Understanding Islam
142 pages
English

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This book is designed to take people on the first steps in understanding Islam and the way that Muslims think and see the world. It grows out of extensive experience of teaching the course on which it is based.

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Date de parution 28 juillet 2014
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780334052333
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

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Understanding Islam
The first ten steps
C. T. R. Hewer
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press. © C. T. R. Hewer 2006 British Library Cataloguing in Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library 0 334 04032 9/9780 334 04032 3 First published in 2006 by SCM Press 9–17 St Albans Place, London N1 0NX www.scmpress.co.uk SCM Press is a division of SCM-Canterbury Press Ltd
Printed and bound in Great Britain by William Clowes, Beccles, Suffolk
Contents
Acknowledgements Introduction 1. The Wider Picture: Creation From a Muslim Perspective 2. Muhammad, the Last in the Chain of Prophets 3. The Qur’an, the Revealed Word of God 4. An Overview of Islamic History 5. The Central Beliefs of Islam 6. The Principal Practices of Islam 7. A Muslim Life 8. Living Constantly Remembering God 9. Islam and Other Faiths 10. Muslims in Britain and Western Europe A Glossary of Islamic Terms Further Reading
To Professor Dr Khalid Alavi, Imam Khatibof the Faisal Masjid and Director of the Da’wah Academy, International Islamic University, Islamabad, and sometime Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of the Punjab, Lahore and Director of Birmingham Central Mosque, who was the first teacher to open my eyes to the contents of the Qur’an.
The Reverend Dr Sigvard von Sicard, Lecturer on Islam in Africa at the Centre for the Study of Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations, University of Birmingham, who taught by example that the teacher’s door must always stand open to the students.
And finally to the thousand people who followed the course on which this book is based, who by their interest and challenging questions shaped the content into what it is today.
Acknowledgements
I must record my gratitude to two of my teachers, Professor Khalid Alavi and Dr Sigvard von Sicard, both for allowing me to dedicate this work to them and for reading and commenting on the manu-script. Professor Yahya Michot did me a great service by meticulously scrutinizing a late draft and his many helpful suggestions and comments profoundly improved the final outcome. I am grateful to Christian friends and colleagues for their comments, including Dr Elizabeth Harris, the Revd Dr Toby Howarth, the Revd John Trenchard and the Revd Dr Pat McCaffrey. A wide range of Muslim scholars have read and corrected all or part of the manuscript, including Ali Akhtar, Abdullah Bawhab, Dr Jabal Buaben, Shaykh Mohamed Amin-Evans, Maulana Tariq Kamal, Chaudary Abdul Rashid and Abdul Karim Saqib. Two Christian theologians, Bishop Mark Santer and David McLoughlin, rendered considerable assistance to correct and improve Chapter 9. Three colleagues with particular expertise in the field, Yahya Birt, Dilwar Hussain and Professor Dr Christian Troll, gave assistance by reading and commenting on Chapter 10. Finally it was a joy and a challenge to receive the critical comments of four former students: Sadaf Ali, Mubeen Azam, Nourallah Chakroun and Nicola Maier. Grateful thanks must also go to Canon Matthew Joy for agreeing to do the final proof-reading. As always, the final text is my responsibility alone, and following the Muslim custom, I seek the correction of the learned and the forgiveness of God for any mistakes contained therein.
Introduction
The journey of a thousand miles, we are told, begins with a single step. This book is intended to be the first ten steps in the endless journey of understanding Islam. As a tradition of more than one billion followers worldwide and with a body of scholarship stretching back over fourteen centuries, Islam is indeed very rich in its self-understanding. What follows is the merest taste of the riches contained within that tradition. It is written for people in the West with limited understanding of Islam and perhaps some misunderstandings based on current perceptions and our European experience of Islam as something ‘foreign’. It aims to tell the story of Islam in a way that is accessible and so does not contain quotations from other scholars. It is the product of many years of study and teaching Christians and other people about Islam but it is still the perspective of one person. In order to try to ensure that it is as faithful as possible to the Muslim tradition, the text has been read through by a number of Muslim scholars and by others who are involved in communicating about Islam in the West. Nevertheless, the author is responsible for the contents and follows the Muslim practice of asking the forgiveness of God for any errors and the correction of the learned. The author is a Christian and as such it is clear that he cannot accept everything that Islam teaches or see the world in exactly the same way as a Muslim does. Were that so, then the author would have to become a Muslim immediately or risk being condemned as a hypocrite. To accept that the Qur’an is the ultimately revealed scripture from God that corrects all others and that Muhammad was the infallible sinless Prophet of God, in the way that Muslims believe, would make it necessary to leave the Christian faith and become a Muslim. Nevertheless, the author ’s position is that Muslims are cousins in faith in the one God and this requires that we take seriously the message of the Qur’an and the lived example of Muhammad and ask what Christians might learn from this. The Qur’an is held by Muslims to be guidance for all humanity and not just for Muslims; similarly, Muhammad was sent with a universal mission to all humankind (Q. 34.28). Several principles underlie this approach. First, the eighth commandment given to Moses requires us not to bear false witness against our neighbour and so the story of Islam is retold with fidelity to that tradition. Second, just as Moses took off his shoes at the burning bush because the ground on which he was to step was holy, so due respect is given to Muslims on whose holy ground we are about to step. Third, there is a significant difference between the ideals proclaimed by a religion