sparrows and sandcastles

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Tag: Islam

“the corrosion of reason”

by AC Grayling

 

An opinion panel research survey conducted in July 2006 found more than 30 per cent of UK university students believe in creationism or intelligent design. This raw detail is gasp-inducing enough in its own right, as indication of the effect of the fairy tales that once served humankind as its primitive science and technology in its intellectual infancy, and continue to assert a grip on too many. But it is even more troubling as a symptom of a wider corrosion, the spread of a more virulent cancer of unreason, which is affecting not just the mental culture of our own country but the fate of the world itself. If that last phrase seems hyperbolic, read on.

 

Take the local concern first, and ask what is signified by the 30 per cent statistic at issue. From the day the government of John Major allowed polytechnics to redescribe themselves as universities, and his and successive governments set a target of getting 50 per cent of school leavers into higher education, but without the huge investment of resources at all levels that would make this viable, it was inevitable that standards required for entrance to degree level courses would fall. And so it has dramatically proved. At the same time standards in public examinations at secondary school level have also fallen, by some measures a long way. The official line, of course, is the latter at least is not true: but such is the way with official lines.

 

The combined result is that a significant proportion of university entrants today are noticeably different from their average forerunners of a generation ago: measurably less literate, less numerate, less broadly knowledgeable, and sometimes less reflective. At the same time education has been infected by postmodern relativism and the less desirable effects of political correctness, whose combined effect is to encourage teachers to accept, and even promote as valid alternatives, the various superstitions and antique belief systems constituting the multiplicity of different and generally competing religions represented in our multicultural society. This has gone so far that our taxes are now arrogated to support faith-based schooling, which means the ghettoisation of intellectually defenceless children into a variety of competing superstitions, despite the stark evidence, all the way from Northern Ireland to the madrasahs of Pakistan, of what this does for the welfare of humankind.

 

The key to the weakening of intellectual rigour that all this represents is enquiry is no longer premised on the requirement that belief must be proportional to carefully gathered and assessed evidence. The fact that faith is enough to legitimate anything from superstition to mass murder is not one whit troubling to people of faith themselves, most of whom disagree with the faith of most other people of faith (thus: a christian does not accept Islam, and vice versa; so a christian’s claim to be certain, by faith, that his is the only true religion is rejected, on grounds of faith, by the Muslim; and so on, to the point of mutual assassination); which shows the non-rational mindset underlying religious belief, an essentially infantile attitude of acceptance of fairy stories, has not been affected by the best education can offer in the way of challenging and maturing minds to think for themselves.

 

Example: ask a christian why the ancient story of a deity impregnating a mortal woman who then gives birth to a heroic figure whose deeds earn him a place in heaven, is false as applied to Zeus and his many paramours (the mothers of such as Hercules, the Heavenly Twins, etc.), but true as applied to god, Mary and Jesus. Indeed ask him what is the significance of the fact this tale is older than Greek mythology, and commonplace in Middle Eastern mythologies generally. Why are they myths, whereas what is related in the New Testament is not? Do not expect a rational reply; an appeal to faith will be enough, because with faith anything goes.

 

Here is why the claim that the resurgence of nonrational superstitious belief is a danger to the world. Fundamentalism in the major religions can be and too often is politically infantilising, and in its typical radicalised forms provide utter certainty of being in the right, immunises against tolerance and pluralism, justifies the most atrocious behaviour to the apostate and the infidel, is blind to the appeals of justice let alone mercy or reason, and is intrinsically fascistic and monolithic. One does not have to look far to find shining examples of this pretty picture in today’s world, whether in the Middle East or the U.S. Bible Belt. The rest of the world is caught between these two appalling instances of basically the same phenomenon, so it is perhaps no surprise, though no less regrettable, that the infection should spread from both directions.

 

More regrettable though, is the fact that the civilised quarters of the world are not taking seriously the connection between the world’s current problems and failure to uphold intellectual rigour in education, and not demanding religious belief be a private and personal matter for indulgence only in the home, accepting it in the public sphere only on an equal footing with other interest groups such as trade unions and voluntary organisations such as the Rotary Club. This is the most a religion merits being treated as, as the following proves: if I and a few others claim to constitute a religious group based on belief in the divinity of garden gnomes, should I be entitled to public money for a school in which children can be brought up in this faith, together with a bishop’s seat in Parliament perhaps? Why would this be laughed out of court when belief of essentially the same intellectual value, say, christianity, is accorded all such amenities and more?

 

I remind those who seek to counter with the tired old canard that Stalinism and Nazism are proof secular arrangements are worse than religious ones, that fundamentalist religion is the same in its operation and effects as Stalinism and Nazism for the reason these latter are at base the same thing as religions, viz. monolithic ideologies. Religion is a man-made device, not least of oppression and control, whose techniques and structures were adopted by Stalinism and Nazism, the monolithic salvation faiths of modernity, as the best teachers they could wish for. When any of these imprisoning ideologies are on the back foot and/or in the minority, they present sweet faces to those they wish to seduce: the kiss of friendship in the parish church, the summer camp for young communists in the 1930s. But give them the levers of power and they are the Taliban, the Inquisition, the Stasi.

 

Give them AK47s and Semtex, and some of the fanatics among them become airline bombers, mass murderers of ordinary people and for the most contemptible reasons.

 

How far are the 30 per cent of students who believe in creationism from airline bombers? A very long way of course; the latter are a psychopathic minority only. But the point to register and take seriously is that there is nevertheless a connecting thread, which is belief in antique superstitions and the nonrational basis of the putative values they represent, values which can lead in the extreme to mass murder, as the chilling jingle reminds us: “faith is what I die for, dogma is what I kill for”.

 

As part of the strategy for countering the pernicious effects faith and dogma can produce, we need to return religious commitment to the private sphere, stop the folly of promoting superstitions and religious segregation in education, demand standards of intellectual rigour be upheld at all educational levels, and find major ways of reversing the current trend of falling enrolment in science courses. The alternative is a return to the Dark Ages, the tips of whose shadows are coldly falling upon us even now.

 

Taken from AC Grayling’s Against All Gods, published by Oberon Books.

 

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mendacious rhetoric

“Without religion, without faith in the absolute, because god is the absolute, then we don’t have an objective foundation for moral values. As a result, people are divided, people are fragmented because it is all based on relativism, which simply means to say, it is up to each one to think. How can we build a united society when we don’t have a reference point, a basis for unity?”

- William Goh, the next Archbishop of Singapore (source)

 

There are numerous problems with this off-the-cuff rhetoric by Singapore’s next Catholic Archbishop-elect.

 

First, religion is not defined as or equal to faith in the absolute. Religion is a complicated mix of theology, philosophy and social movement. While Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism and Islam concoct the idea of a sole absolute god, other religions do not.

 

Second, while the word “god” in everyday language refers to an absolute, and in Goh’s case a source of moral absolutes, it is not the only definition. There are those who use “god” as a metaphor or symbol for transcendence, the meaning of life or the universal principle. Or anything they do not understand.

 

Third, Goh’s rhetoric assumes god’s existence as a no-brainer. But anyone who studies philosophy knows that isn’t the case. So what then? Is he implying societies not built on a faith in god are fragmented? Come on, his very Prime Minister is not a theist.

 

Fourth, since when does an “objective moral foundation” a prerequisite or basis for a united society? Is Goh implying that Theravada Buddhists are not contributing to Singapore’s unity because they do not believe in an absolute deity and thus an absolute for morals? Is Goh accusing Lee Kuan Yew, an atheist, for not contributing towards Singapore’s unity? Is Goh sneaking in the idea that all Singapore residents have to be theists in order for our society to be united? Is Goh espousing a totalitarian mindset?

 

I think not. But that is what one concludes from his rhetoric.

 

Fifth, does morality require an objective foundation? Theists think so, and want the rest of the world to concur. The fact is they do not have a corner on the truth or anything, for that matter. Theists get their knowledge of reality not from careful observation and study of the world but archaic texts written by unschooled ancients. Which source of knowledge is more reliable?

 

Sixth, the idea that morality comes from god is only an assertion, not a fact. I opine it is more plausible to suggest the natural origins of morality. It does not come from a supernatural deity or any “absolute” source. Homo sapiens evolved a moral sense because we are a highly intelligent social species. As our brains grow larger, we think and reason. We rationalise if we are selfish and kill, loot and rape one another, we will not thrive, if not die out. What is now “common” moral sense to us was revolutionary in our evolutionary past. The kill-or-be-killed caveman ideology may be effective in prehistory. But over time we learn that cooperation and compromise is better. We learn that violence only gives birth to more violence. We still revert to our bestial reptilian past at times, maybe many times, but we learn. The part of us which distinguishes us from our primate cousins tells us otherwise.

 

Anyhow, we should do good because we want to, not because god or our religion tells us to. We should not want to rob or rape because they violate the property and bodily rights of another, not because they are some ancient community’s fantasy. Some christian men seem to be proud of the fact that if not for Jesus Christ, they will be pole-vaulting vaginas.

 

Seventh, the basis of societal unity cannot be god. There are so many concepts of god as there are religions and unless every citizen’s idea of god is the same, division will occur! To square the circle of god into the most common denominator is naive. Yes, religious people of all stripes uphold the doing of good. Yes, religious people of all stripes are believe in love and compassion. But not every religion uphold pacifism. Not every religion uphold acceptance of the other. Not every religion holds a pluralistic view. Not every religion is that law-abiding. Not every religion holds a form of universal “salvation”. Not every religion is nationalistic. Not every religion agrees on the nature of human sexuality. Or abortion. Or euthanasia. Or contraception. Or stem-cell research. Or gambling. Blah, blah, blah. Worst of all, unlike free-thinkers and humanists, the religious can get very very touchy on these issues. Some even blow people’s brains out.

 

Faith in the absolute, in god, is NOT the answer to societal cohesion, let alone a fairy tale moral unity. If it is, the Middle East should be one of the most stable and peaceful places to live in.

 

Last, it is precisely the individual freedom to think and reason which contributes to human progress and enlightenment. Societies which prohibit creativity and free-thinking are societies which die. Does Goh really believe that it is harmful for each to think his or her own? I think not.

 

I miss Rowan Williams, not that he is a Catholic. He is not. But he is one christian leader and churchman who does not make philosophically, theologically and sociologically naive comments. He thinks hard before he opines. Then again, it appears Third World Singaporeans love leaders like William Goh. We cannot seem to digest nuances, only childish black-and-whites.

 

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“christianity on its way out”

by Richard Dawkins

 

The drop in those ticking the Christian box, from 71.7 per cent in 2001 to 59.3 per cent in 2011, is highly significant. Even more dramatic is the rise in numbers professing “No religion”, from 14.8 per cent to 25.1 per cent.The two together represent a genuine shift of opinion, away from Christianity and towards unbelief. This is quite different from the increase in Muslims, which surely is due to demographics only: nobody could seriously suggest that any significant number of people in this country would actually convert to Islam. And, unlike Christianity, converting away from Islam carries certain penalties calculated to deter.

 

The exhilaratingly high figure of 25 per cent for non-believers – far more than any group except Christians – would be even higher if the census question on religion had been more intelligently framed. If they had asked “Do you have a religion?” instead of “What is your religion?”, polling data from the British Social Attitudes Survey confirms commonsense: the numbers of nonbelievers would have been massively higher. Non-belief is not a religion, and it is insulting to frame a question that presumes that everyone has a religion, in the same way as they have an age and a sex.

 

But in any case, do the 59 per cent who ticked the Christian box really believe in Christianity? Of course they are free to fasten any label they like to whatever it is they believe. But though they may call it Christianity, are bishops, priests and Christian lobbyists entitled to draw support from the 59 per cent? That depends on what the 59 per cent really do believe. To discover exactly that, the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science (UK) commissioned an Ipsos MORI poll in the very week after the census. We asked only those who ticked the Christian box a series of supplementary questions. The results should be devastating to anybody who wants to claim that this is still a Christian country, which should be run in accordance with Christian values.

 

Only 32 per cent of the census “Christians” believe in the resurrection of Jesus. Only 35 per cent could pick out the correct answer to “What is the first book of the New Testament?” when given a 4-way choice of Matthew, Genesis, Acts, Psalms. When asked why they had ticked the Christian box, only 28 per cent of those who did so said it was because they believe the teachings of Christianity. The most popular answer to that question was, “I like to think of myself as a good person.” What? You ticked the Christian box because you like to think of yourself as a good person? Are you serious? Do you think atheists, Muslims, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists don’t think of themselves as good people?

 

Yet, when these “Census Christians” were asked where they turned when faced with a moral dilemma, only ten per cent said they turned to their religion. The majority turned to relatives or to their own inner moral sense, which of course is what good atheists do. So much for the cliché that you need God to be good. And those who think that our laws and governance should follow Christian values should be disconcerted by the following. Seventy four per cent of the Census Christians are secular in that they think religion should have no special influence on public policy.

 

After the 2001 census, politicians and clerics used the 72 per cent Christian figure as a weapon to argue for Christian influence in public life. This time, despite the poor wording of the religion question, they will not be able to pull the same trick. Not only has the official figure dropped to 59 per cent. The percentage of those self-identifying Christians who either believe in the central tenets of Christianity, or who think Christianity should be given special status in our national policy, is now very low indeed. Christianity is on the way out in this country. We must hope that other religions will go the same way.

(source)

 

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“religion of peace” strikes again

 

 

 

I can only shake my head if an amateur worse-than-B-grade film can turn the followers of the so-called “religion of peace” into steroid-drunk demon-possessed hooligans. I can only shake my head if governments want to be cowered by this infantile bullying by a group of dodo-brained gorillas who think they have a right to kill people and damage property just because someone or some organization has the courage to satirize their religion.

 

 

 

I can only raise the adolescent “L” finger-sign over my brow. Will muslims ever grow up and be civilized human beings in the 21st century? We have a right to say and opine ANYTHING we want, and this includes disagreements over ANY religion. If you disagree, you are welcome to express your disagreement gentlemanly via scholarly discourse. You are welcome to engage in a public debate with the makers of the lousy low-budget film. There is no need to scapegoat an entire country. There is no need to burn its flag. There is no need to stage unruly protests all over the islamic world and claim you are hurt.

 

 

 

When there is freedom of religion, there is also freedom of non-religion. If every religious person claims he or she is offended by some innocent Muhammad or Jesus or Buddha cartoon, I suppose every nonreligious person like myself can claim we are offended when you bigots preach fairy tales to us and claim we will go to hell if we do not follow your religion. We are offended when you make idiotic claims about homosexuality being a learned lifestyle. We are offended when you reject obvious scientific fact for silly fairy tales. We are offended when you force your private beliefs on others. We are offended when you are so blind to simple logic and common sense. We are offended when you make outrageous policies and laws just because you think an ancient outdated book says so.

 

 

 

But we are civilized to wage our battles through scholarship, the literary arts and journalism. We are civilized to wage our battles through the arts and film. We are compassionate not to endanger any human life or property. We understand that love and compassion is the purest and paramount virtue, regardless of personal creed or religion. We will not hesitate to protect even you, barbaric hooligans of the Middle East, if someone else wishes you physical harm.

 

Shame on you.

 

*******

religion of peace

 

 

(source)

 

:) :) :)

“sex”

by AC Grayling

 

A common thread connects opposition to contraception, erotically flavoured advertising, hostility to minority sexual lifestyles and complaints about sex in film and art – and such opposition still goes on, even in the supposedly enlightened modern world. The common thread is the moral conservatism which presumes to tell other people what to think and how to behave.

 

Perhaps such conservatism should now take its name from some other recent champion in the great cause of making people as sexually inactive, ignorant and powerless as possible. What such warriors wish is to stop people having sex unless thoroughly married, to stop people knowing anything about it if unmarried and – anyway for orthodox catholics – to put people completely at the mercy of reproductive chance despite the availability of safe scientific means of controlling fertility. This is what the anti-sex crusade desires: limitation, ignorance, enslavement to biology and marginalisation of sex to hidden places in just one conventional kind of relationship.

 

If sexual relations are ever perfunctory and unimaginative, unsatisfying or downright frustrating, exploitative, furtive, sleazy or violent, it will have a great deal to do with the meddling hand of moralism. If there is a troubling level of sexually transmitted disease in society, it will again have much to do with moralism. If there are unwanted pregnancies, especially among single girls and young women, and a high rate of abortions, it will yet again be because of moralism.

 

Why? Because of the counterproductive effect of moralism’s futile endeavour to limit and control sexuality by denial, by limiting knowledge and opportunity, and by directing the sexual side of human nature into as anodyne and routine a channel as possible. Moralists think that if they expose people to as little stimulation as possible by censoring sexual images and references, and by keeping them as much in the dark and as much under a sense of prohibition as they can, they will thereby squeeze sex out of daily life, or at any rate keep it bottled.

 

Bur exactly there lies their mistake. Imprisoning sexual feelings is an invariable recipe for potentiating them. Ignorance about how to deal with them means that when they express themselves they might do so negatively, even harmfully – and with serious consequences: as when the combination of secrecy and shame with urgency results in couples not having contraception available when they need it.

 

Moralists think they get everything they want by cememting sex to fertility, because pregnancy and child-rearing are well-known antaphrodisiacs, so the moralists can be confident that in most cases sexual passion between marital partners will diminish – although no sooner have moralists breathe a sigh of relief on that score than they find themselves deprecating the adultery and resulting family breakdown which frequently follow, without accepting the leading part their repressive views play.

