My comments follow the article  BR
---------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
Catholic World Report
 
 
 
 
On the "Reform" of Islam

February  15, 2015 
 
If  violence, terror, beheadings, forced conversions, subjection of women, 
and  intolerance of others are removed or “transformed” in Islam, is it 
still  Islam? 
 
_James V. Schall, S.J._ () 




The President of Egypt, at Al Azhar University in Cairo, _recently  did 
everyone a favor by putting on the table_ 
(http://www.raymondibrahim.com/from-the-arab-world/egypts-sisi-islamic-thinking-is-antagonizing-the-entire-world/)
 , from inside of the Islamic  world itself, the question of its public 
conduct and inner soul as they relate  to the Muslim religion. Does its 
conduct, as manifest in its deeds, flow from  its religious beliefs? One and a 
quarter billion Muslims, President al-Sisi  bluntly affirmed, cannot hope to 
eliminate the other six and a half billion  human beings. A May 14, 2014, 
article in the American Thinker estimated  that over the centuries some 250 
million people have been killed in wars caused  by Islam. The religion itself 
thus needs, in al-Sisi’s view, a thorough  “revolution” or transformation.  
The issue that I bring up here, in the light of these observations, is 
this:  “Is such a revolution possible without, in effect, eliminating the basic 
content  of what we know as Islam?” If violence, terror, beheadings, forced 
conversions,  subjection of women, and intolerance of others are removed or “
transformed” in  Islam, so that they are no longer parts of the religion 
but condemned by it, is  it still Islam? Would it not be something totally 
unrecognizable as the same  Islam faithfully loyal to its founding by Mohammed? 
If so, it would follow that  something is radically disordered in the 
founding itself and its development to  its present form.  
No one thought that communism could fall except, perhaps, Reagan and John  
Paul II. Some elements of it still strive to hang on, to be sure, but its 
evils  have generally been acknowledged as inhuman. Is there a similar hope 
about an  unexpected turn in Islam? Could it almost miraculously morph into 
something  else? Or, if it changes in any basic way, does it not have to 
change into  something already known, such as Christianity? Or Hinduism? Or 
even 
modernism?  Are the violent manifestations within Islam towards itself and 
others simply an  aberration? Or, are they essential to the mission to which 
Islam is committed,  namely, to conquer the world for Allah? The authors of 
Charlie Hebdo  hoped that Islam would become as “harmless” as Christianity 
has become. But is a  “harmless” Islam an irrelevant Islam?  
In 2011, _I  called attention_ 
(http://www.thecatholicthing.org/2011/08/23/on-the-fragility-of-islam/)  to the 
work of scholars (mostly German) in 
establishing a  critical edition of the Qur’an. It becomes evident that the 
text 
of  this famous book could not be what it is claimed to be—that is, a 
revelation in  pure Arabic delivered directly from the mind of Allah in the 
seventh century  through Mohammed. Moreover, it is said to be unchanged in any 
way, not only from  its first appearance, but also from eternity.  
My assumption, of course, is that the Muslim mind—or any mind—when faced 
with  facts, can recognize a contradiction in its own origins or practices if 
pointed  out. If the Qur’an cannot be what it said it was, how can anyone 
uphold  it? If it is a correlation to previously existing texts, its origin 
is not what  it said it was. The effort to eliminate the scholars who even 
dare to wonder  about this issue is not an argument in favor of the Qur’an, 
but against  it, a sign of unwillingness to examine the evidence. One can only 
suspect that  the failure of any source in Islam itself to produce a 
critical edition of the  Qur’an, combined with the efforts to impede anyone 
else 
from doing so,  is an indirect proof that many in Islam know there is 
something strange about  the original text that is not explained by the theory 
of 
direct revelation.  
II.
Muslim thinkers, in the light of contradictory statements in the  Qur’an, 
have had to devise a philosophical thesis about Allah’s nature  that would, 
supposedly, defend the text from incoherence. The key to this  defense is the 
affirmation that Allah is pure will. This doctrine is also found  in 
Western philosophy, as in legal positivism. It is sometimes called the “two  
truth”
 theory—that something in revelation and something in reason can  
contradict each other. As pure will, Allah is not bound by reason, by his own  
decrees, or by what he may or may not have said previously.  
In terms of Muslim law, the last statement in the text is the ruling one.  
Allah can decree what is good to be evil, or what is evil to be good. Thus, 
the  suicide bomber who kills, in addition to himself, many innocent people, 
can be  considered a “martyr” because he is killing by the will of Allah. 
This  understanding broadens the power of Allah’s freedom. A God of Logos 
and  a god of voluntas unrelated to reason are simply incompatible. The God  
of Logos has a will ordained to His reason and being. The god of will  has no 
reason to impede any of his actions.