and the realities of the ways in which it has been lived out through the centuries by followers who do not always live up to those ideals; this work errs on the side of the ideals of Islam because that is the way that any religion would like first to be understood. Fourth, not every follower of a faith has had the opportunity to study it in depth and so we need to acknowledge that we may well meet Muslims who do not see their faith in quite the way that it is portrayed here. Fifth, this does not mean that we have to be uncritical of the story as it unravels; the Qur’an itself calls on people to ask questions and puzzle things out for themselves (Q. 2.266; 3.190– 191). Sixth, there is a real urgency for people in the West to come to some understanding of Islam, given that over the last fifty years substantial numbers of Muslims have been born or come to live in the West. Seventh, communication is a two-way process and so at times elements of Christian thought are presented in a way that tries to communicate accurately to readers for whom this may not be familiar. This book is divided into ten chapters, the ten steps, each of which builds on what has gone before. It is intended to be read from the beginning, so that the foundations can be laid before looking at the details that are based upon them. Once the first three chapters have been absorbed, it is then possible to follow through different aspects but without these foundations there is the possibility that later themes will be misunderstood. It can be used for self-study and further books are listed in the bibliography for those who want to engage more deeply. It can also be used by a group of people, who can read and explore each chapter in turn and thus together explore the whole picture. A Glossary of Islamic words used in the book is given at the back so that readers can refresh their memories about things that occurred earlier on. Whenever dates are given, they are according to the Common Era (CE). In terms of years, this is the same as AD but that stands forAnno Domini, or ‘in the Year of Our Lord’, so only a Christian can properly use that. In religious studies now we use CE instead. Most of the key words and names of people and places in Islamic studies are taken from Arabic. Arabic is written with its own alphabet, so we need to find a way of using English letters to make the same sound as the Arabic word. Most modern authors use one of the standard forms to do this. I have chosen I. R. Netton,A Popular Dictionary of Islam
(London: Curzon, 1992). Some words have become common in older forms and amongst them are: Muslim (Moslem), Qur’an (Koran), Muhammad (Mohammed), ‘Id (Eid), Makka (Mecca) and Madina (Medina). Many references are given to the Qur’an in brackets so that readers can become familiar with the Qur’an itself, such references begin with Q., followed by the chapter number, then a full stop followed by the verse number: (Q. 2.156). Sometimes older translations of the Qur’an had a slightly different numbering system for verses; the references that are given here are from the translation of Abdullah Yusuf Ali, as revised by a team of contemporary scholars and published by the King Fahd Complex for the Printing of the Holy Qur’an in Madina.
1. The Wider Picture: Creation From a Muslim Perspective
God is one – creator – sustainer – creation is in harmony through obeying God’s will – the natural God-given way of life – freewill – we are the servants of God and the stewards of creation – guidance – accountability – revelation sent in Books and in creation – a chain of Prophets from Adam onwards – all guidance essentially the same – Qur’an is the criterion – role of Prophets – a code by which to live – a sense of the closeness of God – the practices of Islam
Everyone sees things from a particular angle. If we think of a football match, the supporters of the losing side often tell the story of the match differently from the winners. The same would be true if we think about an event in history like a war. The victors always seem to write the history books. If we don’t know how the other person sees something, then it is easy to misunderstand. The same is true when looking at a religion. Jews and Christians grow from the same roots but read their histories in different ways. Each religion has its own way of seeing the world; its own story to tell. When we grasp the big picture, then we can make sense of the detail. Most people in the West don’t know much about Islam. Probably they have heard that there was a prophet called Muhammad. A few may have heard about a holy book called the Koran (or Qur’an as it is normally spelt now). Apart from that, most of what we know about Islam and Muslims is what we hear on the news. We have no framework to make sense of it. To build such a framework, we need a starting point. The Muslim starting point goes back before the creation of the world, before time began. Before the world was created, God always existed because God has no beginning and has no end. God is beyond our created universe. God is outside time and outside space. God created time like everything else. There is no place that we can say, ‘God is there’. To sum this up, we say that God is transcendent, meaning beyond everything that is created. This does not mean that ‘God is very old’ or that ‘God lives in a place a long way away’. God is beyond all that. It means also beyond our understanding and beyond our ability to speak accurately about God. Our language, our understanding, our ability to imagine, simply does not stretch far enough to be able to handle the transcendent world of God. Even to call it a world is wrong. God is beyond everything. The fundamental understanding of Islam is that God is one and unlike any created thing or being (Q. 112.1–4). God alone exists without the need for anything else. God was never created. God always simply existed. God cannot be divided up into parts nor can any created thing or person share in the being of God. The English word ‘God’ is used for this one supreme being and similar words occur in a variety of languages. In Arabic, God is Allah, meaning simply ‘The one and only God’. This Arabic word for God is used by Arabic-speaking Jews and Christians as well as by Muslims worldwide. Just as the English word ‘God’ with a capital G cannot have a plural, so in Arabic Allah has no plural form. This defends the absolute uniqueness of God. God chose to create by a free act of the will. God did not need to do it but chose to create. God simply creates by