 

What is the source of the moralists’ strange idea that sex is wrong, bad, dirty, and in need of control? One answer is: the consequences of just such control – for if you dam a river it will flood elsewhere in awkward and unexpected ways. A major source of hostility to sex is religion. The belief that soul is heavenly and body earthly, and that everything earthly interferes with the soul’s aspiration to heaven, is the fountainhead of negative evaluations of bodily things.

 

That case is proved by the proliferation of sexually suggestive and explicit advertising. Some of it is tasteless – which is an aesthetic judgement, not a moral one – and some of it is beautiful and erotic. To the generous eye the latter adds delight and flavour to the world, while to the acidulated eye of prudery it is a lecherous and threatening affront.

 

How sad therefor for the prude!

 

Prudery expresses itself most forcibly as censorship, and censorship has been at its most damaging, so far as the last century goes in the anglophone world anyway, in relation to serious cinema. Until almost the end of the twentieth century, film censors in Britain generally left frank representation of sex to foreign-language cinema, doubtless because they thought that the alien provenance of such films gave a kind of zoological respectability to their sexual content. The censors also doubtless thought that since such films mainly attracted small audiences of intellectuals, their depiction of foreign goings-on would not damage the nation’s morals at large.

 

By letting mainstream films with explicit sex scenes pass uncut, Britain’s censors began to signal the crumbling of important taboos against public visual representation of such objects and activities as erect penises and oral sex. The significance of allowing these things to appear in mainstream cinema, rather than leaving them to the bracketed-off realm of pornography, is that it allows them to be incorporated more fully into debate about life’s natural experiences. The best kinds of art include among their other purposes the encountering and exploration of what happens in ordinary life, and so long as certain things are kept out of view by obscenity laws and prudery, art is prevented from doing so – is prevented, in short, from telling the truth. Pornography cannot supply the lack, because its erections and oral sex are, among other merely repetitive frictions of body parts, the sole point; whereas in real life they are always a component of a larger and richer debate about love, needs, passions and sorrows, as real art almost always, and powerfully, shows.

 

But why are erect penises and oral sex taboo anywway? And when did they become so? Astonishingly, the removal from public view of erections and sexually various activities, relegating them to dark places of whispering and anxiety, is a very recent phenomenon, and one restricted almost exclusively to cultural traditions stemming from the “religions of the Book” – Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Every other culture, historically and contemporaneously, which has escaped their attitudes to sex and the body has two notable features: a widespread celebration of sexuality in art and religion, and a complete absence of pornography (which is not, note, the same thing as erotica).

 

Thousands of pages could be filled in documentation of this claim. Look at the painted pottery of the classical world and its statuary, jewellery and murals. They are full of frank depictions of all forms of heterosexual and homosexual activity, and of celebration of the erect penis as a positive symbol. Women and girls standardly wore penis amulets as lucky charms, erections were carved over doors of houses to bring good fortune, and sculpted priapic herms stood at rural crossroads to protect travellers.

 

The sources of this sexual celebration are deep and ancient. In Mesopotamia four thousand years ago, the same word denoted semen and fresh water, the connection lying in the power of both to fecundate. Survival depended upon the herds reproducing and the crops growing; all life turned on fertility, and death lay with its opposite, so it is scarcely surprising that sex and all that appertains to it should have been a matter of great interest and ubiquitous festival.

 

The growth of civilisation is measured by refinements of living and increasing distance from the immediacies of survival. In matters of sex, the cultivation of physical pleasure for its own sake was a natural concomitant of this process, as the beautiful art of India, China and Japan illustrates. But this has never been so wherever the “religions of the Book” have achieved dominance. Jewish sexual morality is the morality of herdsmen anxious to increase the number of their flocks and children. Its chief and overriding aim is reproduction. Therefore, although a man can easily divorce his wife or take concubines, to ensure that he has offspring, he must not do anything that misdirects his seed from reproductive uses. Oral sex, homosexuality and masturbation were thus rendered abominations. Onan, remember, was struck dead by God for not placing his seed in his dead brother’s wife’s womb.

 

Now add two unlucky accidents of christian history. The first was the early christian belief that the second coming was imminent, and that the faithful should therefore remain celibate. On these few words of St Paul rests a groaning mass of subsequent sexual frustration in western history, and its inevitable result: pornography and deviation. When the Second Coming did not happen, Christianity was already in the hands of philosophers who found it a welcoming home for Plato’s view that spirit is good and must be cultivated, whereas body is bad and must be disciplined. This is the second accident. The inevitable followed, from monasticism to the extremes represented by Origen castrating himself to escape his sexual longings.

 

One signal effect of restrictive morality, at least as an official ethos, is that it provides men with ways to control women’s sexuality and fertility. The historical result was the expectation of female virginity before marriage and chastity after it, with very severe penalties for non-compliance, thus ensuring that men were genuinely the fathers of the children to whom they bequeathed their property. Men, of course, were subject to the same constraints only in theory.

 

It was in particular Christian puritanism after the Reformation which added the final touch to western attitudes to sex. Puritanism regards sex as an evil attendant on the expulsion from Eden. At its extreme it teaches that husbands and wives sin if they enjoy their conjugal duty to reproduce. The generalisation of this miasma of prudery spread in Europe from the seventeenth century until its apogee in the nineteenth. One of the illustrations of the folly it provoked is the British Museum’s reputed decision to chip off penises on greek statues in its possession, to save the blushes of its Victorian visitors. By one of the quirks of history, most of the penises on classical statues depicting male beauty are small, as a symbol of continence; the giant phalluses of satyrs and Priapuses are not meant to suggest that erotomanes have big penises, but big appetites. By mutilating the statues, the prudes thereby obliterated classical tokens of moral restraint.

 

Among the malays who live in the Cape of South Africa, it is a sign of female beauty to have the four upper and lower front teeth missing. This is allegedly because it facilitates fellatio, the chief form of contraception in the community.

 

As a cultural mark of the centrality of sex in life, malay orthodontics lie on a continuum with the joyful statues of India’s Konarak and Khajuraho temples, and from them to the immense wealth of erotic and passionate art in most non-Abrahamic cultures beyond.

 

If the censors’ passing of frank content in serious cinema means that the strangulated and distorted sexual attitudes of the west are thawing back to the human mainstream at last, it is a welcome and grateful sign.

 

Just how much Britain’s own recent cultural mainstream incorporated sexual frankness is demonstrated in an entertaining and illuminating account by Ian Littlewood (called Sultry Climates) of what the eighteenth century Grand Tour was in large part really about. Littlewood originally won his spurs by writing literary companions to Paris and Venice, proving him to be a discerning guide to intellectual and cultural landscapes. While working on those books,  he says, he noticed that alongside the officially recorded responses of travellers there was a secret history unfolding too, of travel to territories of experience closed at home: territories of sexual encounter and awakening, of freedom and felicity, of release and long-pent sensual expression. For men and women both, travelling abroad always was (and still is) a journey to liberation, arriving sometimes at love but often sexual pleasure for its own sake.

 

Rich youths went on their eighteenth-century Grand Tours ostensibly to acquire languages and politeness, culture and an insight into foreign ways, but in reality they acquired much of a less mentionable nature besides – not just gambling debts but sexual experience and often enough the pox. Sexual experience was an aspect of the tour covertly welcomed by parents at home. As Boswell’s frank record shows, the different mores and morals of Abroad offered a wealth of opportunities for the repressed tourist to throw off his shackles, a fact which, once grasped, was never afterwards forgotten – and remains part of the motivation for clubbers heading to Ibiza and Shirley Valentines heading for Greece.

 

For convenience Littlewood classifies sexual travellers into connoisseurs, pilgrims and rebels. The first group comprises Grand Tourists, the second those Romantic seekers after self-discovery who expected fulfillment in the holy places of antique cutlure, and the third those who travelled as a way of rejecting the restrictions of home. That this taxonomy is not exclusive is already implied in the idea that many in the first two categories also belonged to the third. A signal example of the rebel is afforded by Norman Douglas, who abandoned his diplomatic career when he discovered his homosexuality. Giving lunch to visitor from England in a Florentine cafe, he pointed out a young waiter and described his charms in bed, and then asked, “When are you coming out here to join us?” Douglas is the paradigm of the gay or bisexual man for whom escape from what he called the “murk” of England was release into life itself. Italy, North Africa and between the two world wars Berlin, were havens for such, from Oscar Wilde and Andre Gide to Christopher Isherwood.

 

Central to Littlewood’s account is the thesis that sex and travel have a basic affinity, as evidenced by our sexual vocabulary:

 

  • roving eyes and wandering hands
  • exploring
  • mounting
  • entering
  • penetrating
  • riding
  • galloping
  • coming
  • going all the way

Although Littlewood’s chief geographical focus is France and Italy, he makes an interesting foray to Polynesia because of its significance as a sexual Eden in literature and legend, which riveted the attention and excited the longing of many. Imagine the amazement when news reached eighteenth-century England of a paradise where beautiful young girls swam naked to visiting ships, their long black hair streaming in the water behind them, offering themselves to the sailors in return for the gift of a single nail – so prized was iron among the Tahitians then. Hawkesworth and de Bougainville reported the ease, the sensuality, the laughing unconcern with which the lovely island girls gave their favours. Predictably, when christian missionaries set to work in the south seas, it was with a grim determination to stamp out this “detestable licentiousness”, a large part of their plan being to “extirpate” the easily available bread-fruit from the islands so that their inhabitants would have to work for their food, thereby disciplining themselves “in the sweat of their brows”, leaving them far less time for misbehaviour.

 

Among the plethora of throwaway detail in Littlewood’s story is his account of the cult of the sun that brought life to the French Riviera. The writers and artists who discovered its glorious summers had themselves made the connection between hot weather and sex which we now think is too obvious and enjoyable to miss. The shedding of dress and the shedding of moral restraint go together in our frosted northern imaginations, showing, as Littlewood points out, that “the central link between sex and travel is not to do with the meeting of bodies, but with the working of imagination.”

 

In discussing sex it is easy to confuse two separable though related things, namely, its psychological and biological aspects. Instructive treatises on these respective aspects are Geoffrey Miller’s The Mating Mind and Tim Birkhead’s Promiscuity. The first is about sex, the second is about reproduction. The one about sex is by a psychologist, the one about reproduction by a biologist. The one about sex, by psychologist Miller, talks of human nature and culture, art and morality, beauty and playfulness. The one about reproduction, by biologist Birkhead, talks of sperm, oviducts, sacs, spiders and chickens. Yet both in their radically different ways offer much illumination about the same thing.

 

These two tomes differ also in how cheering they are. Miller’s psychological account has an upbeat, cultural, intellectual message to offer, which in a nutshell is that language and intelligence – and all that go with them – are to humans what the tail is to the peacock, viz. sexual ornamentation, aimed at promoting the possessor’s attractiveness, and thereby improving his or her chances of getting a mate. Birkhead’s biological account is less upbeat. It is about polyandrous behaviour of females of almost all species, meaning that they collect sperm from several males, and internally select the best of it by physiological means. Miller tells us that brain power is sexy, which we always thought was partially true; Birkhead tells us that females of most species are promiscuous, which we always knew while convincingly pretending to believe that only males are so.

 

The brainpower-is-sexy view has generally been regarded as merely a partial truth because although some women indeed claim to find smart men attractive, the reverse is not noticeably true, and may even be noticeably false. Moreover, the attractiveness of brain power has its limits: if dusty old dons, after reading Miller’s book, think they are in for a run of luck, they are out of luck. Lots of girls prefer the bad boy who dropped out of school to the good boy who is still there swotting. This makes Miller’s thesis look a bit optimistic. Birkhead’s thesis is at least frankly pessimistic, as it applies to humans: the message is that if a girl is minded to get pregnant, vows and values are not going to stand in the way of her getting the genetic wherewithal from other than her usual supplier, if she thinks it necessary.

 

Birkhead is concerned to show that standard models of sexual reproduction in nature have to be substantially revised in the direction of new theses about choice and competition in the mating game after insemination has taken place. The standard model regards most females in nature as typically monogamous and passive, although it allows that male gaudinessis is a function of the fact that females do the choosing in the first place, with males competing for favours. Birkhead amasses a mountain of data from across the animal kingdom to show that females are anything but monogamous and passive, and that a significant part of their non-passivity is POST-COITAL.

 

Selection operates more intensely on males because of this competition, but it also means that males and females are in conflict too, for the male wishes to be the fertiliser of the female’s eggs, and therefore seeks to prevent or limit her insemination by other males. Accordingly his sperm may carry chemicals that alter her behavour, perhaps by making her unreceptive to further copulations. They can damage her, or even shorten her life. In return, females use the male as a source of supply, exchanging sexual favours for gifts of food, or absorbing the nutriments in his sperm, or even eating him during or after copulation, as with certain spiders and mantids.

 

Birkhead’s thesis about interuterine sperm competition and selection by the female depends in the end on good experimental and observational evidence showing the processes in action. As Birkhead demonstrates in the case of the headline-catching claims about human “sperm wars” put forward by Robin Baker and Mark Bellis, which critics claimed was based on shaky evidence and slack thinking, great care is needed in science, even when hypotheses are in the early stages of mooting, as is the case with Birkhead’s own.

 

It is a little unfair to caricature Miller’s claim as “brain power is sexy”, although that is what in large part his central thesis comes down to. But quite a lot of his book is about breasts, buttocks, clitorises and orgasms too, and although of course some will immediately see their connection with art and culture, not all might. And indeed it is not clear that Miller does either, for in telling us that pert breasts and plump round buttocks are signals of female youth and fitness, and that male choice evolutionarily selected the favoured size and shape of these things not to mark maturity so much as to distinguish younger women from older less fertile women with flat drooping breasts and cellulite, he seems to be stating the obvious; but whether or not he is right, he has left the mind some way behind.

 

Miller is on better ground with art, morality, language and creativity, the four distinctive features of human beings that evolutionary biology allegedly cannot understand because they are expensive in energy and have no obvious survival value. Miller’s place for them as ornaments and allures in the sexual scheme of things has plausibility, although it would be a mistake to be purely reductive about them, for it is equally obvious that, given the curiosity and intelligence humans possess, much in art and the social nexuses of morality and language seems intrinsically and not merely instrumentally worthwhile.

 

On at least one point Miller is wholly persuasive: that the evolution of the homo sapiens brain must have taken place by something like the rapid feedback mechanism he describes as a “runaway process” in which given evolutionary adaptations take hold and become dominant. It is natural to think that the bigness of the human brain is causally linked to consciousness and language, and these in turn to art and morality; and it is further natural to think that these adaptations must be for something useful.

 

One thing is sure. If sexual activity were allowed its natural place in human life and society, it would very probably consume less time and energy than it now does. Sex occupies an absurdly inflated part of the moral horizon, and in many respects is surrounded by muddle and even misery. Prohibitions, anxieties, and what amounts to social rationing inflate the importance of sex (the hungry individual thinks only of food), and also in some cases distort it – for frustrated instincts are more prone to seek unusual, sometimes harmful, outlets than more easily satisfiable ones.

 

A kindly nature has made sexual activity pleasurable, and not just to encourage reproduction but to promote bonding and plausibly health also. Our closest primate relatives, bonobo chimpanzees, enjoy frequent sexual encounters as a means of bonding and recreation, just as do humans. Among other primates mating activity is influenced by the oestrus cycle, which renders female sexual interest periodic. Otherwise chimpanzees, gorillas and orang utans do not moralise, still less agonise, about sex, but simply get on with it when occasion calls.

 

Matters are greatly more complex with humans of course, and there is no clear answer to the question: what is the natural place of sex in human life? A woman’s potential investment in sexual activity, with its possible consequences of pregnancy, birth and childcare, is so heavy that it seems natural to expect her to be more selective about partners and more circumspect about engaging in sex, than is a man – at very least, when contraception is unavailable or unreliable. If some characteristic kinds of male homosexual activity are any guide to male sexuality in general, most or at least many men are rather like bonobo chimpanzees, in being apt - if offered the opportunity – to engage freely in frequent casual sexual encounters, attended by little emotional commitment. On this view, the argument might be that heterosexual males differ from their homosexual brothers only in having, as a rule, less opportunity for sex than they, owing to conventions and the restraints imposed by potential partners.

 

It seems that if women’s potential investment in sex is reduced by effective contraception and greater economic independence, their attitudes liberalise. In particular, wherever women attain equal status in business and the professions, their sexual behaviour comes increasingly to resemble that of men – even in such notable respects as, for example, employing prostitutes while on business trips and in having more casual or opportunistic sexual encounters generally.

 

These points suggest that men and women differ in sexual behaviour only when the latter are obliged to be circumspect about consequences. The advance of science has made these factors contingent, not essential; anatomy is no longer destiny. So everything that needs to be said about sexual morality and liberation applies equally to both sexes.

 

***

 

This article is taken from a compilation of essays entitled Life, Sex and Ideas, by Anthony Grayling.

 

******* 

 

 

this is why I am so pissed off with fundamentalists…

 

It seems that the numbers are growing, albeit slowly but steadily. And it is a problem to science education in the UK.