President  al-Sisi is in a different position from those Western political 
and religious  leaders who keep insisting on a distinction between a 
peaceful Islam and a  war-oriented one. In the face of the most violent 
evidence to 
the contrary, they  insist “Islam is a religion of peace”. The Western 
mind is thus sent off to  search for the causes of “terrorism” that can be 
attributed to non-religious  sources. They can never seem to find any, because 
the origin of such violence  is religious. The text of the Qur’an can 
justify it. It is  simply dishonest or ignorance to maintain otherwise.  

The Muslims who know this background feel abused when it is claimed that  
they have nothing to do with the “real” Islam. In their view, they are the 
real  Islam. This textual and traditional foundation is why peaceful Muslims, 
who know  their tradition and history, are either silent or acknowledge the 
fact. In this  sense, the problem of Islam is not some misunderstanding 
that arises from  outside its own soul. It arises from within it.  

In the wake both of history and Qur’anic text, this view of a peaceful  
Islam is really not possible to maintain, except in the light of a jihad that  
submitted the world to Allah. Peace is possible when, and only when, all 
people  are Muslim. Hence it becomes naïve-sounding to hear the myth of a 
totally  peaceful Islam repeated by people who seem to have no knowledge of 
history or  what motivates most Islamic people who do use force and terror 
with, 
in their  view, the complete approval of Allah. We can call them 
fundamentalists or  terrorists, or whatever we want, but they see themselves as 
devout 
Muslims who  are obeying Allah. It has proved almost impossible to change 
the minds of such  “believers” in the Muslim world-mission.  
III.  
It is obviously true that someone from outside Islam will miss many things  
within it when it comes to the question of how to change it, if change is  
needed. On the other hand, the very existence of Islam is itself a denial of 
the  heart of Christianity. No Christian—or anyone else—can fail to see 
what happens  to Christians in Muslim lands. They are fleeing, being killed, 
forced to  convert, or reduced to second-class status. Islam is also a 
question of an  attack on the essence of Christianity itself. Islamic scripture 
demotes Christ  to the rank of a mere prophet. This is not to praise Him but 
rather to insist he  is not the Son of God. His mother is a very holy lady, 
not the mother of God.  The Trinity and Incarnation are specifically denied.  
The Old and New Testaments are said to be fraudulent documents rewritten  
somehow in the light of the pre-existing Qur’an; and the  Qur’an is the 
final and definitive revelation, not the Jewish or  Christian scriptures. Yet 
what scholarship we have indicates, instead, that the  Qur’an is itself a 
strange amalgam of the Old Testament, the New  Testament, and other sources 
that 
existed previous to its slow composition in  the first centuries after 
Mohammed.  
Islam is said to be the final and only true “revelation”. All people 
should  be “submissive” to Allah; all people are born Muslim, but are corrupted 
by  parents or customs. If, though they are often persecuted, Jews or 
Christians are  tolerated in Muslim lands, it is at the cost of second-class 
citizenship, with  severe restriction of places and organizations that support 
them. Essential to  any real Muslim internal “revolution” would be the 
abandonment is this lethal  hatred and intolerance of others.  
IV.  