a word of command. God says, ‘be’ and it is! God is the creator of everything that exists and all is dependent on God (Q. 2.255; 36.81–82; 54.50). God is perfect and a perfect being cannot create imperfection, therefore the whole of the creation was created in a state of perfection. Or better to say, it was as perfect as it could be (Q. 32.7; 39.5). You see, God exists outside time and space but the creation is within time and space. This means that everything that is created had a beginning and so must grow older and eventually cease to exist. From the very moment that we are born, we are getting older and we will in the end die. Everything that is created is limited also by space. I am here and not there. Therefore, to be created in time and space carries with it certain limitations. The creation can only be the best of all possible worlds. God is the sustainer of the whole universe (Q. 11.6). God did not create it and then cease to be involved. Without the ongoing, sustaining presence and interest of God, the whole of creation would cease to be any more. Nothing can exist without being in a relationship with the creator (Q. 2.255). Christians may be asking, ‘What about Adam and Eve, the fall and original sin?’ The Qur’an speaks of the existence of Adam and Eve as the first two human beings and of their error of judgement in thinking that something evil was good. This led to them being cast out from Paradise. Eventually they repented and were reconciled to God. Christians maintain that this shattered the perfection of creation in a way that could not be fully repaired. This led to the development of the doctrine of original sin to speak about this fundamental flaw in creation. From the Muslim perspective, God can do anything and so is capable of
restoring the creation to the state of perfection that was lost. When Adam and Eve repented and sought God’s mercy, they were forgiven and returned to a state of harmony with God (Q. 2.30–39). The key word here is harmony. God creates the world in a state of harmony (Q. 32.7; 95.4). That harmony exists between every individual created thing and God. If everything is in harmony with God, then the whole of creation must be in harmony within itself. Each human being, for example, is created in a state of harmony with God, with all humankind and with every other element in creation. Now harmony between the creator and the creation is not a partnership of equals. Who knows best how the creation should run? Surely the creator who designed it and brought it into being. Therefore, harmony with God requires that every element of creation knows its place and obeys the will of God. So all creation, including every human being, is called to be the obedient servant of God. Only then can there be true harmony or peace. This idea of fundamental harmony with God and within the creation is contained in the wordislam. Arabic is a language built up on three-letter roots. Words are made by adding to these three letters. Every word built on the same root is part of one family and shares a set of common meanings. Take for example the Arabic root S L M. From this we can make three words all belonging to the same family:islam, muslimandsalam.
s l m islam mus lim salam
See the way in which the root letters appear in each word? The wordislamthat state of perfect means harmony that exists between God and the whole of creation, and within creation itself, which is the way that God created it. It contains also the idea of submission, because this harmony can only come about when everything submits to the will of God and acts according to the plan of the creator. This will lead to the state of absolute peace, which can only come about when everything is in harmony and obedience to God. The wordmuslimdescribes something in the state ofislam. In this way, we can say that God created everything in the state ofislam, that is, God created everythingmuslim. This goes right back to the dawn of creation itself. The planets, sun and stars were all createdmuslim. Mountains, rivers and minerals are allmuslim. Trees, plants, flowers and vegetables aremuslimso are animals, birds and fish. The and natural condition of the whole of creation is to be in a state of potential perfect harmony with God and with everything else, that is to bemuslim(Q. 17.44; 24.41). In the same way, every human being is createdmuslimand we are most completely at peace when we submit to the will of God in all things (Q. 57.1; 64.1). This brings us to the third of our words made from the same root,salam. This word is used in the traditional Arabic greeting between Muslims,salam alaykum. This is normally translated ‘Peace be with you’ but it really means ‘may you come ever more completely into that state of perfect harmony and peace with God that is meant byislam’. When people finally reach heaven, one of the names for which is Dar al-Salam (The Land of Peace), this will be the greeting that they will use there (Q. 33.44). When the disciples of Jesus asked him to teach them to pray, he taught them the words of what is today called the Lord’s Prayer. This contains the line, ‘Your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in heaven’. This leads Christians to speak about the kingdom (or reign) of God. In the reign of God, the will of God will be obeyed by every element of creation. It is worth thinking about this in relation to the definition ofislamin the last paragraph. When human beings are living this way of life, which is in total harmony with God, that isislam, they are said to be following thedin al-fitra(the natural God-given way of life) (Q. 30.30). The human being is now living like a flower or a bird in the sky, fully and completely the way that God intended. The difference between a human being and a flower or a bird is that we have received the revelation from God in the form of Books of guidance. We have thus been called to live an ethical life following the revealed will of God. It is in this way that we come to a state of harmony with God and, as we can rationally comprehend and morally implement the divine will, we can bring out the full potential harmony that is latent in all creation. When a mountain, tree or dog is in its natural state it ismuslim, but it has no choice in the matter. That is how it was created and that is how it is. Human beings are different. We are the pinnacle of creation and what makes us unique is that we are able to receive direct revelation from God and that we are given
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