 

More and more muslim undergraduates in biology and medicine are avoiding classes on evolution because they perceived the subject to be contradictory to their religious understanding of the world.

 

Creationism, that is.

 

Muslim Medics boycott Lectures on Darwin and Evolution

 

It used to be christian loonies, but now it is the growing loony muslim population in the UK, which somehow always appear to grow via immigration from Pakistan and similar countries. And their version of Islam is loony indeed.

 

Now – even IF one rejects the fact of evolution for fairy tales – there is no harm in learning about an alternative viewpoint. In fact, if creationists want to promote their pseudo-science more effectively, they should learn NOT to make lame arguments against a caricatured form of evolution that evolutionists never teach in the first place.

 

British muslims should learn from intellectuals like Usama Hassan, an imam at a mosque in East London who recently suggested that darwinian evolution and islam is compatible.

 

Alas, as is the common practice among the ignorant muslim throng these days, Hassan received death threats and pseudo-fatwas for his scientific views.

 

Sigh…Britain should somehow BAN the Saudi Arabian brand of Wahabhi islam from entering its shores – it is this idiotic country that is responsible for propagating much of the nonsense in Islam which we see in the media today. Islam would do better without Saudi Arabia and its lunatics.

 

*******

 

“in its proper place”

 

“It was not any particular teaching that attracted me, but the whole wonderful, inexplicably coherent structure of moral teaching and practical life program. Islam appears to me like a perfect work of architecture. All its parts are harmoniously conceived to complement and support each other: nothing is superfluous and nothing lacking, with the result of an absolute balance and solid composure. Probably this feeling that everything in the teachings and postulates of Islam is “in its proper place,” has created the strongest impression on me.”

- Leopold Weiss (aka Muhammad Asad)

 

*******

 

the qur’an on jesus

 

Behold! the angels said: “Oh Mary! The One God gives you glad tidings of a word from Him: his name will be Christ Jesus, the son of Mary, held in honour in this world and the hereafter and of the company of those nearest to the One God;

He shall speak to the people in childhood and in maturity. And he shall be of the company of the righteous.”

- Surah 3: 45-46

 

“And the One God will teach him the Book and Wisdom, the Law and the Gospel,

And appoint him a Messenger to the Children of Israel, with this message: “I have come to you, with a Sign from your Lord, in that I make for you out of clay, as it were, the figure of a bird, and breathe into it, and it becomes a bird by the One Godd’s leave: and I heal those born blind, and the lepers, and I quicken the dead, by the One God’s leave; and I declare to you what you eat, and what you store in your houses. Surely therein is a Sign for you if you did believe;

“I have come to you, to attest the Law which was before me. And to make lawful to you part of what was before forbidden to you; I have come to you with a Sign from your Lord. So fear the One God, and obey me.

- Surah 3: 48-50

 

*******

 

judeo-christian decalogue vs islamic code of duties

 

Here is the common basic ethic of all three Abrahamic monotheisms – the first statement of each couplet represents the judeo-christian commandment while the second statement (in bold) represents the Islamic.

 

I am the Lord, your God.

In the name of God, the most Gracious, the most Merciful.

 

You shall have no other gods before me.

Do not set up any other deity side by side with God.

 

You shall not make for yourself an image of God. You shall not misuse the name of the Lord, your God.

For thy Sustainer has ordained that you shall worship none but him.

 

Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.

NIL

 

Honour your father and mother.

And do good unto thy parents. And give his due to the near of kin, as well as to the needy and wayfarer.

 

You shall not kill.

And do not kill your children for fear of poverty…and do not take any human being’s life.

 

You shall not commit adultery.

And do not commit adultery.

 

You shall not steal.

And do not touch the substance of an orphan.

 

You shall not bear false witnesss against your neighbour.

And be true to every promise.

 

You shall not covet your neighbour’s house.

And give full measure whenever you measure, and weigh with a balance that is true. And never concern thyself with anything of which thou hast no knowledge.

 

You shall not covet your neighbour’s wife, nor his slave, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is your neighbour’s.

And walk not on the earth with haughty self-conceit.

 

*******

 

our father abraham

in the three monotheisms:

 

Judaism

  • He is the biological father of Isaac, whose son Jacob was called Israel. God made an eternal covenant with him. So he is the ancestor of the Jewish people.
  • He is also a model of true obedience to the Law: the ideal Jew; justified by works, which proved his steadfastness in faith.
  • The sacrifice of Isaac as a prototype for withstanding the most difficult trial of faith.
  • He is also the recipient of the promises of Israel: people and land.

 

Christianity

  • Spiritual father of all believers, whose promises have been fulfilled in Christ. So he is the ancestor of Jews and Christians.
  • He is a model of unshakeable faith; the one who announces Christ; justified by the faith which precedes works.
  • The sacrifice of Isaac as a prototype for the handing over of God the Son by the Father.
  • He is the recipient of the promises for all peoples: Jesus Christ as the heir of Abraham.

 

Islam

  • He is the biological father of Ishmael, with whom he founded the Ka’bah in Mecca as the central sanctuary  of the one God. So he is the ancestor of the Arabs.
  • A model of unconditional submission: the first muslim; he attains righteousness through faith in God, the service of God and a life pleasing to God.
  • Setting out from Ur as the prototype of the Prophet’s migration from Mecca.
  • He is the recipient of the original revelation, which is set down unfalsified only in the Qur’an.

 

*******

 

all human beings are equal

by Abdul Malik Mujahid

 

“O Mankind, We created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female and made you into nations and tribes, that you may know each other. Verily the most honored of you in the sight of God is he who is the most righteous of you” (Quran 49:13).

 

Explanation: There are several principles, which this verse presents:

 

1. This message is not just for Muslims only because God is addressing all of humanity. While Muslims are one brotherhood, this is part of a larger brotherhood of humanity.

 

2. God is telling us that He has created us. Therefore He knows the best about us.

 

3. He says that He created us from one man and one woman meaning then that we are all the same.

 

4. It also means that all human beings are created through the same process, not in a manner in which some are created with a better mechanism than others.

 

5. God is the One who made human beings into different groups and people.

 

6. These differences are not wrong, rather a sign from God (“And among His Signs is the creation of the heavens and the earth, and the difference of your languages and colors. Verily, in that are indeed signs for those who know” [Quran 30:22]).

 

7. Note that no word equivalent to race is used in this ayah or any other verse of the Quran.

 

8. Islam, however, limits the purpose of these distinctions to differentiation and knowing each other. This is not meant to be a source of beating each other down with an attitude of ‘my group is better than your group’ or false pride as is the case with tribalism, nationalism, colonialism, and racism.

 

9. The only source of preference or greatness among human beings is not on a national or group level, but it is at the individual level.

 

10. One individual who is (higher in Taqwa), more conscious of his Creator and is staying away from the bad and doing the good is better, no matter what nation, country or caste he is part of. Individual piety is the only thing that makes a person better and greater than the other one.

 

11. However, the only criterion of preference, Taqwa, is not measurable by human beings. Indeed God is the One Who knows and is aware of everything so we should leave even this criterion to God to decide instead of human beings judging each other.

 

These are the deeply embedded ideals of Islam which still bring people to this way of life even though Muslims are not on the best level of Iman today. This is what changed the heart of a racist Malcolm X when he performed Hajj in Makkah. This is the power that brought Muhammad Ali to Islam. This is what still attracts the Untouchables of India towards Islam. This is the theory which convinced noted historian Professor A.J. Toynbee in 1948 to say that: “The extinction of race consciousness as between Muslims is one of the outstanding achievements of Islam, and in the contemporary world there is, as it happens, a crying need for the propagation of this Islamic virtue.”

 

Let’s ask ourselves if the Muslim Ummah today, in its individual and collective behavior is striving to adopt and promote these Islamic ideals?

 

From the Sunnah

 

1. Prophet’s response to racist comments:

A man once visited the Prophet’s mosque in Madinah. There he saw a group of people sitting and discussing their faith together. Among them were Salman (who came from Persia), Suhayb who grew up in the Eastern Roman empire and was regarded as a Greek, and Bilal who was an African. The man then said:

“If the (Madinan) tribes of Aws and Khazraj support Muhammad, they are his people (that is, Arabs like him). But what are these people doing here?”

The Prophet became very angry when this was reported to him. Straightaway, he went to the mosque and summoned people to a Salat. He then addressed them saying:

“O people, know that the Lord and Sustainer is One. Your ancestor is one, your faith is one. The Arabism of anyone of you is not from your mother or father. It is no more than a tongue (language). Whoever speaks Arabic is an Arab.” (As quoted in Islam The Natural Way by Abdul Wahid Hamid p. 125)

 

2. Statement of the universal brotherhood in the last Sermon:

O people, Remember that your Lord is One. An Arab has no superiority over a non-Arab nor a non-Arab has any superiority over an Arab; also a black has no superiority over white, nor a white has any superiority over black, except by piety and good action (Taqwa). Indeed the best among you is the one with the best character (Taqwa). Listen to me. Did I convey this to you properly? People responded, Yes. O messenger of God, The Prophet then said, then each one of you who is there must convey this to everyone not present. (Excerpt from the Prophet’s Last Sermon as in Baihiqi)

 

3. Don’t take pride in ancestry:

The Prophet said: Let people stop boasting about their ancestors. One is only a pious believer or a miserable sinner. All men are sons of Adam, and Adam came from dust (Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi).

 

4. Looking down upon other people will stop you from entering the Jannah:

The Prophet said: Whoever has pride in his heart equal to the weight of an atom shall not enter Paradise. A man inquired about a person who likes to wear beautiful clothes and fine shoes, and he answered: God is beautiful and likes beauty. Then he explained pride means rejecting the truth because of self-esteem and looking down on other people (Muslim).

 

5. The Prophet condemnation of Arab racial pride:

There are many hadith, which repeatedly strike on the Arab pride of jahiliyyah. Arabs before Islam used to look down upon others specially blacks. The Prophet repeatedly contrasted the believing Africans versus non-believing Arab nobles.

The Prophet said: You should listen to and obey your ruler even if he was an Ethiopian slave whose head looked like a raisin (Bukhari).

***

 

This article was first published on the website, SoundVision.com under the title Islam’s Manifesto of Universal Brotherhood of Human Beings.

 

*******

a muslim’s engagement on pope benedict xvi’s 2006 lecture

by Aref Ali Nayed

 

The Pontiff of the Catholic Church of Christianity, Benedict XVI, delivered a lecture titled “Faith, Reason and the University: Memories and Reflections” at the University of Regensburg (September 12th, 2006).

 

The Pontiff’s lecture gave rise to a deep and painful rupture in Catholic – Muslim relations on many fronts: diplomatic, political, and, most intensely, popular. The superficial media coverage of the lecture, and the intensity of popular reactions to that coverage, have largely prevented clear-headed considerations and critiques of its contents. This paper strives to conduct a thorough study of the lecture.

 

It is hoped that a balanced and fair consideration of the lecture can prepare for an urgently needed theological and philosophical dialogue between Muslim and Catholic scholars, including the Catholic Pontiff himself. Such a dialogue is urgently needed in order to repair the damage in Catholic – Muslim relations, and to heal fresh wounds that have compounded the pains of an already tarnished and pained world.

 

Benedict’s paper is a complex work that has to be engaged at various levels and from various angles: theological, philosophical, and political. It is hoped that this paper will at least start a process of further Muslim reflections on it and discussion of it.

 

In order not to risk distorting, through paraphrasing, the meaning of Benedict XVI’s Lecture, I shall quote heavily from the official Vatican translation posted on the Vatican Website and copyrighted by Libreria Editrice Vaticana.

 

In order to make one’s presuppositions and tools clear from the outset, it is important to point out that the author of this paper is a devout Sunni Muslim theologian of the Ash’arite school, Maliki in jurisprudential tendency, and Shadhili/Rif’ai in spiritual leanings. The author is deeply committed to the possibility of fruitful philosophical discussions on the basis of our common humanity, and to the possibility of nourishing inter-religious dialogue on the basis of our common belief in the One True God. These commitments translated into several years of philosophical and inter-religious study and practice.

 

It is important to appreciate that Benedict XVI is speaking, at least to some extent, as a former Professor who is coming back to his beloved University to speak, once again, as a Professor. Of course, the discourse of a person, and its reception, depends a great deal under which aspect he happens to make the discourse. Different discourses are associated with different normative standards and are to be judged according to the standards appropriate to them.

 

It is one thing to consider the lecture as that of Joseph Ratzinger qua Benedict XVI, Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, and World-Leader of all Catholics. It is another to consider the lecture as that of Joseph Ratzinger qua German Professor of Theology. The nostalgic tone of the opening passages of the lecture, and the reference to earlier lectures of the 1950’s, make it clear that Ratzinger is, to some extent, speaking, once again, as German Theology Professor. However, Ratzinger having been ‘created anew’ as Pope Benedict XVI, and noting the ecclesiastical garb in which he gave the lecture, it is only natural that, despite the charming nostalgia, receivers of the lecture can not simply suspend the ecclesiastical role of Ratzinger.

 

It is inevitable, therefore, that the lecture is received as that of a Roman Catholic Pope, and not just that of a University Professor. The Vatican clearly assumes this by posting the lecture as that of the “Holy Father” and as part of an “Apostolic Journey”.

 

As the Roman Philosopher Cicero and the British Philosopher Bradley both point out, one’s duties depend a great deal upon one’s position or station. It is important to note that as Professor Ratzinger was speaking in his former University, Pope Benedict XVI was very much present to his listeners.

 

In a cruel world full of wars and strife, much of which is between Christians and Muslims (under whichever flag or tag they happen to fight), it is extremely important that religious leaders of all religions speak and act responsibly. The gravity of responsibility is in direct correlation with the importance of the religious office from which one speaks. There are all sorts of university professors who say all sorts of unpleasant things about Islam and Muslims. They are often simply, and rightly, ignored. The lecture of Professor Ratzinger was very much that of Pope Benedict XVI. This is why it can not be ignored and must be engaged at all possible levels.

 

It is also important for Muslims, in the spirit of fairness dear to Islam, to appreciate and support whatever positive aspects are there in the lecture. One such aspect is the very important discourse, which is unfortunately relegated to the end of Benedict XVI’s Lecture, on the importance of deepening and widening the notion of Western Reason so as to include and accommodate the contribution that revelatory religiosity can make. The anti-Positivist critique of common Western University understandings of Reason can be readily appreciated and accepted by many Muslims. Of course, such a critique is not original in that it follows from the anti-Positivist developments of the Philosophy of Science since at least Karl Popper and his students wrote their important works. Nevertheless, the use of such anti-Positivist discourse for making way for revelatory discourse is fruitful for all.

 

Had Benedict XVI started with his last passages and developed them further, and had he appreciated the historical commitment of Islam, throughout the ages, to reasonableness and proper discussion, we would have had an uplifting discourse conducive to co-living and peaceful Christian-Muslim co-resistance to the pretensions of irreverent scientistic Reason. Islam can actually be Christianity’s best ally against the arrogant pretensions of scientistic positivism, and for a deeper and more spiritual Reason. Alas, that is not what Benedict XVI actually did. Let us look at how he actually did start and then follow the Lecture section by section, quoting important sections as we go along.

 

Benedict XVI begins his lecture, nicely enough, with reminiscences on his time at the University of Bonn in 1959 where “We would meet before and after lessons in the rooms of the teaching staff. There was a lively exchange with historians, philosophers, philologists and, naturally, between the two theological faculties.”

 

It is clear that Benedict XVI is very much disposed towards, and cherishes, historical, philosophical, philological, and theological discussions. It is important that he is engaged at all these levels. From the contents of the lecture, it is very clear that Benedict XVI can do with more meaningful discussion with serious Muslim scholars.

 

There is no doubt that he is very much interested in Islam and that he takes it very seriously. However, the study materials and sessions he engages with seem to be of a very particular and narrow type. Being a Catholic scholar who respects specialization, Benedict XVI seems to heavily rely on the works of Catholic Orientalists some of whom are not particularly sympathetic to Islam.

 

Late last year, Benedict XVI devoted the annual retreat that he usually has with his former doctoral students to the study of the Concept of God in Islam. Very little is known about the contents of this retreat, but glimpses of what it must have been like can be gathered from two, sometimes conflicting, reports that were later provided by two of the key participants. The topic and content of the retreat is of direct relevance to Benedict XVI’s Regensburg Lecture. It would be most helpful for understanding Benedict XVI’s true position regarding Islam if the contents of this important ‘private’ Seminar were to be made fully public.

 

It would have also been helpful to Benedict XVI to hear Muslim theologians themselves on what they thought and taught about God. Instead, Benedict XVI invited his students to listen to, and discuss with, two Catholic Scholars specialized in Islamics and Christian-Muslim relations. Both scholars: the German Jesuit Christian Troll and the Egyptian Jesuit Samir Khalil Samir are renowned Catholic experts in Islamic studies.  However, both tend to be deeply suspicious of what may be called ‘traditional Islam’. Troll is fundamentally convinced that Islam must be reformed and is an expert on, and an active supporter of non-traditionalist ‘reformers’. Samir is less charitable to Islam, be it traditional or ‘reformed’, and is often quite hostile. Together with some other close advisors of Benedict XVI, like the American Jesuit Joseph Fessio, Samir has been clearly taking an Islamophobic approach that may explain the direction of the Lecture of Benedict XVI.

