston Churchill's "Iron Curtain" speech at Fulton, Missouri, in 1946. Earlier 
this year, Benedict's elliptical remarks to former students at a private 
seminar in 2005, mentioned in passing by an American Jesuit and reported in 
this space, created a scandal. [2] I wrote at the time that even the pope must 
whisper when it comes to Islam. We have entered a different stage of 
civilizational war. 

The Islamic world now views the pontiff as an existential threat, and with 
reason. Jihad is not merely the whim of a despotic divinity, as the pope 
implied. It is much more: jihad is the fundamental sacrament of Islam, the 
Muslim cognate of the Lord's Supper in Christianity, that is, the unique form 
of sacrifice by which the individual believer communes with the Transcendent. 
To denounce jihad on theological grounds is a blow at the foundations of Islam, 
in effect a papal call for the conversion of the Muslims. 

Just before then-cardinal Ratzinger's election as pope last year, I wrote, "Now 
that everyone is talking about Europe's demographic death, it is time to point 
out that there exists a way out: convert European Muslims to Christianity. The 
reported front-runner at the Vatican conclave ... Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, is 
one of the few Church leaders unafraid to raise the subject." [3] The 
Regensburg address oversteps the bounds of dialogue and verges upon the 
missionary. A great deal has changed since John Paul II kissed the Koran before 
news cameras in 1999. The boys and girls of the Catholic youth organization 
Communione e Liberazione that Ratzinger nurtured for a generation will have a 
great deal to talk to their Muslim school-fellows about. 

No more can one assume now that Europe will slide meekly into dhimmitude. 


In that respect [I wrote during the conclave] John Paul II recalled the sad 
position of Pius XII, afraid to denounce publicly the murder of Polish priests 
by Nazi occupiers - let alone the murder of Polish Jews - for fear that the 
Nazis would react by killing even more. It is hard to second-guess the actions 
of Pius XII given his terrible predicament, but at some point one must ask when 
the Gates of Hell can be said to have prevailed over St Peter.
Specifically, Benedict stated that jihad, the propagation of Islam by force, is 
irrational, because it is against the Reason of God. Citing a 14th-century 
Byzantine emperor to the effect that Mohammed's "decree that the faith he 
preached should be spread with the sword" as "evil and inhumane" provoked 
headlines. But of greater weight is the pope's observation that Allah is a god 
whose "absolute transcendence" allows no constraint, to the point that Allah is 
free if he chooses to promote evil. The great German-Jewish theologian Franz 
Rosenzweig explained the matter more colorfully than did the pope, as I 
reported three years ago in the cited review: 


The god of Mohammed is a creator who well might not have bothered to create. He 
displays his power like an Oriental potentate who rules by violence, not by 
acting according to necessity, not by authorizing the enactment of the law, but 
rather in his freedom to act arbitrarily ... Providence thus is shattered into 
infinitely many individual acts of creation, with no connection to each other, 
each of which has the importance of the entire creation. That has been the 
doctrine of the ruling orthodox philosophy in Islam. Every individual thing is 
created from scratch at every moment. Islam cannot be salvaged from this 
frightful providence of Allah ... despite its vehement, haughty insistence upon 
the idea of the god's unity, Islam slips back into a kind of monistic paganism, 
if you will permit the expression. God competes with God at every moment, as if 
it were the colorfully contending heavenful of gods of polytheism.
It is amusing to see liberal Jewish commentators in the United States, eg, the 
editorial page of the September 16 New York Times, deplore the pope's remarks, 
considering that Rosenzweig said it all the more sharply in 1920. 

Benedict's comments regarding Islam served as a preamble to a longer discourse 
on the unity of faith and reason. "Is the conviction that acting unreasonably 
contradicts God's nature merely a Greek idea, or is it always and intrinsically 
true?" Benedict asked, and answered his own question: "I believe that here we 
can see the profound harmony between what is Greek in the best sense of the 
word and the biblical understanding of faith in God." It is not, however, the 
reasoned side of Benedict's remarks to which Muslims responded, but rather the 
existential. 