Many Catholic and other Christian leaders—and perhaps even some Muslim  
documents and leaders—want to hold (and do hold in public) that Islam worships  
the same God as they do. I have often tried to imagine just what the two “
gods”  really have in common so that we could call them “the same”. An Allah 
who denies  the Trinity and Incarnation hardly seems like the same deity 
that affirms them.  We carefully peel every differing understanding of the 
deity off the core. We  affirm what, in Christianity, is rejected by Islam. Can 
the remains still be  Christian, or even Platonic? It is not the Yahweh of 
the Jews.  
When we see how Allah is understood in Islam, how he is described, we are  
hard pressed to see what, if any, relation the Christian God and Allah have 
at  all. Rémi Brague, in On the God of Christians (and on one or two others) 
(St. Augustine's Press, 2013; Editor's note: _see CWR's  review_ 
(http://www.catholicworldreport.com/Item/2895/who_is_god.aspx)  of Brague's 
book), has 
shown the textual and historical difficulty in  efforts to equate these two 
positions. But is not just the seeking for an  explanation something in 
common? The problem, however, exists at the level of  what is found, not what 
is sought.  
Others want to maintain that, if we keep stripping off the things that make 
 the two views different, we will eventually arrive at a notion of “
submission”  to the will of God or Allah. This submission can provide a basis 
of 
agreement.  But the Christian idea of submitting to the will of God and the 
Muslim notion of  “submission” to Allah are so different that it is difficult 
to see how they can  be reconciled, however much good will is put into the 
effort. The Christian is  freely open to a God of order, which it can 
reject; the Christian God is  Logos, reason. The freedom of God is bound to His 
being. He is  mysterious but not arbitrary or contradictory.  
Allah, it seems, is pure will. He is not bound by even His own decrees, let 
 alone to any objective distinction of good and evil. “Submission” 
literally  means that, because man’s mind has no grounds to oppose or 
understand 
anything  that Allah claims, his will must be done whatever it is. The 
difference between  free, rational obedience and servile submission is a gulf, 
even 
though both are  supposedly worthy ways to worship.  
Allah’s will shows its supremacy by decreeing evil to be good or vice 
versa.  This thesis was necessary in large part because many ideas in the  
Qur’an 
contradict each other. The only way to save the integrity of  Allah was to 
deny that a contradiction made any difference. If these two views  are 
compatible, I fail to see how. One can only “respect” someone’s god if that  
god 
is not the origin of what is impossible to maintain.  
V.
But to return to President al-Sisi’s point, can a “revolutionary” Islam 
that  has purged itself of all the violence still be Islam? Benedict XVI’s 
question,  in his 2006 _“Regensburg  Lecture”_ 
(http://w2.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/speeches/2006/september/documents/hf_ben-xvi_spe_20060912_univ
ersity-regensburg.html) , asked whether a God who approved violence in the 
name of religion  could be God. No doubt, Yahweh in the Old Testament did 
command violence in  numerous occasions. Many think this source is where Islam 
got the idea in the  first place. Likewise, the notion of “going forth and 
conquering all nations”  may well be of New Testament origin. No one wants 
to deny the sins and  aberrations of one’s own history. John Paul II sought 
to “redeem” Christian  history of its own aberrations by acknowledging that 
these deeds were wrong. But  they were wrong by some objective standard that 
ought to have been known and  observed. They are not presented as God’s 
will.  
Islam, as far as I can see, does not apologize. It rarely gives aid to 
anyone  but its own. But the capacity to forgive or aid others would seem to be 
 