 

It is noteworthy that some of Benedict’s closest advisors on Islam have recently been hostile types who believe that Islam, at least as it stands, is inherently violent and who are filled with fear of its expansion. Several Catholic or secular advisors who know better than to instill Islamophobia into the Pontiff’s heart have generally been marginalized, retired or ignored.  Some, like the deeply respected Bishop Michael Fitzgerald have been moved to other, respectable, but less central positions. The subsuming of the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious dialogue under the Pontifical Council for Culture, and the continued deterioration of the Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies, have all combined to create a situation where Benedict XVI is increasingly being advised on Islam by the least sympathetic Catholic scholars of it.

 

It is important that Muslim scholars strive to intellectually and theologically engage Benedict XVI, and not through the filters of some Islamo-phobic Catholic Orientalists. It is important for the Catholic Pontiff to select his advisors more widely, and to be weary of narrow and prejudiced views, even if they happen to be held by so called ‘experts’ of Islamic Studies. He should also be careful of trusting the purely ethnic claims to expertise of some Arab Catholic scholars. It is well known that some members of minorities within a larger culture are sometimes the least expert on its full richness. Some members of minorities are often obsessed with feelings of persecution and fears of destruction. There are some Arab Catholic Islamics specialists who have very dubious views on Islam and Muslims, and whose Islamo-phobic views are trusted because they happen to be Arabs.

 

On the other hand, there are Arab Christians, both Catholic and non-Catholic, who do have a very deep understanding and appreciation of Islam and Muslims and who can provide the Pontiff with very good advice. Respected and fair figures such as Bishop Michel Sabah and Metropolitan Georege Khoder can offer Benedict XVI a deep understanding of Islam and Muslims. There are also several non-Arab Catholic Orientalists who can be of great help to Benedict XVI on Islamic matters. These scholars include Maurice Bourmans, Michel Lagarde, Etienne Renault,  and Thomas Michel.

 

In times of war and strife we humans tend to trust the views of those who tend to make us fear the perceived enemy and who help us mobilize our energies against it. It does not at all help Benedict XVI, or our tarnished world for the people he trusts on matters Islamic to openly say things like:

 

“Benedict is aiming at more essential points: theology is not what counts, at least not in this stage of history; what counts is the fact that Islam is the religion that is developing more and is becoming more and more a danger for the West and the world. The danger is not in Islam in general, but in a certain vision of Islam that does never openly renounces violence and generates terrorism, fanaticism.”

 

Or, worse still:

 

“The West is once again under siege. Doubly so because in addition to terrorist attacks there is a new form of conquest: immigration coupled with high fertility. Let us hope that, following the Holy Father’s courageous example in these troubled times, there can be a dialogue whose subject is the truth claims of Christianity and Islam.”

 

Such views are very dangerous and will only lead to more war and strife. They are the exact counter-part and mirror-image of the views of pseudo-Islamic terrorists.

 

Christians and Muslims must be on the alert for such Manichean and polarizing views, and must strive to live in daily deep and fair discernment so as to improve the painful situation in which we all live.

 

It is essential, therefore, that Muslims and reasonable-non-Muslim serious-and-fair scholars engage the Pontiff in scholarly and intellectual discussion of the kind he praises at the beginning of his Lecture.

 

“Once a semester there was a dies academicus, when professors from every faculty appeared before the students of the entire university, making possible a genuine experience of universitas – something that you too, Magnificent Rector, just mentioned – the experience, in other words, of the fact that despite our specializations which at times makes it difficult to communicate with each other, we made up a whole, working in everything on the basis of a single rationality with its various aspects and sharing responsibility for the right use of reason – this reality became a lived experience.”

 

Benedict XVI clearly appreciates the experience of ‘universitas’ through  the periodic encounter with the other. He sees clearly that specialization can lead to a dangerous narrowing that closes horizons of true communication. It is important to point out that just as there is a ‘universitas’ based on our common humanity and reasonableness, there is a monotheistic universitas based on our common belief in the One True God. It is important that Christians and Muslims, despite (and because of) their dedicated devotions to their own religions, work together in mutual-respect and dialogue for the sake of the One True God. Such a dialogue must become a lived experience that leads us closer to world peace.

 

Benedict XVI then points out the importance of research and discussions about the reasonableness of faith, and that in such research and discussions, even radical skepticism has to be considered and engaged. “That even in the face of such radical skepticism it is still necessary and reasonable to raise the question of God through the use of reason, and to do so in the context of the tradition of the Christian faith: this, within the university as a whole, was accepted without question.

 

Recognition of the importance of such research and discussion is the very foundation of the extensive and deep field of Islamic Studies called ‘Ilm al-Kalam’, or Muslim systematic theology. As a matter of fact, many Kalam manuals open with extensive considerations of the position of the skeptics by way of establishing the validity of seeking out reasons in support of religious faith. All great scholars of Kalam recognized the fact that discussions, argumentations, and disputations with others can only be conducted on the basis of a shared human reasonableness that forms a kind of ‘universitas scientiarum.

 

The manuals of Kalam are full of extensive reasoned discussions with Skeptics, Atheists, Naturalists, Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians, Buddhists, Hindus, Aristotelians, Platonists, and a host of other religions and philosophies.

 

It is most unfortunate that Benedict’s appreciation of discussions based on ‘universitas scientiarum do not seem to extend to Islam and Muslims. Despite the fact that many Muslim scholars and institutions responded positively to the Catholic Church’s newfound openness to dialogue with them (as expressed in the documents of Vatican II), and worked very hard in many dialogue settings, Benedict XVI seems to think (from later parts of his lecture) that such reasonable discussion is only possible within a European/Christian/Hellenistic setting. This is both historically and actually untrue and unfair.

 

After his fairly benign Lecture opening, Benedict XVI suddenly conjures up a most troubling legacy:

 

“I was reminded of all this recently, when I read the edition by Professor Theodore Khoury (Münster) of part of the dialogue carried on – perhaps in 1391 in the winter barracks near Ankara – by the erudite Byzantine emperor Manuel II Paleologus and an educated Persian on the subject of Christianity and Islam, and the truth of both.”

 

It is not clear how Paleologus’ dialogue “reminded” Benedict XVI of “all this”. I would have liked to believe that Benedict XVI was reminded of the value of reasoned discussion, based on common humanity, by the fact that a Christian and a Muslim were having a reasoned discussion even in the midst of a siege.  Alas, I think a more likely reading is that Benedict XVI was reminded of the presumed intimate relationship between Christian faith and reason by the fact that a Christian, faced with a violent Islam, still focused on the equation of his faith with reasonableness.

 

Benedict XVI very much starting with a ‘siege’ setting resurrects a scene from the siege of Constantinople, with all its associated symbolism:

 

“It was presumably the emperor himself who set down this dialogue, during the siege of Constantinople between 1394 and 1402; and this would explain why his arguments are given in greater detail than those of his Persian interlocutor. The dialogue ranges widely over the structures of faith contained in the Bible and in the Qur’an, and deals especially with the image of God and of man, while necessarily returning repeatedly to the relationship between – as they were called – three “Laws” or “rules of life”: the Old Testament, the New Testament and the Qur’an. It is not my intention to discuss this question in the present lecture; here I would like to discuss only one point – itself rather marginal to the dialogue as a whole – which, in the context of the issue of “faith and reason”, I found interesting and which can serve as the starting-point for my reflections on this issue.”

 

It is strange that Benedict XVI selected an admittedly “marginal” point from an obscure medieval dialogue, written at a particularly abnormal and tense moment in history, to find a “starting-point” for his reflections on “faith and reason”. One could imagine an infinitely large number of possible, more direct and sensible, starting-points.

 

Many an alternative starting-point could have helped Benedict XVI make his main points about faith and reason without using a disfigured straw-man Islam. The connection between the medieval dialogue and the main point of the lecture is so strained and distant; invoking the dialogue unnecessarily damages Christian-Muslim relations. This is at a time when we truly need the healing of these relations.

 

Then, of all the sections of the Emperor’s book, the Pontiff chooses to focus on the one concerning Holy War or Jihad: “In the seventh conversation (διάλεξις – controversy) edited by Professor Khoury, the emperor touches on the theme of the holy war. The emperor must have known that surah 2, 256 reads: “There is no compulsion in religion”. According to the experts, this is one of the suras of the early period, when Mohammed was still powerless and under threat. But naturally the emperor also knew the instructions, developed later and recorded in the Qur’an, concerning holy war.”

 

It is also interesting that Benedict, invoking the authority of anonymous “experts”, summarily dismisses the clear and still normative Qur’anic ruling ‘There is no compulsion in religion’ by claiming that it was only upheld by Muhammad (peace be upon him) in times of weakness!

 

Instead of cherishing this ruling, and challenging Muslims today to live-up to it, the Pontiff dismisses an important Islamic resource for reasonableness and peace by seeing it as a fake Islamic stance that was only ever held because of temporary weakness! This is most unfortunate. The no-compulsion verse has never been revoked and has always been binding.

 

At no point in history did Muslim jurists legally authorize the forced conversions of people of other religions. This vital verse was foundational for the tolerance that Muslims did concretely demonstrate towards Christians and Jews living in their midst. It is very dangerous for the Pontiff to dismiss a Qur’anic verse that actually formed, and still forms, a juridical and historical guarantee of safety to Christians and Jews living amongst Muslims.

 

Furthermore, the disheartening claim by Benedict XVI that Muhammad (peace be upon him) whimsically changed Islam’s principles and juridical teachings, depending on his weakness or strength, is simply an echo of prejudiced unfair views that have surfaced again and again in Christian and Western polemics against Islam. Wiser and fairer advice could have saved Benedict XVI from adopting such prejudices.

 

The image of an opportunist Prophet, which Benedict XVI invokes in passing, is deeply painful and offensive to Muslims. How would Benedict XVI feel if Muslims pointed out that the Catholic Church only became tolerant of Muslims and Jews after it lost its power in Europe, and that this tolerance was really granted by Secular states and not by the Church, but opportunistically claimed by it. Such a point is likely to give pain and offence. Imagine, then, the pain and offense we Muslims feel as Benedict XVI claims that our beloved Prophet is an opportunist who teaches one thing when he is weak, only to reverse it when he gets stronger.

 

Benedict XVI goes further:

 

“Without descending to details, such as the difference in treatment accorded to those who have the “Book” and the “infidels”, …”

 

Again, Benedict XVI strangely dismisses, in passing, yet another Islamic resource for tolerance towards Christians and Jews. Islam has always distinguished between ‘the People of the Book’ (Christians and Jews), and mere Pagans. The People of the Book living in Muslim communities were always granted the right to worship in peace largely based on this important distinction. It is very important to note that some of the hateful discourses of recent pseudo-Islamic terrorists have worked very hard to dilute the distinction between Christianity and Paganism (by calling Christians ‘Cross-Worshipers’) precisely in order to remove the juridical protection granted to Christianity and Judaism under Muslim Jurisprudence. Benedict XVI seems to imply that such distinctions are minor and only obscure Islam’s purported intolerance.

 

Benedicts XVI then goes on to quote one of the most disturbing passages in the Emperor’s discourse:

 

“… he addresses his interlocutor with a startling brusqueness, a brusqueness which leaves us astounded, on the central question about the relationship between religion and violence in general, saying: “Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached”.

 

This hateful and hurtful passage is what the media picked up the most, and what most of the popular Muslim reactions have reacted to.

 

Tragically, Benedict XVI, having invoked this piece of hate-literature back from its historical dormancy, fails to distance himself from the opinion of its original author. He does use such languages as ‘brusqueness’, ‘leaves us astounded’ and ‘expresses himself forcefully’. However, none of these expressions constitutes a negative judgment or rejection of the opinion of the original author. As a matter of fact, they may even be read as indicative of a subtle support of a supposed bravery that may be a bit reckless.

 

When someone gratuitously invokes a very obscure text that expresses hatful things one has a moral obligation to explain why he goes out of his way to invoked it, and a further obligation to respond to it, and to dismiss the hate expressed in it. Otherwise, it is very reasonable to assume that the person invoking the hurtful text does mean it, and does share the views expressed in it. 

 

To claim that no hurtful intent was present, and that Muslims simply did not understand the text, agonizingly adds insult to injury. This is why the quasi-apology of Benedict XVI was not considered adequate by many Muslims. All the Vatican’s statements to date, including the address of Benedict XVI express regret for the fact that Muslims supposedly misunderstood the Pontiff’s Lecture and have reacted badly to it.

 

Such an approach simply accuses Muslims of lack of understanding and over-reaction. This approach, instead of meekly and  humbly admitting the hurt one has caused, blames the ones being hurt for taking the insult the wrong way! Many devout Catholics have, unfortunately, seen Muslim rejections of the quasi-apology and Muslim’s emotional reactions to the words about their Prophet (peace be upon him) as indicative of Benedict XVI’s correct and heroic stance.

 

Benedict goes on:

 

“The emperor, after having expressed himself so forcefully, goes on to explain in detail the reasons why spreading the faith through violence is something unreasonable. Violence is incompatible with the nature of God and the nature of the soul. “God”, he says, “is not pleased by blood – and not acting reasonably (σὺν λόγω) is contrary to God’s nature. Faith is born of the soul, not the body. Whoever would lead someone to faith needs the ability to speak well and to reason properly, without violence and threats… To convince a reasonable soul, one does not need a strong arm, or weapons of any kind, or any other means of threatening a person with death….”

 

Interestingly, if one consults a reliable classical Qur’anic exegesis book (tafsir) for an exegesis of the verse ‘There is no compulsion in religion’, one would find explanations that are very similar to the Emperor’s point about the heart or soul being the abode of faith. All Muslim theological treatises have a section on faith (Iman). There is unanimity amongst all Muslim theologians that faith resides in the abode of the heart or soul and that no physical compulsion can ever affect it.

 

It is interesting to note that Benedict XVI was for many years the ‘Prefect of the Faith’ of the Catholic Church.  The Prefect of the Faith is the distant modern version of the Inquisition. The Inquisition seldom respected the sanctity of the human heart in matters of faith. Tragically, for Muslims and Jews, especially in Spain, the Church used a dizzying battery of physical torture techniques to get Muslims and Jews to convert to Christianity. The Inquisition never heeded such advice as that of the Emperor: “To convince a reasonable soul, one does not need a strong arm, or weapons of any kind, or any other means of threatening a person with death”. We could all learn from this advice.

 

It is Qur’anically normative for Muslims to call to the path of God through wisdom, wholesome advice, and proper discussion. There is no sanction in Islam for torturing people into conversion. Indonesia and Malaysia have more Muslims than all Arab countries combined. No Muslim army ever entered these lands. How did Islam spread there?

 

Nevertheless, it will be dishonest or naïve to claim that no Muslim army ever conquered any land. However, creating a domain where God can be freely worshiped does not entail converting the inhabitants of that domain by force of the ‘sword’. Muslim conquests seldom translated into forced conversions. The evidence is clear: Muslim dominated lands still have Christian minorities. How many Muslims or Jews were left in Spain after the Catholic Ferdinand and Isabella re-conquered it?

 

Interestingly, Muslims, as immigrants, were only ever able to re-enter Europe under the multi-cultural policies of secular Europe. If the Catholic Church had its way would that have been possible? Benedict XVI himself is famous for rejecting Turkey’s plea to become part of Europe for lack of the right religious and cultural credentials.

 

In some past Vatican statements Muslims were sometimes called upon to forget the past (when it comes to the Inquisition or the Crusades). In Islam, acknowledgment and regret are necessary pre-conditions of true repentance and forgiveness. Benedict XVI, by self-righteously invoking the hurtful accusations of a long-dead Emperor, is, astonishingly, oblivious to the use of torture, cruelty, and violence in the history of the Catholic Church, not only against Muslims, but against Jews, and even fellow Christians.

 

The violence inflicted, or supported, by the Catholic Church extended all the way to modern times through the support of European colonial conquests of the rest of the world. Missionaries, especially Jesuits, went hand-in-hand with colonialists into the Americas, Africa, and Asia. In my native Libya Italian fascists armies and death squads used to be blessed by the local Catholic authorities in the Cathedral’s square before they went to hunt Libyan resistance fighters. This was happening as late as the 1930’s. The Ethiopian soldiers the fascists force-marched in the front of the Italian armies bore big red crosses on their chests just as the knights of Saint John did when they slaughtered Tripoli’s inhabitants back in the 1500’s.

 

The image of a non-violent hellenistically ‘reasonable’ Christianity contrasted to a violent un-reasonable Islam is foundational for the Lecture of Benedict XVI. This self-image is amazingly self-righteous and is oblivious to many painful historical facts. It is very important for our world that we all begin to see the poles that are in our own eyes, rather than focus on the specks in the eyes of our brethren. Benedict XVI further says:

 

“The decisive statement in this argument against violent conversion is this: not to act in accordance with reason is contrary to God’s nature. The editor, Theodore Khoury, observes: For the emperor, as a Byzantine shaped by Greek philosophy, this statement is self-evident. But for Muslim teaching, God is absolutely transcendent. His will is not bound up with any of our categories, even that of rationality. Here Khoury quotes a work of the noted French Islamist R. Arnaldez, who points out that Ibn Hazm went so far as to state that God is not bound even by his own word, and that nothing would oblige him to reveal the truth to us. Were it God’s will, we would even have to practice idolatry.”