Rather than rail at the pope's characterization of Islam, Muslims might have 
responded as follows: "Excuse me, Your Holiness, but did we hear you say that 
you represent a religion of reason, whereas Allah is a god of unreason? Do you 
not personally eat the body and blood of your god - at least things that you 
insist really are his flesh and blood - every day at Mass? And you accuse us of 
unreason!" That is a fair rebuttal, but it opens up Islam's can of worms. 

True, we are not pottering about in this pilgrim existence to be rational. 
Today's Germans are irrational, and know that their time has past, and 
therefore desist from bearing children. What mankind - Christian, Muslim and 
Jew, and all - demand of God is irrational. We want eternal life! Christians do 
not want what the Greeks wanted - Socrates' transmigration of souls, nor the 
shadow existence of Homer's dead heroes in Hades. That is an unreasonable 
demand if ever there was one. 

Before the Bible was written, the Babylonian hero Gilgamesh learned that his 
quest for immortality was futile. The demigods of Greece, mortals favored by 
Olympians, suffered a tedious sort of immortal life as stars, trees or rivers. 
The gods of the heathens are not in any case eternal, only immortal. They were 
born and they will die, like the Norse gods at the Ragnorak, and their 
vulnerability projects the people's presentiment of its own death. To whom, 
precisely, have the gods offered eternal life prior to the appearance of 
revealed religion? Eternal life and a deathless mortality are quite different 
things. 

But what is it that God demands of us in response to our demand for eternal 
life? We know the answer ourselves. To partake of life in another world we 
first must detach ourselves from this world in order to desire the next. In 
plain language, we must sacrifice ourselves. There is no concept of immortality 
without some concept of sacrifice, not in any culture or in any religion. That 
is a demand shared by the Catholic bishops and the Kalahari Bushmen. 

God's covenant with Abraham is unique and singular in world history. A single 
universal and eternal god makes an eternal pact with a mortal that can be 
fulfilled only if Abraham's tribe becomes an eternal people. But the price of 
this pact is self-sacrifice. That is an existential mortal act beyond all 
ethics, as Soren Kierkegaard tells us in Fear and Trembling. The sacraments of 
revealed religion are sublimated human sacrifice, for the revealed god in his 
love for humankind spares the victim, just as God provided a ram in place of 
the bound Isaac on Mount Moriah. Among Jews the covenant must be renewed in 
each male child through a substitute form of human sacrifice, namely 
circumcision. [4] Christians believe that a single human sacrifice spared the 
rest of humankind. 

Jihad also is a form of human sacrifice. He who serves Allah so faithfully as 
to die in the violent propagation of Islam goes straight to paradise, there to 
enjoy virgins or raisins, depending on the translation. But Allah is not the 
revealed god of loving kindness, or agape, but - pace Benedict - a god of 
reason, that is, of cold calculation. Islam admits no expiatory sacrifice. 
Everyone must carry his own spear. 

We are too comfortable, too clean, too squeamish, too modern to descend into 
the terrible space where birth, death and immortality are decided. We forget 
that we cannot have eternal life unless we are ready to give up this one - and 
this the Muslim knows only through what we should call the sacrament of jihad. 
Through jihad, the Muslim does almost precisely what the Christian does at the 
Lord's Supper. It is the sacrifice of Jesus that grants immortal life to all 
Christians, that is, those who become one with Jesus by eating his flesh and 
drinking his blood so that the sacrifice also is theirs, at least in Catholic 
terms. Protestants substitute empathy identification with the crucified Christ 
for the trans-substantiated blood and flesh of Jesus. 

Christians believe that Jesus died on the cross to give all men eternal life, 
on condition that they take part in his sacrifice, either through the physical 
communion of the Catholic Church or the empathetic Communion of Protestantism. 
From a Muslim vantage point, the extreme of divine humility embodied in Jesus' 
sacrifice is beyond reason. Allah, by contrast, deals with those who submit to 
him after the calculation of an earthly despot. He demands that all Muslims 
sacrifice themselves by becoming warriors and, if necessary, laying their lives 
down in the perpetual war against the enemies of Islam. 