essential to the “revolution” that President al-Sisi has proposed. It is 
first  necessary to acknowledge that much of Muslim history was based on a 
wrong  understanding of God, and thus of man. It is also necessary to change 
the  Qur’an in such a fashion that its readers will not constantly  
rediscover the roots of violence that is engenders every time it is taken  
seriously 
as the will and word of Allah.  
VI.
In thinking about such subjects, it is well to recall Aristotle’s 
admonition  that any “revolution” can make things worse as well as make them 
better. 
A  status-quo that is pretty bad may still be better than an even worse 
situation.  One of the root factors in the rise of Islam in recent decades is 
its shrewd  analysis of the disorder of soul in the lives and polities of its 
chief critics.  While population growth in several Muslim countries is now 
declining to western  levers, the _killing of 1.3 billion  babies_ 
(http://www.numberofabortions.com/)  by abortion since 1980 makes it difficult 
for 
many Muslims to see why  it would be better to imitate the moral chaos that 
now seems to rule democratic  countries. Why is it all right to kill the 
unborn and the elderly but not kill  the blasphemers? Why are divorce, serial 
monogamy, and “gay” marriages superior  to polygamy?  
Muslims know that many religious people in the West uphold these practices, 
 evidently without scruple. But these facts bring us back to the same 
issue:  which God upholds these practices and which one does not, and why? The 
Christian  God is not only distinct from Islam on the issue of killing in the 
name of  religion but also in its notion of family life. One is hard pressed 
to see that  the family life practiced in Islam, with all its aberrations, 
is worse than what  our laws and practices now enforce or encourage.  
In the name of “justice” and economy, we now see ways to eliminate a 
family  as the bond between one woman and one man with their children. We have 
separated  sex from reproduction in such a way that makes “the brave new world”
 look  familiar, even romantic to us. Ironically, the same “voluntarism” 
that makes  Allah so dubious is the going doctrine of our legal, social, and 
moral lives. In  the end, we have to say to President al-Sisi, that perhaps 
it is not only Islam  that is in need of a real “revolution.”  
==================================== 
BR Comments: 
I agree with just about everything said in this article. My self-professed  
theology is not Catholic, however, it follows from several sources,   
starting with  Raphael Patai's essential book, The Hebrew Goddess,  including 
Simo Parpola's Assyrian Prophecies and Savina Teubal's  Sarah the Priestess and 
Richard Elliott Friedman's Who Wrote the  Bible? And my heroes include 
Martin Luther, Roger Williams, Hannah  Adams,  Albert Schweitzer, Walter 
Rauschenbusch, and E. Stanley  Jones. Added to this is the strong influence of 
Henri Saint-Simon and his  magnum opus, The New Christianity, the example of 
Kobo Daishi, and some  important lessons learned in years of my youth and 
younger adulthood as a  Baptist and then a Baha'i and, albeit only for a time, 
as 
part of  a Sri  Aurobindo center. And there is one very special book that 
must be cited,  written by Diane Wolkstein and Samuel Noah Kramer, Inanna,  
Queen of Heaven and Earth.  
On top of all this, I have been a teacher of Comparative Religion and my  
views reflect that experience, one that makes me very ecumenical in outlook 
and  generally appreciative of the things that people of faith do and of 
their  motivations.  
Clearly my views are anything but traditional Catholic or traditional  
Protestant. But here I am in the strongest possible agreement with a Jesuit. 
Any and all thoughts of a reformation within Islam are out of the  
question. 
Any and all thoughts of a reformation within Islam are ruled out   
-"essentially," in the philosophical sense-  because the Koran is what it  is, 
little different than Hitler's Mein Kampf, basically Nazism before  Nazism as 
it 
manifest itself in Europe in the WWII era. Islam is, at its  core, 
proto-Fascism, or of you prefer Bertrand Russell's characterization, is at  its 
core 
a pre-modern version of Bolshevism. In any case, as commanded by the  Koran, 
Islam is totalitarian in nature and is thoroughly morally bankrupt. It is  
a criminal religion and can no more be "reformed" than there is such a thing 
as  "reformed Nazism." Indeed, it is more difficult to conceive a 
reformation in  Islam than in Nazism since, after all, there was some effort to 
 
achieve exactly that on the part of the Strassers. 
The only serious efforts to reform Islam have all led to the rise of new  
religions, as in the case of the Druze and Baha'is, with much the same that 
can  be said for Ahamdiyyat, or with posthumous discrediting of the reformer, 
as  happened in the case of Akhbar in India. As you can tell, there  is  
one  Baha'i principle I  now completely reject and  condemn, the view that 
Islam is in any sense a revealed and true religion. On  the contrary, it is 
false and criminal and the Allah it promotes is no different  than Satan. 
Terrific article that I hope many people read and take to heart. 
Billy R. 

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