 

Benedict XVI’s ‘decisive statement’: ‘Not to act in accordance to reason is contrary to God’s nature’. This statement is very complex, and is open to many interpretations and discussions. What is amazing is the swiftness and ease with which it is used to make up what amounts to, a deeply disturbing, false contrast between a peace-loving-reasonable Christianity and a violent-loving-unreasonable Islam!

 

The reason for the swiftness and ease is the fact that such a contrast is a famous one taken from what we maybe called ‘contrast tables’ that are often simplistically invoked in some missionary and polemical discourses. The idea of such tables is to put Christianity at the top of one column and Islam at the top of the other. One then goes on to fill the table with such polarities as:  Love/Law, Peace/Violence, Freeing/Enslaving, Women-liberating/Women-oppressing and so on.

 

Such tables are reminiscent and are related to the tables the Athenians, the Romans, and even the German Idealists (who do have an influence on the Bavarian Pontiff) often developed to contrast the ‘Civilized’ with the ‘Barbarian’, the ‘European’ with the ‘non-European’.

 

Unfortunately, for their proponents such tables never work. They are grossly over simplified and create contrasts at a great cost to truth and fairness. In Islam, just as in Christianity, it is not human calculative reason that is salvific, but rather the free underserved grace (rahma) of God. One of the many graces that God gifts to human beings is the gift of reason. 

 

Reason as a gift from God can never be above God. That is the whole point of Ibn Hazm; a point that was paraphrased in such a mutilated way by Benedict XVI’s learned sources. Ibn Hazm, like the Asha’rite theologians with whom he often contended, did insist upon God’s absolute freedom to act. However, Ibn Hazm did recognize, like most other Muslim theologians that God freely chooses, in His compassion towards His creatures, to self-consistently act reasonably so that we can use our reason to align ourselves with His guidance and directive.

 

Ibn Hazm, like most other Muslim theologians did hold that God is not externally-bound by anything, including reason. However, at no point does Ibn Hazm claim that God does not freely self-commit Himself and honors such commitments Such divine free-self-committing is Qur’anically propounded “kataba rabukum ala nafsihi al-Rahma” (Your Lord has committed Himself to compassion). Reason need not be above God, and externally normative to Him. It can be a grace of God that is normative because of God’s own free commitment to acting consistently with it.

 

A person who believes the last proposition need not be an irrational or un-reasonable human-being, with an irrational or whimsical God! The contrast between Christianity and Islam on this basis is not only unfair, but also quite questionable.

 

Granted that the Pontiff is striving to convince a secular university that theology has a place in that reason-based setting. However, this should not go so far as to make God subject to an externally-binding reason. Most major Christian theologians, even the reason-loving Aquinas never put reason above God.

 

When Muslim theologians make a similar move, they should not be accused of irrationality or un-reasonableness. Such misunderstanding is the direct result of simplistic contrast tables of which scholars like Theodore Khoury are apparently fond.

 

Benedict XVI should not trust his views on Muslim theology to scholars like Khoury or Samir Khalil Samir. Their views of Islam and Muslims are often most unfair. He may not want to consult with Muslims, and may not even trust them to know their own doctrines; but he should, at least, consult some serious scholars who are not necessarily from an Arab Christian minority or a very narrow Catholic Orientalist group.  

 

Benedict goes on:

 

“At this point, as far as understanding of God and thus the concrete practice of religion is concerned, we are faced with an unavoidable dilemma. Is the conviction that acting unreasonably contradicts God’s nature merely a Greek idea, or is it always and intrinsically true?”

 

Benedict XVI’s way of phrasing this issue is again open to many interpretations and engagements. This is not the place for unpacking a very loaded question. Suffice it to say that talk of the ‘nature’ of God is itself problematic.

 

Talk of reasonableness and unreasonableness is also quite problematic. What is this reason we are talking about? Is it a human faculty of understanding? If so, what kind of understanding? Is it cognitive? Is it emotive? Is it spiritual? Or is reason, rather, some sort of an ontologically primary agent or emanation, as the Neo-Platonists often taught? What sort of reason and reasonableness are we talking about?

 

Such questions need further and deeper reflections. However, interestingly, the ambiguity and vagueness of the word ‘reason’ allow for the amazing leap of unifying the Greek and the Christian by appealing to the very Hellenistic Prologue to the Gospel of John.

 

As Benedict XVI puts it:

 

“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. Modifying the first verse of the Book of Genesis, the first verse of the whole Bible, John began the prologue of his Gospel with the words: “In the beginning was the λόγος”. This is the very word used by the emperor: God acts, σὺν λόγω, with logos. Logos means both reason and word – a reason which is creative and capable of self-communication, precisely as reason.”

 

Here we come close to getting a definition of what Benedict XVI means by reason: “a reason which is creative and capable of self-communication”. This is indeed close to what John speaks of. However, is this the same reason as the reason of the Greek Philosophers? I think not. Reason for most Greek philosophers was more associated with pure contemplation or theoria, than with creative activity or poesis. Furthermore, for most Greek philosophers it was being as such or to on that was truly ‘self-communicating’. Reason for most of them was a human capacity to receive this self-communicating being.

 

Therefore, the great unifying vision of Benedict, which brings together the Greek with the Christian, turns out to be a move made possible through the ambiguities of such rich and loaded words as ‘logos’ or ‘reason’. Of course such moves have often been practiced  in the past within the theological, exegetical and spiritual traditions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

 

Of course, a great deal of medieval discourse depends precisely on this kind of ambiguity-fueled leaping. However, it is quite strange that this medieval leaping tactic is being used to bridge the gap between the cool rationalistic reason of the German University, and the logos of the Catholic Church!

 

Benedict XVI, then makes an astoundingly Hegelian statement:

 

“John thus spoke the final word on the biblical concept of God, and in this word all the often toilsome and tortuous threads of biblical faith find their culmination and synthesis.”

 

Benedict XVI claims that John spoke the ‘final word’ on the biblical concept of God. He also makes the Hegelian claim that biblical faith took a “toilsome” and “torturous” path to culminate in this Johannine synthesis.

 

I will leave it to Christian theologians of various denominations and schools to comment on such a claim. In light of the cumulative findings of historical-critical researches into the Bible, it is very strange that it is still possible to make such critically debatable statements about a biblical faith that is supposedly making a long journey to culminate in a Greco-Christian synthesis.

 

I am sure Jewish scholars will also find difficulties with the implicit claim that Torah threads of faith are “toilsome” and “tortuous”, and that John was needed to make it all culminate into true and final biblical faith. While Hegelian synthesis and culmination sounds wonderfully exciting to the one with the culmination results, it is sure to bother all who are being culminated!

 

Then, yet again, the argumentation leaps into Hegelian speculation, but this time introducing a dangerously ‘European’ claim to Christianity:

 

“In the beginning was the logos, and the logos is God, says the Evangelist. The encounter between the Biblical message and Greek thought did not happen by chance. The vision of Saint Paul, who saw the roads to Asia barred and in a dream saw a Macedonian man plead with him: “Come over to Macedonia and help us!” (cf. Acts 16:6-10) – this vision can be interpreted as a “distillation” of the intrinsic necessity of a rapprochement between Biblical faith and Greek inquiry.”

 

The Asia versus Macedonia contrast is used to justify the strange claim that there is an “intrinsic necessity” of rapprochement between Biblical faith and Greek inquiry.

 

Thus in Europe and not in Asia, and with European reason and not with Asiatic Reason Christianity comes to unite with “Greek inquiry”. This Hegelian talk suffers from the same Euro-centric tendency of much of Germanic idealist philosophy.

 

This tendency is very dangerous indeed for it demotes versions of Christianity that manifest themselves in non-Greek and non-European milieus (for Example South American, African, and Asian theologies).

 

It also makes a claim to Reason in general, and to Greek reason, in particular, and appropriates it to make it purely Christian. Thus the historical facts of even clear, let alone partial, Jewish-Hellenistic syntheses (as in Philo of Alexandria), and Muslim-Hellenistic syntheses (as in Al-Farabi, Ikhwan al-Safa, Ibn Sina) are simply denied as impossible. Only the Christian is united with the Greek in a Johannine Hegelian European culmination.

 

Muslims, like Christians and Jews, before and after them, worked out many profound philosophical and theological systems the aim of which was the harmonization of the claims of human reasoning and the truths of divine revelation. The philosophers just mentioned were not alone. Theologians of the Mu’tazili, Asha’ri, Maturidi, Ithna Ashri, Isma’ili, Ibadi and even Hanbali schools all strived to articulate their faith in as reasonable a manner as possible. Even introductory texts of Islamic Philosophy and Theology make this clear. The intricate dialectical and logical works of the great Abdul Jabbar, Asha’ri, Baqillani, Jwaini, Ghazali, Razi, Maturidi, Nasfi, Ibn Rushd, and Ibn Sabain, amongst others, are testaments to the keen Muslim interest in reason and reasonableness when it comes to articulating matters of faith. Even the most conservative of Hanbalites, Ibn Taimmiyah, wrote important works on non-Aristotelian logics and has anti-Aristotelian arguments akin to those of Sextus Empiricus!

 

Benedict XVI, in the closing section of a long passage, that would fit very nicely as a preface to Hegel’s Philosophy of Religion or Philosophy of History, goes on to claim:

 

“A profound encounter of faith and reason is taking place here, an encounter between genuine enlightenment and religion. From the very heart of Christian faith and, at the same time, the heart of Greek thought now joined to faith, Manuel II was able to say: Not to act “with logos” is contrary to God’s nature.”

 

The Septuagint is, thus, accorded a primacy that I am sure will sound strange to many Christian ears. The synthesis of biblical faith and Greek reason is simply accorded ultimate value as the culmination of a process through which all other ways of religiosity are relegated to things subsumed and superseded.

 

Yet Benedict XVI, being a scholar of medieval theology knows that he can not deny certain facts:

 

“In all honesty, one must observe that in the late Middle Ages we find trends in theology which would sunder this synthesis between the Greek spirit and the Christian spirit. In contrast with the so-called intellectualism of Augustine and Thomas, there arose with Duns Scotus a voluntarism which, in its later developments, led to the claim that we can only know God’s voluntas ordinata. Beyond this is the realm of God’s freedom, in virtue of which he could have done the opposite of everything he has actually done. This gives rise to positions which clearly approach those of Ibn Hazm and might even lead to the image of a capricious God, who is not even bound to truth and goodness. God’s transcendence and otherness are so exalted that our reason, our sense of the true and good, are no longer an authentic mirror of God, whose deepest possibilities remain eternally unattainable and hidden behind his actual decisions.”

 

This passage, while serving its author’s ultimate goal of undermining the theologies mentioned in it, does at least show that Benedict XVI is somewhat aware that other possible theologies do exist, and that Muslim theologians were not alone in caring about the affirmation of God’s sovereignty against human pretensions to govern Him with human criteria.

 

Unfortunately, he goes on to totally undermine such theologies as not being the true ‘faith of the Church’. It is also very interesting that, in a follow-on passage, Benedict XVI, for a moment, does affirm a love that transcends knowledge, but then re-interprets that affirmation by claiming it is logos that loves. Thus he synthesizes logos and reason. It turns out to be reason that actually loves.

 

Then, in clear and unambiguous terms, we see the actual foundational claim of Benedict XVI, and the ultimate reason for his troubles with Islam:

 

“This inner rapprochement between Biblical faith and Greek philosophical inquiry was an event of decisive importance not only from the standpoint of the history of religions, but also from that of world history – it is an event which concerns us even today. Given this convergence, it is not surprising Christianity, despite its origins and some significant developments in the East, finally took on its historically decisive character in Europe. We can also express this the other way around: this convergence, with the subsequent addition of the Roman heritage, created Europe and remains the foundation of what can rightly be called Europe.”

 

He clearly claims that Europe is the only place where Christianity and Reason culminated in a great synthesis that is European civilization. Thus Europe is Christian-Greek and rational, and Christianity is European-Greek and rational. If Europe-Christianity is to be kept pure, all non-European elements and non-Christian elements must be kept out. This is why Islam and Muslims have no place in this great Hegelian synthesis! This alarming set of neo-colonial ideas supports the thesis of the Barbarous (non-Greek) and non-European nature of Islam. Islam, according to this kind of thinking, is ‘Asiatic’ ‘non-rational’ and ‘violent’. It has no place in ‘Greek’, ‘rational’ and ‘reasonable’ Europe.

 

Now that Benedict XVI has reached his thesis of the synthesis of the Greek and the Christian into a single logos, he proceeds to undermine all attempts to deny this synthesis. He goes on to criticize three phases of what he calls ‘dehellenization’:

 

“The thesis that the critically purified Greek heritage forms an integral part of Christian faith has been countered by the call for a dehellenization of Christianity – a call which has more and more dominated theological discussions since the beginning of the modern age. Viewed more closely, three stages can be observed in the programme of dehellenization: although interconnected, they are clearly distinct from one another in their motivations and objectives.”

 

It is better for Muslims to leave it to Christian theologians to comment on the extent of the fairness and accuracy of Benedict XVI assessment of the Christian tradition. However, to this Muslim, it does seem astonishing that Benedict XVI seems to sweep all of the Reformers’ efforts as a dehellenization that undermines the true synthesis earlier celebrated by him. I will also leave it to Protestant theologians to reply to Benedict XVI’s sweeping claims.

 

Benedict XVI then blames the theologian von Harnack for the second dehellenization. I will, again, leave it to von Harnack scholars to reply to the claims made by Benedict XVI. It does strike me as strange, however, to find von Harnack accused of dehellenization. Following Karl Barth, I believe that von Harnack was Hellenizing rather than the opposite. He may evem be seen as reducing theology to a kind of Aristotelian phronesis.

 

Benedict XVI’s the third, and last, type of dehelleniztion, is worthy of more attention.

 

“Before I draw the conclusions to which all this has been leading, I must briefly refer to the third stage of dehellenization, which is now in progress. In the light of our experience with cultural pluralism, it is often said nowadays that the synthesis with Hellenism achieved in the early Church was a preliminary inculturation which ought not to be binding on other cultures. The latter are said to have the right to return to the simple message of the New Testament prior to that inculturation, in order to inculturate it anew in their own particular milieu. This thesis is not only false; it is coarse and lacking in precision. The New Testament was written in Greek and bears the imprint of the Greek spirit, which had already come to maturity as the Old Testament developed. True, there are elements in the evolution of the early Church which do not have to be integrated into all cultures. Nonetheless, the fundamental decisions made about the relationship between faith and the use of human reason are part of the faith itself; they are developments consonant with the nature of faith itself.”

 

Yet again, we are faced with a Euro-centric and Greco-centric arrogant approbation of Christianity. I will leave it to Latin American, African and Asian Christian theologians to address this strange appropriation.

 

For a Church that is now quite international, the Pontiff is really going out of his way to alienate all who are not into Greek-European culture. He is basically claiming that such Greek and European elements are fundamental to the Christian faith itself. I find the whole claim dangerously arrogant. It is not only Islam and Muslim who are threatened by it. I truly believe that this lecture should alarm Muslims, Christians and Jews alike.

 

This alarm is extenuated by the fact that the alarming position is not that of just a Professor or a theologian, but of a Roman Catholic Pontiff who leads millions of human beings. It is, therefore, urgent and vital that Muslim, Christian, Jewish, and Secular scholars engage the Pontiff and challenge his views not only on Islam, but also on what it means to be a reasonable human being, and what it means to be a European.

 

As for Islam and its Prophet (peace be upon him), centuries of cruel and vicious attacks against them, both verbal and physical, have only made them stronger. The sun shall still shine no matter what dark clouds strive to do.

 

Let us pray for a better world, a peaceful world, a respectful world. Let us engage in a dialogue that is based on mutual-respect, and is elevated above mere polemics. The One God has created us all, and willed for us to be so different, let us learn more about each other, and let us, together, construct a better world, for God’s sake.


 

This article was first published in Masud.co.uk under the title, A Muslim’s Commentary on Benedict XVI’s “Faith, Reason and the University: Memories and Reflections” .

 

The Author, Aref Ali Nayed, is a Former Professor at the Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies (Rome), and the International Institute for Islamic Thought and Civilization (Malaysia). He is currently an Advisor to the Cambridge Interfaith Program at the Faculty of Divinity in Cambridge.

 

*******

 

an abrahamic interfaith prayer

 

 

Hidden, eternal, immeasurable God, rich in mercy,

there is no other God than you.

 

You are great and worthy of all praise.

Your power and grace sustain the universe.

 

God of truth without falsity, righteous and true,

you chose Abraham your submissive servant

to be the father of many peoples

and spoke through the prophets.

 

Hallowed and praised be your name in all the world,

and let your will be done wherever people live.

Living and gracious God, hear our prayer:

our guilt has become great.

Forgive us children of Abraham our wars,

our enmities, our misdeeds against one another.

Redeem us from all distress and give us peace.

 

Guide of our destiny,

bless the leaders and rulers of the states,

that they do not lust after power and glory

but act responsibly for the well-being of their subjects

and peace among all.

 

Guide our religious communities and their leaders,

so that they not only proclaim the message of peace

but live it out themselves.