These are parallel acts, in which different peoples do different things, in the 
service of different deities, but for the same reason: for eternal life. 

Why is self-sacrifice always and everywhere the cost of eternal life? It is not 
because a vengeful and sanguineous God demands his due before issuing us a visa 
to heaven. Quite the contrary: we must sacrifice our earthly self, our 
attachment to the pleasures and petty victories of our short mortal life if we 
really are to gain the eternal life that we desire. The animal led to the 
altar, indeed Jesus on the cross, is ourselves: we die along with the sacrifice 
and yet live, by the grace of God. YHWH did not want Isaac to die, but without 
taking Abraham to Mount Moriah, Abraham himself could not have been transformed 
into the man desirous and deserving of immortal life. Jesus died and took upon 
him the sins of the world, in Christian terms, precisely so that a vicarious 
sacrifice would redeem those who come to him. 

What distinguishes Allah from YHWH and (in Christian belief) his son Jesus is 
love. God gives Jews and Christians a path that their foot can tread, one that 
is not too hard for mortals, to secure the unobtainable, namely immortal life, 
as if by miracle. Out of love God gives the Torah to the Jews, not because God 
is a stickler for the execution of 613 commandments, but because it is a path 
upon which the Jew may sacrifice and yet live, and receive his portion of the 
World to Come. The most important sacrifice in Judaism is the Sabbath - "our 
offering of rest", says the congregation in the Sabbath prayers - a day of 
inactivity that acknowledges that the Earth is the Lord's. It is a sacrifice, 
as it were, of ego. In this framework, incidentally, it is pointless to 
distinguish Judaism as a "religion of works" as opposed to Christianity as a 
"religion of faith". 

To Christians, God offers the vicarious participation in his sacrifice of 
himself through his only son. 

That is Grace: a free gift by God to men such that they may obtain eternal 
life. By a miracle, the human soul responds to the offer of Grace with a leap, 
a leap away from the attachments that hold us to this world, and a foretaste of 
the World to Come. 

There is no Grace in Islam, no miracle, no expiatory sacrifice, no expression 
of love for mankind such that each Muslim need not be a sacrifice. On the 
contrary, the concept of jihad, in which the congregation of Islam is also the 
army, states that every single Muslim must sacrifice himself personally. Jihad 
is the precise equivalent of the Lord's Supper in Christianity and the Jewish 
Sabbath, the defining expression of sacrifice that opens the prospect of 
eternity to the mortal believer. To ask Islam to become moderate, to reform, to 
become a peaceful religion of personal conscience is the precise equivalent of 
asking Catholics to abolish Mass. 

Islam, I have argued for years, faces an existential crisis in the modern 
world, which has ripped its adherents out of their traditional existence and 
thrust them into deadly conflicts. What was always latent in Islam has now come 
to the surface: the practice of Islam now expresses itself uniquely in jihad. 
Benedict XVI has had the courage to call things by their true names. Everything 
else is hypocrisy and self-delusion.

Postscript
Regarding Benedict XVI's statement that the characterization of the Prophet 
Mohammed did not reflect his "personal opinion": In 1938, at the peak of 
Stalin's terror, a Muscovite called the KGB to report that his parrot had 
escaped. The KGB officer said, "Why are you calling us?" The Muscovite averred, 
"I want to state for the record that I do not share the parrot's political 
opinions."

Notes
1. See Oil on the flames of civilizational war, December 2, 2003.
2. See When even the pope has to whisper, January 10, 2006.
3. The crescent and the conclave, April 19, 2005.
4. See The Death and Resurrection of the Beloved Son: The Transformation of 
Child Sacrifice in Judaism and Christianity, by Jon D Levinson (Harvard; 
Cambridge 1993). 

(Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us 
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