 

And to all of us, and those who are not of us,

give your grace, mercy and all good things,

and lead us, God of the living,

on the right way to your eternal glory.

 

Amen.

 

Amid the tensive currents that underlie the recent brouhaha over certain islamophobic comments made by Singaporeans on Facebook, let this prayer be the desire of every spiritual descendant of Abraham in Singapore - jew, christian or muslim.

 

***

 

The above prayer was composed by the great catholic theologian, Hans Kung.

 

******* 

 

 

a different case all together

 

 

One would think that with all the media attention on the former YP (Young PAP) member, the probability of another incident with similar societal repercussions would be extremely low, even bordering on the impossible.

 

But within a few days, a fresh case surfaces. It involves an NSF (National Service-Full time) by the name of Christian Eliab Ratnam (definitely NOT a chinese, as some in online forums and chatrooms ignorantly assume) who apparently posted the above on his Facebook page.

 

The bordered text reads:

 

“Islam is not a religion or a race! Islam is an authoritarian, political doctrine which imposes itself by force. Any political doctrine that calls to kill those who do not believe in it is NOT a religion. Islam is not a religion! It is a ____ that glorifies _____.”

 

It seems to me that the majority of people are equating the above rhetoric with the previous case but I beg to differ. To blatantly call a group of innocent children on board a bus to a kindergarten terrorist trainees CANNOT be equated with a paragraph that opines on the perceived political nature of the Islamic religion. While the former is irresponsible and crass, the latter is an expression of opinion, regardless of its correspondence to reality.

 

Yes, I do not agree with Ratnam’s evaluation on the matter – has he read any works by islamic scholars like Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Tariq Ramadan, Abdal Hakim Murad or even the great medieval Islamic philosopher, Al-Ghazali? Has he genuinely investigated into the claims of Islam and whether or not the deluded extremists who kill people in the name of Islam truly represent Islam?

 

Has he NOT realise that the hebrew scriptures (the Christian old testament) contains numerous references to genocides, mass killings and gross violence in the name of God? And it takes just one loony individual who interprets those narratives literally and who is charismatic and powerful enough to perhaps start another Jewish or Christian war against the perceived enemies of God? Of course, no Jewish rabbi worth his salt would interpret those narratives literally and use them as a biblical sanction for wiping out secular atheist nations!

 

And so would any credible Islamic scholar of fiqh (jurisprudence) or Kalam (theology).

 

Besides, what one sees through the very tainted eyes of the media makes up about one to two per cent of the entire global muslim population. Similarly – there are extreme cults in the name of Judaism or Christianity that justifies the killing of innocent lives in order to create a Jewish or Christian society. But these do not represent the true face of Judaism or Christianity as we know it today!

 

Now – even after all the disagreements I have with Ratnam – I have to admit that without allowing emotion to take over, this NSF is just expressing an opinion about religion. Does he not have the basic right to express a personal opinion on anything and everything? I think he does.

 

And to demonise him just because of expressing an opinion – is bringing real shame on us as a cosmopolitan city state that upholds pluralism. We as a society have to learn to not only tolerate views akin to our own but also opposing views as well. That is a sign of maturity. Of course, because of his ignorance, we can attempt at correcting his somewhat bigoted notions of Islam by education, instruction and debate. We can set the record straight.

 

There is no need for criminalising him just for expressing an opinion.

 

Otherwise, we are no different from China, North Korea, Saudi Arabia or Iran.

 

Nations for which I have utter contempt and disdain.

 

*******

 

gay muslims?

 

Here is an interesting report about the ongoing discussion within the muslim community about being homosexual as well as muslim. A thorny issue, really.

 

LGBT and Muslim? A New Report busts Stereotypes

 

Can change really be made about Islam and homosexuality? Can there be tangible progress within the Islamic community about LGBT issues?

 

For goodness and humankind’s sake, let’s hope for the better.

 

*******

 

self control

 

“He is not strong and powerful who throws people down; but he is strong who withholds from anger.”

- Muhammad (PBUH)

 

***

 

It is ironic how so much emotionalism and anger is being expressed by the muslim community in recent times, more so than any other religious community. One does not see Christians screaming and shouting in protest just because animated programmes like South Park ridicule Jesus Christ. Besides, the figure of Jesus has been the object of ridicule, mockery and crass humour for decades.

 

*******

 

malaysian authorities ban gay pride festival

 

It is depressing that the LGBT community in Malaysia would have to endure the indignity of having their already three-year-old gay pride festival being scrapped by the local authorities because it “threatens national security”.

 

Yes – the Malaysian theocrats are so deluded by their Islam that they have finally gone mental. Since when do LGBT people “threaten the national security” of a nation? Since when do LGBT people “corrupt the morals” of others – as though heterosexuals can become homosexuals just by witnessing a LGBT festival – which consists of intellectually stimulating forums, talks, lectures, workshops, film screenings and concerts.

 

Malaysian Police ban Gay Rights Festival

 

For goodness’ sake – one is either a LGBT or one is NOT! There is NO WAY a straight bloke will transform into a phallus-loving and anal-licking machine (no offence to my gay brothers) just by having gay friends or participating in a gay pride event. Sexual orientation is conditioned by nature and NOT human nurture!!!

 

Of course, the loony muslims (and most christians too) would beg to differ and perhaps wish for all LGBT people to have their arses fried in hell – but I sometimes wonder – if heaven would be a place filled with hate-filled people who are supposed to be loving, compassionate, caring, accepting and gentle. Pardon me, but the majority of muslims and christians I meet have this propensity to turn into raging devils the moment the issue of homosexuality is raised. They become so filled with the “wrath of god” that they often secretly wish that LGBT people would rot in hell.

 

Malaysian Authorities block a festival celebrating Gays

 

Although a whopping 70 to 80 per cent of the Singapore population is religious, thank goodness we have a secular government that does not and will not interfere with the affairs of peaceful communities who just want to live and let live. Yes, we still have that accursed law that makes homosexual sex a crime – but the authorities do not go knocking on every hotel during Valentine’s Day to fish out LGBT lovers.

 

Nor do they break up any of our gay pride events that are held annually and in a very public way. Unless of course, the LGBT community start to protest and riot, which is a different issue all together.

 

Hmm…perhaps the LGBT community in Singapore could invite the Malaysian counterparts for the Pink.dot event next year?

 

As for now, I will boycott all things Malaysian. Fuck them.

 

*******

 

the islamic case for religious liberty

 

The words of the Qur’an and hadith contain rich resources for supporting the democratic order. If Muslims are to embrace modernity, including life in a pluralistic, democratic society, without abandoning their faith, they must take up the argument for religious liberty that is embedded in their history and that stands at the center of their most sacred texts.

 

Although the broad thrust of the Qur’an and hadith supports religious liberty, many parts of these texts can be, and traditionally have been, interpreted as denying it. One example is a qur’anic verse that deals with the question of the jizyah, a tax on non-Muslims: “Fight those who believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by Allah and His Messenger, nor acknowledge the religion of Truth, (even if they are) of the People of the Book, until they pay the Jizyah with willing submission, and feel themselves subdued” (Q 9:29). The Prophet reportedly sometimes demands the death penalty for apostasy, the most obvious example of this being the hadith “Whoever changes his religion, kill him” (Bukhari, Sahih, 9, 84, hadith 57).

 

These problematic texts are outweighed by the bulk of the texts and instruction provided by the two most important authorities in Islam, the Qur’an and the Prophet Muhammad’s actual practice. Both are remarkably supportive of the idea of individual and personal religious freedom.

 

The bedrock of the Islamic case for religious liberty is the Qur’an’s vision of the human person. The Qur’an’s anthropology—which is shared by Christianity and Judaism—views every human being as a creation of God, blessed with intellect and free will. God created humans “in the best of molds” (Q 95:4) and in doing so honored humanity and conferred on it special favors (Q 17:70). The Qur’an emphasizes that human beings have inherent worth and dignity. Further, it holds that God gave humankind the intellect and ability to discern between right and wrong (Q 17:15 and 6:104).

 

The Qur’an emphasizes free choice. “The truth [has now come] from your Sustainer: Let, then, him who wills, believe in it, and let him who wills, reject it,” it says (Q 18:29). And also: “Whoever chooses to follow the right path follows it but for his own good; and whoever goes astray goes but astray to his own hurt” (Q 17:15). Resoundingly, the Qur’an declares that “there shall be no coercion in matters of faith” (Q 2:256). Belief is an individual choice—or, rather, it is a choice involving the individual and God. Therefore forced conversions are simply unacceptable, and anyone who would use force rather than persuasion to promote religion must ignore the view of the person central to the Qur’an.

 

The capstone of the qur’anic case for religious liberty is the fact that not even the Prophet Muhammad could impose or force people to profess Islam. When people were unreceptive to the message of Islam, the Qur’an explicitly reminded him that he was never to resort to coercion: “Your task is only to exhort; you cannot compel them [to believe]” (Q 88:21).

 

Evidence from Islamic history suggests that this view was held not only by Prophet Muhammad but also by his political successors. In one recorded example, an elderly Christian woman came to see the caliph Umar and then refused his invitation to embrace Islam. He became anxious that she might have perceived his invitation as compulsion. “O my Lord,” he said, expressing his remorse, “I have not intended to compel her, as I know that there must be no compulsion in religion. . . . [R]ighteousness has been explained and distinguished from misguidance.”

 

Unfortunately, many Muslim-majority countries have failed to follow the Prophet’s example. Muslims in these states face penalties for blasphemy, heresy, and, most famously, apostasy. Non-Muslims are barred from proselytizing and possessing or importing unsanctioned religious items, including Bibles. They face restrictions on the public practice of religion and strict limits on the building or renovation of places of worship. The government monitors their religious activities, raids private services, and sometimes harasses or imprisons non-Muslim believers simply for practicing their faith.

 

But the Qur’an says much to undercut such restrictions. On a practical level, it repeatedly emphasizes the role of the Prophet as teaching people about God rather than forcing them to convert to Islam. “The Apostle is not bound to do more than clearly deliver the message [entrusted to him]” (Q 24:54). Similarly, it urges readers to “pay heed, then, unto God and pay heed unto the Apostle; and if you turn away, [know that] Our Apostle’s only duty is a clear delivery of this message” (Q 64:12).

 

In fact, the Qur’an appears to afford a high degree of freedom to non-Muslims under Muslim rule, particularly Jews and Christians (sometimes known as the “people of the book”). Its relatively tolerant position gave way to restrictions that emerged approximately one hundred years after the death of Muhammad. At the time of the Prophet, the Qur’an clearly distinguished between those non-Muslims who were hostile to the emerging Muslim community and were prepared to use violence against it and those non-Muslims who desired to live peaceably. In passages from the last two years of the prophet’s time in Medina (631-2 c.e.), the Qur’an encouraged, and even commanded, Muslims to bring these hostile forces under the authority of the Muslim state. However, even when exhorting Muslims to fight their opponents, the Qur’an did not suggest that those engaged in hostilities should be forced to convert to Islam. Indeed, it drew a sharp line between enforcing recognition of state authority and forcing any change of religious belief.

 

So the Qur’an does not endorse use of the sword to force conversions to Islam. But does it command such means to stop conversion from Islam?

 

The answer, I believe, is no. The Qur’an itself does not prescribe any worldly penalty—let alone death—to those who leave Islam. There are two clear categories of apostasy in the Qur’an. The first concerns Muslims who profess Islam outwardly but who then attempt to destroy the Muslim community from within, using every opportunity to discredit the Prophet (Q 2:8–18). However, the Qur’an does not recommend the death penalty even for this group of religious hypocrites, or munafiqun.

 

The other category of apostasy concerns Muslims who reject Islam and then return to it, only to reject it again a second or even a third time, seesawing back and forth between Islam and their former religions (Q 4:137). In the case of these serial apostates, the Qur’an does not suggest the death penalty. It specifies only a severe punishment that they will suffer in the life after death—the same other-worldly punishment the Christian tradition reserved for apostates.

 

And in fact, in the first centuries of Islam after the Prophet’s death, when the community was more threatened from outside forces, the laws prohibiting apostasy, blasphemy, and heresy were used often against political and theological opponents, whereas at other times Muslim critics of Islam were allowed to remain and function within the Muslim community despite their controversial views.

 

That is the qur’anic teaching. What do the hadith, the collected traditions and sayings of the Prophet, say about religious liberty? Some appear to indicate that any Muslim who changes his or her religion should be killed. However, the hadith themselves offer no evidence to suggest that Prophet Muhammad himself ever imposed the death penalty for the mere act of conversion from Islam. For example, a hadith in Bukhari’s collection (one of the most important collections of hadith for Sunni Muslims) tells of a man who came to Medina and converted to Islam. Shortly after his arrival, however, he informed Prophet Muhammad that he wanted to return to his former religion. Far from punishing him with death, the Prophet let him go free, without imposing any penalty at all (Bukhari, Sahih, 9, 92, hadith 424). A contradiction, therefore, exists between certain sayings attributed to the Prophet and his actual conduct.

 

Of course, there are instances when the Prophet did impose the death penalty. What are we to make of them? In these cases, the accused had joined an enemy camp, or taken up arms against the Muslim community, or done something else that made their act more than a simple conversion. One version of an important hadith says: “A man who leaves Islam and engages in fighting against God and His Prophet shall be executed, crucified, or exiled.” (Abu Duwad, Sunan, 33, hadith 4339). The crime being singled out for punishment is not the simple changing of one’s faith but rather the definite choice to engage in war against the Muslim community.

 

Another hadith, attributed to the Prophet, affirms the idea that it is not simply a change of religion that warrants the death penalty for apostasy: “The blood of a Muslim who professes that there is no God but Allah and I am His Messenger is sacrosanct except in three cases: in the case of a married adulterer, one who has killed a human being, and one who has abandoned his religion, while splitting himself off from the community” (Muslim, Sahih, 16, hadith, 4152).). The reference here to “splitting himself off from the community” is interpreted to mean one who actively boycotts and challenges the community and its legitimate leadership.

 

The various hadith that appear to command Muslims to kill apostates from Islam must, therefore, be understood in their proper political context. Most Muslim scholars today rely on the legal reasoning of the classical jurists without considering whether their reasoning should be considered authoritative or how changed political and legal conditions should shape our reception of that tradition’s authoritative elements. In the view of Muhammad Mutawalli al-Sha’rawi, for example, a preacher from Egypt, the liberty of a Muslim is restricted in that a Muslim may not leave Islam once he becomes a Muslim. He argues that although a person is free to believe or not to believe in Islam, once he has embraced the Islamic faith he is subject to all of its requirements, including the contemporary stand on apostasy and its punishment.

 

At the time of Prophet Muhammad there was no “state” as such. A tribal system was in place in much of Arabia in the sixth and early seventh centuries. With the rise of Islam and its consolidation in Medina during the last decade of the Prophet’s life (622–32 c.e.), converts to Islam from various tribes joined a community that was political as well as religious. Given the ongoing hostility between the Muslims and their opponents, conversion from Islam generally meant that a person left the Muslim community and joined its opponents. Apostasy was the equivalent of treason.

 

If the Qur’an does not speak against religious liberty, and if the evidence from relevant hadith is weak, how can we account for the restrictions on religious liberty in Muslim-majority states? Most of these restrictions can be traced back to classical Islamic law. The classical legal texts from each of the surviving schools of Islamic law provide a range of restrictions on the religious liberty of both non-Muslims and Muslims. These are not inevitable developments of Islam’s two most authoritative sources, the Qur’an and the Prophet’s actual practice, but rather a contestable departure from them.

 

About one hundred years after the death of the Prophet, Muslim theologians and jurists during the Umayyad dynasty began to define Muslim and community. Discussions of relations between Muslims and non-Muslims and of Islam’s superiority over other religions were intertwined with theological debates over matters such as free will, predestination, and the nature of God. These debates produced a wide range of positions and schools of thought. It was within this context of religious pluralism and conflict that Muslims had to deal with the problem of religious liberty.

 

Over time, limits on religious liberty for non-Muslims were added. These included restrictions on the building of places of worship, public readings of Scripture, and the ability of non-Muslims to engage publicly in certain activities that Muslims considered forbidden (such as drinking alcohol) if these non-Muslims were living in Muslim communities. It is far from clear how consistently or stringently the restrictions were applied in practice. Like apostasy law, they may have been used only at particular times of uncertainty, difficulty, or tensions with an external enemy.

 

Although these restrictions have come to form an influential part of classical Islamic law, non-Muslims under Muslim rule generally have been granted the prerogative to manage their own affairs (including religious affairs) from the time of the Prophet Muhammad onward. This practice was adhered to in various Muslim empires (from the Umayyad through to the Abbasid and the Ottoman). One example is the “millet system” established by the Ottoman Empire. One of the major challenges for the Ottomans was finding ways to govern the broad array of people, religions, cultures, and languages contained within their empire. Under the millet system, the Ottomans gave people of various religious traditions the right to practice their own religion and preserved their places of worship, provided they recognized the Ottoman state and the superiority of Islam.

 

With these arrangements in place, Ottoman society remained generally free of large-scale religious conflict for centuries. Even the Jews fleeing persecution in Spain found that they were welcome in Ottoman lands. This tolerance did not necessarily result in full equality or equal citizenship (which are, in any case, relatively modern concepts even in the West), but non-Muslims nonetheless rose to prominence in many Muslim states.

 

Today there is some movement toward Muslim acceptance of religious liberty. In global legal terms, religious liberty receives its primary definition from Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which has been incorporated into other international instruments such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief. Many Muslim-majority states have even signed and ratified the ICCPR, which contains the wording of Article 18 of the Universal Declaration, with some minor changes. The article reads: “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”

 

Though they may continue to flout these ideals, the many Muslim-majority countries that have accepted this statement have, in some minimal legal sense, already committed themselves to the ideal of religious liberty.

 

Sadly, the implementation of this standard continues to be painfully slow because of certain trends within Islam. At a time when a number of ultraconservative voices appear to be dominating the discourse in many parts of the Muslim world, Muslim scholars who advocate for religious liberty are fiercely opposed. They are often labeled as stooges of the West or accused of being apostates or heretics. Many such scholars in Muslim nations are imprisoned for their views or have their publications banned. My book Freedom of Religion and Apostasy in Islam was banned in the Maldives in 2008 after a targeted campaign against my coauthor (and brother) Hassan Saeed by certain politicians and an ultraconservative group.

 

Despite current challenges, the degree of freedom available to many Muslims, particularly those who are based in intellectually free societies (many of which are in the West), can be used to challenge those who threaten religious liberty. Muslims, who now make up roughly 20 percent of the world’s population, have a political and religious duty to take into account the important values and norms that have extensive grounding in Islam’s most sacred texts and its own tradition. In doing so, Muslim thinkers will be returning to their most important sources of authority, the Qur’an and the Prophet, in support of tolerance and religious liberty.

 

*******

 

Abdullah Saeed is the Sultan of Oman Professor of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Melbourne, Australia. This essay includes material delivered in a lecture given to the James Madison Program at Princeton University.

 

From the journal, First Things.

 

why dogma is irrelevant for religious pluralism

 

 

This is a cheeky yet eloquent presentation of religious pluralism and its perceived incongruence, using the “co-exist” tag as its jumping board. It seems that the wildly fanatical on both sides of the continuum love to toy with the propositional differences of religion to buttress their fundamental biases.

 

The religious fundamentalists would play the noncontradiction game that truth is antithetical and exclusive, and as such there would be no place in the metaphysical world for both monotheism as well as polytheism, or any of the contradictory alternatives. Christians would assert that either there IS ONLY one God, many gods or none at all. All three alternatives cannot exist one and the same time. Muslims would holler at the top of their lungs that “Allah is Great” and that they have the FINAL revelation which supercedes both of their predecessors in the faith, namely Judaism and Christianity. And Buddhists would roll their eyes at the shenanigans of the monotheists and preach that such metaphysical issues are irrelevant to good and righteous living.

 

On the other end of the continuum, the belligerant atheists and secularists would hammer home their dream of exterminating all forms of religion as they are not based on science and reason. And yes, they will preach to the choir about why the different religious traditions cannot coexist due to reasons similar to that of the religious extremists. Doctrines such as eternal damnation, salvation in christ alone and military “jihad” would often be the scapegoats.

 

Both ends miss the point.

 

In fact, the term “fundamentalism” does indeed characterise Dawkins and company – NOT in the sense that they adhere strictly to sacred texts, as Dawkins and Hitchens would often assert in their own defence, but in the sense that like the religious fundamentalists, Dawkins and company perceive reality in very stark black and white terms, with no shades in between at all. Science is the be-all and end-all of everything and anything – science is the answer to ALL of humankind’s problems and should be the ONLY thing humankind should believe and HAVE FAITH in.

 

But I suppose we all know that there are some things science simply cannot answer and resolve. Science may attempt to “explain” these issues in neurological, biological or psychological terms but it cannot eliminate the real EXISTENTIAL issue of pain, loss, suffering, estrangement, love, hope, faith and compassion. Science can objectifiy those issues so as to study them, but issues of existence cannot just be objectified but has to be subjectified in order to understand them. Life is to be EXPERIENCED and not just studied.

 

And the moment we put ourselves in the shoes of the sufferer, the lover, the poet, the mystic, the depressed, the romantic, etc – science sometimes goes out the window. One does not become a better lover by understanding the intricacies of neural and hormonal function but by simply BEING IN love. One will not be able to make love better by studying the evolutionary history of copulation and procreation, or even the mechanics of bipedal copulation. One has to be EMOTIONALLY and PASSIONATELY involved with the partner in order to make love to him/her better and perhaps send him/her to the moon and back!

 

Anyhow, it is common knowledge that populist notions often misrepresent the real thing and similarly, these atheists who take potshots at crude caricatures of religion are simply shooting at empty space. Although there are hundreds of thousands of people who take some of these religious dogmas seriously and literally – the language of religion itself, is NEVER literal or scientific. It is the language of MYTH.

 

And myth revolves around fable, legend, symbols and metaphors. These point to existential truths beyond the surface readings of the religion. Thus no theologian who is worth his salt would subscribe to a strict christocentric exclusivism in Christianity or a literal place of fire and brimstone for the non-believer.

 

And because symbols and metaphors are embedded in human culture, they are “different” in different religions. But these differences are never intended to be literal and empirical differences! The crux of religious faith is in the experience of the MORE, the AWE, the mystery of simply existing and living. Christian contemplation and buddhist meditation evokes the same physiological and neurological responses. Pentecostal/charismatic speaking in tongues and buddhist/muslim chanting also evokes the same, as would the humanist in the company of best friends sharing toast and tea under the stars, contemplating the vastness of the physical universe.

 

It is thus this primeval, existential urge for the “more” that led to premodern humanity to perhaps develop such complex edifices of symbols, metaphors and rituals which enrich and enliven them. So far, secular humanism and atheism have not been able to replicate the power in which the great religions are able to evoke in their practitioners. So far, much of atheism has but led to meaninglessness, hopelessness and a REAL void that nothing can seem to fulfil.

 

By claiming that religious pluralism cannot succeed, by asserting that the religions of the world cannot coexist in peace, are atheists trying to promote strife and conflict? Freethinkers often claim to promote peace in the world, but are we, when we always attack the religions virulently and haphazardly?

 

Yes, the fanatical and loony in the religious world may be causing problems. But what about the majority in the civilised world who are religious, who simply want to get on with their lives in peace and quiet?

 

What about the numerous foundations, coalitions, societies and organisations that are promoting unity and dialogue among the religions? What about the numerous religious enterprises that are promoting evolutionary theory? What about the many deeply religious people in the world who are against homophobia and are for same-sex marriage? Or for that matter, human and animal rights?

 

Aren’t they trying to make this world a better place to live in? Just like the humanists and the secularists?

 

It can be a bit weary to read about organisations like the Freedom from Religion Foundation and the National Secular Society or the British Humanist Association, who, in my opinion, are behaving like whiny kids throwing tantrums when they continuously hammer on about the constitution and such so as to eradicate prayer in public schools, and for that matter, any form of religious discourse.

 

Come on. You should be concerned about the terrorists and the suicide bombers. You should be concerned about the numerous serial killers on the loose (who always happen to be Americans). As well as the paedophiles and the sexual perverts. These do REAL harm than some harmless and innocent praying.

 

We Singaporeans, apparently, are more civil than these American and British atheists. We just live and let live – really, what other religious people do is NONE OF OUR BLOODY BUSINESS – unless serious harm or injury is done.

 

Bah!

 

*******

 

thank goodness we’ve separated

 

Thank goodness we had parted ways with our neighbour Malaysia in 1965, to become the sovereign Republic of Singapore, who has thus far out-performed and outclassed our bigoted, islamic fascist and racist idiot of a neighbour.

 

In order to attract tourists to the nation, its spin doctors often attempt to deceive the world into believing Malaysia is a pluralistic and modern city nation like Singapore. But unlike Singapore, which is a genuine secular state that promotes equality for every religion and race, Malaysia is a malay-dominated racist nation that favours the native malays over every other race, even though it is obvious to the world that the chinese and indians there are way above the malays in academic performance and eventual affluence. Where is meritocracy?

 

And what about religious pluralism? Its brand of Islam is ridiculously backward (but thankfully not as idiotic as its Saudi Arabian counterparts) and insecure, having the legal sanction to convert people of other faiths whereas its own are prohibited from conversion.

 

Malaysia muslims gets counseling after church meet

 

The recent paranoia and insecurity expressed by the authorities in Selangor over a charitable dinner event held in a Methodist church just made me sick to the stomach. There were muslims at the dinner, and thus the authorities feared that “there were attempts to subvert the faith and belief of muslims”.

 

And so they decided to “counsel” the muslims at the dinner, to “restore their belief and faith”.

 

Gosh, if the islamic religion is all that great and dandy, how can a single night of dinner in a christian church affect one’s faith? Buddhists are not all that bothered by luncheons and dinners held by organisations affiliated to other religions. Same with Hindus and even Christians.

 

Malaysia is but an islamic theocracy that clearly discriminates against non-muslims and their religious beliefs. A “moderate” muslim country?

 

All the existing islamic theocracies today are paramount examples of what a country will become when religion is in power. Only a truly secular, nonreligious government will ensure real peace and prosperity in a country. Has Islam really made a country more moral than the “decadent” West? I contend that Islam has in fact demonised almost every country in which it has power over – crimes against humanity abound in countries that are supposed to be on a higher moral ground than atheist Europe.

 

It is sad that the muslim world are so blinded by the irrationality that is part and parcel of the religious mindset that they fail to see reality as it really is. Which are the most peaceful and stable countries in the world?

 

Definitely NOT the religious countries.

 

Thank the mighty gods of Zeus and Jupiter, Jesus and Buddha, Vishnu and Shiva that I was not born in Malaysia and that we Singaporeans are FREE from the idiocy and primitive silliness of islamic fundamentalism.

 

*******

 

some thoughts on atheist activism in the US and UK

 

There are times I wonder if all that effort by atheists, free thinkers and humanists, mainly in the US and the UK, to eradicate religious expression in the public space, is all that good and beneficial to the cause.

 

Organisations like Freedom from Religion Foundation in the US and the British Humanist Association in the UK have often been in the political frontlines of trying to get all forms of religious expression out of the public arena like government schools, in parliament, in areas of public service, etc. Although one can indeed make a case in the US by appealing to the secular nature of the constitution, even as a freethinker myself I don’t really see what all the fuss is about when a student attempts to pray in school or when some form of religious expression is attempted.

 

Despite what these atheists and freethinkers say about respecting democratic liberalism and pluralism; they continually give me the impression that they are atheist fascists, attempting to get rid of all forms of religion in society. Is this the kind of impression you want to give to the religious community, that atheists themselves have this “evil” agenda of eliminating religion at all costs?

 

The only form of religious expression that I think should be eradicated is religious fundamentalism, in all of its evangelical, wahabi and hasidic varieties. These are definitely dangerous to humanity and human progress. But what about theraveda buddhism? What about pluralistic hinduism? What about benign attempts by sincere christians to want to pray in school?

 

I contend that such expressions are harmless and REAL humanists should never force their secularist views, however moderate or extreme, on such really innocent folks.

 

The situation in Singapore is somewhat different from the US or the UK. As a secular country, religion is almost nonexistent in any form of civil, government and public discourse, although it is mightily prevalent in our culture and society. It is almost ingrained in every Singaporean that one has no right to force his personal religious beliefs on another and thus proselytisation is almost a taboo and a no-no in Singaporean society.

 

But this does not mean that Singapore is like Sweden or Norway where citizens are mostly non-religious. Singapore is VERY religious, a melting pot of buddhism, taoism, hinduism, jainism, christianity, islam and what-have-you all in one place. But we live and let live – we simply mind our own business and allow others to practise what they want, as long as their beliefs are not dangerous to society, such as scientology or the Jehovah’s Witnesses (their opposition to military conscription and to bear arms goes against our policy of mandatory military service of every male citizen upon reaching the age of 18), which are banned in Singapore.

 

BUT…no decent Singaporean will mind if a teacher attempts to bring up his religious views in a classroom, of course, in a civilised and respectful way. It is often okay to offer exposition on one’s religious views but always in a way that DOES NOT put down another view that is contrary to oneself’s.

 

We also have our fair share of “faith” schools, schools that are affiliated with religious institutions such as the Anglican and Methodist schools as well as the Buddhist schools and the Madrasahs. With the exception of the Madrasahs which I contend could be quite dodgy in terms of their educational curriculum, all of our christian and buddhist schools are absolutely HARMLESS. All of them accept nonreligious students into their cohort and although there are chaplains and chapel services, proselytisation is a no-no without the nonreligious student’s consent.

 

There might be a prayer or two during Monday gatherings, but then again, who cares? Nonreligious students simply ignore them. There is no coercion by anybody to believe or practise the faith of the school.

 

So I suppose this is very unlike the faith schools in the UK, that are somewhat more religiously aggressive.

 

Hmm.

 

But of course, there are also many things about Singapore that is unhealthy and should be changed, like its draconian censorship laws, views on capital punishment, criminalisation of homosexuality, and its unwritten prohibition against any form of derogatory criticism of religion and religious views in public discourse.

 

But what the hell, people still have the right to practise and believe what they want, however ridiculous, erroneous and idiotic (which they are), as long as they do not force others to do the same.

 

This, I think, is what the atheists in the US and UK are doing wrong.

 

*******

 

why ac grayling is not a believer

 

It is not what the man of science believes that distinguishes him, but how and why he believes it. His beliefs are tentative, not dogmatic; they are based on evidence, not on authority or intuition.

- Bertrand Russell

 

We have many nonreligious beliefs, but what distinguishes them from the beliefs that amount to religious faith is the kind of grounds on which we hold them and the nature of what they are about.

 

From this it will in turn be obvious that by religion I mean the standard thing and its offshoots: a set of beliefs in one or more (generally personal) supernatural agencies, typically a deity or set of deities, together with the values and practices taken to be entailed by the existence of any such agency, such as worship of it, submission and obedience to its supposed commands or requirements, and so son.

 

In its focal and standard sense, religion not only denotes a metaphysical commitment to the existence of something non-natural in, or somehow outside but connected to, the universe, but further that this something’s relation to the universe is in some way significant - centrally, by being some or all of the universe’s creator, ruler and moral instructor. The meanings of these remarks is of course only notional – as with a lot of theological and religious discourse, it is hard to attach a literal sense to what is claimed, which votaries defend by appealing to the ineffability of religious “truths” and the finitude of our minds in comparison – but they vaguely indicate what religious people claim to believe.

 

One has to say something along the foregoing lines when discussing religion because religious apologists are inveterately apt to defend criticism or refutation by saying, “That is not what I mean by religion” and “I don’t recognise that caricature of what I believe.” Part of the sleight of hand at work here becomes obvious when one notes the great difference between what ordinary votaries of a religion believe and what their theologians and high priests say.

 

Likewise, the fact that mythologies antedating Christianity are full of stories of gods impregnating mortal maids who give birth to heroic figures, not a few of them of whom go down into the underworld and return – think of Zeus and his dalliances with at least 27 recorded mortal women – makes it puzzling why anyone should think that the God-Mary-Jesus story is out of the ordinary instead of what it is: merely an obvious borrowing and adaptation. Viewed in this light, and extended to religion in general, one sees that it is a function of historical accident that some people should today think they are consuming the body and blood of a god, some literally and some metaphorically, rather than slitting the throats of bulls and making libations to mountain-dwelling deities rather than heaven-dwelling ones.

 

I do not accept the metaphysics of religious belief, and what follows explains why. The explanation I give is of why I reject claims to the effect that there are, or might be, supernatural aspects to the universe. It is not an explanation of why I reject as mere tales and myths the Olympian gods, the gods of Babylon, the Hindu pantheon, and so endlessly on, for as the foregoing remarks imply, it is just plainly obvious that all the historical religions are a hangover from the less knowledgeable and more superstitious infancy of humankind, or at least from that chapter of it in which what had been early science and technology – explanation of natural phenomena by appeal to the actions of purposive agents in nature, plus a “technology” of prayer, sacrifice, and taboo to influence these agencies – had begun to be abstracted into belief in mountain or sky deities as a result of the increase in knowledge which had pushed those earlier proto-scientific efforts at explanation beyond the horizon. That religion as thus shaped survives is a well-recorded result of priesthoods and temporal powers needing and supporting each other in order to control majority populations; the institutionalisation of religion and the indoctrination of children into its tenets, are jointly among the main reasons why it persists.

 

The fact that the major religions contradict and indeed blaspheme one another, a fact not lost on our forebears who went to war over it frequently, is however, not taken by the faithful to disprove all of them – “it only disproves all of the others, not mine”.

 

But in any event, the particular religions – the incoherent mass of more than a few thousand christian sects between them believing an almost as large number of absurdities, the simple-minded and equally absurd beliefs of the dozen sects of Islam, the fairytale legends and stories of Hinduism, and so on – would none of them recommend themselves to an ordinarily intelligent adult if he were first presented with them without having first been influenced in childhood by society and schooling. Asked to believe that they are true and important, and to base his life upon them, such an adult would almost certainly feel one of two things: very amused or very insulted.

 

And since all this is so, what follows is not about any particular historical religion, but the basis of religious belief as such. It is though tiresome that one has to undertake the task at all, given that religion, whose infantilisms, absurdities and obvious inheritance from a superstitious and ignorant remote past should surely be enough to make the conversation unnecessary.

 

The essential point for me is the rationality of belief. A principal mark of rationality is reliance on evidence, conformity with relevant experience and respect for associated knowledge and theory.

 

The views and practices that emerge from common sense, practicality and science form a general picture of a law-like realm in which we know what is rational to believe and do, and what is not. We know, for example, that it is rational to expect that we can light and heat a house by installing the right kinds of appliances in it and connecting them to a power source such as an electricity grid, and at the same time we know that it is irrational to believe that we light and heat it by prayer alone, or by sacrificing a white heifer and dancing around its entrails. This is precisely and exactly why it is rational to believe the deliverances of common sense, practicality and science, and irrational to believe religious claims: the former are based on evidence massively gathered and confirmed by experience, whereas the various etiolated fancies constituting the latter are untestable, inconsistent with each other, internally contradictory, and in conflict with the deliverances of common sense and science.

 

Some would try to give room for two “magisteria” repudiate the last remark made, arguing for a form of mutual consistency by construing religion and science as incommensurable discourses which address and operate in wholly disjoint spheres. That is heroic, but will not wash: the religions make existential claims about what is in or attached to the universe and putatively makes a huge difference to it – claims that are unverifiable by, and at odds with, science and common sense. In fact, religion and science are competitors for the truth about such things as the origins of the universe, the nature of humankind, and the ways that the laws of nature can be locally and temporarily suspended.

 

Efforts to arrange a test that would adjudicate between these competing claims will always be won by science, but the votaries of the faiths will always have a convenient escape clause such as “god will not be tested” and the like.

 

It is surely fruitless to press this aspect of the matter, once one has said: contrast the current state of geology and evolutionary biology with commitment to belief in a six-day creation that occurred less than 10,000 years ago. This single example of the staring difference between disciplined rationality and what is nothing short of pathological irrationality ought to be enough, in its generalisation to all religious belief, to settle the matter – and among other thing, to outlaw the abuse of children by allowing them to be taught religious dogma and tradition as fact rather than one of the often tragic aspects of history.

 

But one ought always to conclude this aspect of the discussion by invoking the shade of Karl Popper, whose remark that a theory which explains everything explains nothing should be the rationalist mantra. Religious claims are irrefutable because they are untestable; nothing will be accepted as counter-evidence of the faithful – neither the existence of natural and moral evil, nor the deliverances of science and reason; there is always an excuse or an explanation, or the last scoundrely resort to claims about the ineffability or mystery of divinity, so that even the grossest conflicts with the facts or logic can be explained away or discounted.

 

The main key to the survival of all religions is their proselytisation of the young, For good evolutionary reasons, children are highly credulous, believing in everything the adults in their circle tell them to believe in. But whereas the tooth fairy and santa claus soon enough leave the scene along with fairies and trolls, gods remain, reinforced by parental, educational and social institutionalisation. That this is a form of child abuse is unquestionable, not least because most of those who abandon religious faith later have a psychological and sometimes social struggle in doing so, often painful; and beforehand they may suffer agonies of apprehension and doubt because of their sexual feelings and consciousness of “sin” in respect of all sorts of things that are natural and acceptable except in the eyes of the faith.

 

The distorted lives of the victims of religion are plain to see from the Bible Belt of the US to the veiled and shrouded women of Saudi Arabia; genital mutilation, honour killings, forced marriages, and dozens of other abuses are perpetuated in the name of religion and tradition and contrary to rationality and humanity; the toll is great, and constitutes an indictment of religion as by far one of the least happy inventions of human ingenuity.

 

In more secular parts of the world, where religions are on the back foot, their votaries assume a smiling face and an innocent posture. The christian churches in the Western world no longer murder their opponents at the stake or in crusading massacres, but offer the Kiss of friendship to new members during church services. They concentrate on charity, peace and goodwill – a far cry from their past blood-soaked efforts to force everyone into obedience and submission. But this only applies when they are weak; where they are strong they are not so kid-gloved. The Taliban in Afghanistan offer an example of what all religions everywhere tend toward when given the opportunity: control, and imposition of orthodoxy and orthopraxy. This is not a merely rhetorical claim: the christianity of the inquisition, the Calvinists, and the Puritans is no different in practical effect from the Wahhabis of Saudi Arabia or the Taliban of Afghanistan.

 

The contrast is with pluralism, individual liberty, consensual institutions, regimes of law, and rights – in short, Enlightenment dispensations, in which it is not a crime but an obligation to think for oneself, be informed, allow disagreement, encourage debate, and tolerate differences. That is not religion’s historical way, or its present way when it has the option. Just as science and religion are in direct competition for factual truth, so Enlightenment and religion are in direct competition when it comes to the contrasting kinds of society they envisage and promote.

 

This scratches the surface of why I not only reject the claims of religion, but think religion ought to be opposed and contested because it consists of falsehood and distortion, and is harmful to humanity.

 

If there is one practical move I would advocate toward diminishing the place of religion in human affairs, it is shriving education of it: that is the key to a better future.

 

*******

 

This article is written by professor Anthony C. Grayling, then professor of Philosophy ar Birkbeck College, University of London.

 

*******

 

gentleness and courtesy

 

“The Islamic teachings have left great traditions for equitable and gentle dealings and behavior, and inspire people with nobility and tolerance. These are human teachings of the highest order and at the same time practicable. These teachings brought into existence a society in which hard-heartedness and collective oppression and injustice were the least as compared with all other societies preceding it….Islam is replete with gentleness, courtesy, and fraternity.”

- H.G Wells

 

*******

 

singapore behaves just like another islamic theocracy

 

I posted an entry in late August commenting on an advertisement in Orchard Road depicting the beautiful abdominal muscles of a male model. There were quite a number of people who found it rather distasteful and lewd:

 

Is this Advertisement Distasteful?

 

I defended the advertisement by highlighting a letter sent to The Straits Times about the supposedly “lewd” nature of the piece and pointed out fallacies inherent in the letter.

 

It now seems that even the powers that be in Singapore is yielding to the the stupidity of the public, claiming that the advertisement has breached certain decency guidelines and thus decided to suspend the advertisement.

 

Abercrombie & Fitch Advertisement at Knightsbridge suspended

 

MDA backs ASAS call to remove Abercrombie & Fitch Ad

 

COME ON Singapore.

 

There are some who claim that it borders on indecency the moment the portion below the navel line is revealed. This is ridiculous – and I am not easily deceived by such nonsense – the navel line rule is a rule that Islam propagates for its men – the region between the navel and the knee is prohibited from exposure. So if someone brings that up in public discourse, he/she would in fact be using religion and not reason and sound logic to defend what it means to be “decent”.

 

So what about swimming trunks then? I am aware that there are indeed some muslim men who would not wear swimming trunks for apparently that line of religious reasoning. But the majority of decent men out there still wear swimming trunks to the pool or the beach and there is no hue and cry from anyone that it is indecent or lewd.

 

If the Abercrombie advertisment would be taken off, we might as well ban swimming trunks altogether.

 

This is SECULAR Singapore. And it is behaving like another Iran or Saudi Arabia, with all of their sexual paranoia and ridiculous islamic fascism. It will never be a genuine first world city if it continues to subscribe to archaic forms of morality that have no place in the 21st century.

 

*******

 

the epitome of islamic idiocy

 

What is FUCKING wrong with Saudi Arabia??!

 

It was only very recently that the current King made a public proclamation that Saudi women are able to vote in the country’s elections.

 

And yet they are still banned from driving. And are not allowed to go out of their homes without a male chaperon. And are coerced by law to cover up themselves like silly blanket ghosts.

 

Saudi Arabia is also one of the very very few countries in the 21st century who still practises beheading and stoning for crimes like murder, armed robbery, frequent drug use, adultery, “witchcraft” and conversion to another religion. There is also no freedom of religion in the country, where the only religion that is allowed to be practised is Islam, and their own interpretation of it at that. No churches or temples are allowed to be erected in the nation.

 

And muslims still complain about “discrimination” in secular Europe. My goodness…it is precisely because of the goodness of Europe that muslim immigrants could even build mosques and worshp in them!

 

It is high time muslims appreciate the secularism and humanism that is represented by Europe, one that is much more civilised, humane and truly enlightened than even moderate forms of Islam could ever aspire to be.

 

*******

 

 

drag queen of singapore finally comes out

 

 

He denied it adamantly twice before. But he finally decided to take one of the boldest step for himself by publicly admitting that he is homosexual.

 

Kumar publicly admits he’s gay

 

Kumar has been one of the most enigmatic and popular figures in Singapore’s entertainment scene – his meteoric rise came with the RaRa Show in the ’90s on primetime telly.

 

Although his homosexual or at least bisexual tendencies seem quite obvious to the majority of the public, coming out as part of the LGBT community in Singapore is no stroll in the park. Despite her public relations tagline of being a first world and cosmopolitan city and all that, Singapore is still a barbarous nation through and through.

 

Apart from its laws regarding the death penalty (even the US has many states abolishing this archaic law) as well as its fascist-like censorship grip on the news media, this medusa also makes LGBT sex a crime, which is akin to criminalising an individual of a different race than oneself just because.

 

It was also a shame and a disgrace for the Singapore authorities to criminalise a British journalist simply for writing a book criticising the use of the death penalty in Singapore’s legal system.

 

Hmm. So like the crazy Ayatollahs of Iran who issued a fatwa on celebrated author Salman Rushdie for simply writing a novel which they are apparently offended with in 1989. Singapore is not unlike such regimes in this respect.

 

There are also societal underpinnings that are not so favourable to the LGBT person – many ordinary Singaporeans still view homosexuality as a sexual deviance and something that is morally evil, probably promulgated by religions such as Christianity and Islam in the country.

 

With ninety-five per cent of  christians in Singapore being tied to the evangelical-fundamentalist view, it is no surprise that christianity in Singapore represents homophobia through and through. Thank goodness a dose of the Enlightenment has been experienced and no christian here would think of really imprisoning gays or executing them simply for practising what they are born with. Unlike places in Africa like Nigeria and Uganda.

 

There is also this strange view that homosexuality is a Western phenomenon, whereas there are Chinese scholars who believe that homosexuality had been a crucial aspect of ancient Chinese civilisation.

 

Like any other civilisation in times past and present, really.

 

With this as a backdrop to Singapore’s inherent prejudice against alternative lifestyles (sexual orientation is NOT a lifestyle choice, by the way), no wonder Kumar had a difficult time coming out.

 

There are many more in the entertainment scene like him, fearing to come out and fearing society’s so-called traditional or religious wrath on them. Popular host, comedian and actor Hossan Leong is one of them. No one really knows if the relationship he is having now is a same-sex relationship or a normal one. He also attends a Pentecostal church almost every Sunday, and so for those who knows his “christian” background might believe he is indeed a heterosexual. But then again, no gay will think of coming out in a Pentecostal church in Singapore! The pastors might then think of exorcising some demon of homosexuality from you!

 

Hairstylist Addy Lee is another one. And so are TCS 8 actors Chen Hanwei and the hunkily gorgeous Qi Wu.  The former is a very very obvious candidate for gaydom, but in Singapore, one simply live and let live. One can be a gay, as long as one does not try to be a hero about it.

 

*******

 

a penchant for the supernatural

 

Yesterday was Hari Raya Puasa, or Eid, which is the islamic celebration which culminates from a month long period of daylight fasting and prayer. In multi-religious Singapore, Eid is a public holiday.

 

As such, the whole family was at home, and in the afternoon, I was attempting to cut open the irritatingly spiky husks of the durian when I noticed a few spots of blood on the newspapers which I laid on the kitchen floor. I thought I had accidentally cut myself. There was also stains of red fluid on my left thumb.

 

Anyhow, I was unperturbed by scratches and slight cuts and proceeded to finish the few seeds of durian, while my wife was toying with the rubic’s cube in the bedroom and the three kids roughing it out in the living room.

 

I washed up about ten minutes later and was bewildered by the lack of any wound on any part of my members. Where on earth did the spots of blood come from then? I searched in vain for any hint of a scratch, puncture mark, anything…to no avail.

 

Whatever the case might be, it was nothing to fuss about and I assumed there had to be a natural explanation for the presence of blood but the cause just eluded me.

 

Yesterday’s trivial experience made me think about some things, though.

 

Although my presuppositions were naturalistic, and my thought processes at that time seem common sensical; not many Singaporeans go through the same rational process. I realise that if indeed no apparent wound was found, there would be some people who would really assume that in some supernatural way, the “miracle” blood could be a sign from god! Or that the durian had indeed bled!

 

I know…it sounds so incredulous…but isn’t this same looniness present when people attribute natural epiphenomena such as crop circles, wood grain patterns and even coffee stains to the divine? I remember there was a monkey-like pattern in the bark of a tree a few years ago that had the chinese community in Singapore wondering – if it was a sign of the monkey god! What made me puke was when numerous incences and food offerings were erected around the tree as a sign of “respect” or worship.

 

Similar reported sightings of such “miracles” abound about Jesus or the Virgin Mary appearing in the clouds, burnt stains of toast, wood grains of cupboards and wardrobes, etc.

 

The human brain has the propensity to seek out patterns and meanings and thus even in genuine randomness, people love to presume some sense of significance, pattern and ultimate meanings (this applies on a larger scale to cosmology and human origins).

 

Some time last year I had an experience in the middle of the night which the less educated or ill informed would label as “supernatural” or “paranormal”. That evening I retired to bed in the children’s room alone, with my wife and three kids in the other room (there wasn’t enough space for all of us on the same bed – my older kids insisted on sleeping with their mom that night). I was awaken about an hour or two past midnight with fear written all over my heart. Perspiration riddled my face and my heart was pumping at a furious pace and it seemed as though someone or some presence was in the room with me.

 

I tried to get up but I was somehow “glued” to the mattress – I couldn’t move an inch. It all seemed like a child’s nightmare but it wasn’t a typical dream when one was asleep. I knew I was awake.

 

There was also voices and strangling sounds. Strange sounds that seem to be coming from the living room and it occurred to me that whoever or whatever those sounds belong to would soon be entering my room.

 

And then all of a sudden…I snapped out of it and the entire room whirled back into normalcy. The sounds dissipated and I managed to sit up on the mattress.

 

I went back to sleep. Sound as a baby.

 

Now…this same experience would be interpreted by my mom as a form of demonic oppression or “spiritual attack”. As with most evangelical christians, especially those of the charismatic and pentecostal variety, such “encounters” at night are often understood to be spiritual in nature and a demonstration of the existence of spirits and demons.

 

There are many others, most of them women, who claimed to have been “pressed down” by some forces or “demonic spirts” in the middle of the night and such experiences are also attributed to the supernatural or paranormal realm.

 

I know this is all chicken droppings. Although the experience I had that night was very “real” to me, I did not interpret it as something paranormal. In fact, such experiences can be empirically proven to be nothing more than what scientists call sleep paralysis. The human body has a remarkable way of protecting itself when it is in deep sleep – it immobilises itself – so that even in the most dramatic of dreams while in R.E.M (rapid eye movement) sleep, it doesn’t move. But of course, sometimes this mechanism malfunctions in a sense, and thus there would be some occasions when we wake up in tears or even wetting ourselves.

 

And then there is also another natural phenomenon in which we tread on the subconscious level – the layer between consciousness and deep sleep. It is this layer of experience that we sometimes feel that we are wide awake and yet hear voices or “see things” – we are in fact actually dreaming while being half awake.

 

This explains my hearing voices as well as my supposedly inability to move. This also explains the whole lot of bunk about demonic oppression at night.

 

Of course, people love to affirm the supernatural. I have offered this explanation to many folks and it seems that the superstitious or religious ones never accepted them. Not on any rational or scientific grounds, mind you. They simply prefer the supernatural explanation to the natural one as this validates their worldviews.

 

This is but the remarkable matrix that is our human brain. It creates this illusion of self consciousness and a sense of reality that is really nothing but phenomenological. It also creates this illusory sense of self apart from our bodies, and thus the idea of the human soul. But it is my personal opinion that we are our bodies and what we feel, think or behave are simply functions of our physiology, psychology and biology.

 

I think that is the truth, whether we like it or not.

 

*******

 

 

muslim fundies attempting to engage in goobledygook

 

An islamic fundamentalist group in the UK posted this video on youtube which shows a muslim bloke trying to engage in philosophy with the biologist, PZ Myers when he was in Dublin, Ireland for its World Atheist Convention in June 2011.

 

iERA engages with PZ Myers at the World Atheist Convention

 

15 minutes into the conversation, I was already shaking my head. The bearded loons should never have tried to engage in “proving” God to an evolutionary biologist, because it cannot be done.

 

If they engaged in biology, they would have lost as these fundies were definitely not scientists. So they adopted a strategy by invoking philosophy – the cosmological argument for God – namely, the Kalam Argument, and all of their other babbling goobledygook.

 

PZ Myers, in what seemed like a Zen-like calmness, refused to engage in philosophical nonsense and simply stood his ground by stating that empiricism so far is the only reliable method for discovering truth in the natural world…and as such, the scientific method has not unearthed any evidence for the existence of God. Period.

 

Unlike Myers, the muslims were one very emotional and hyped lot, something that I can never stomach. They were probably of Pakistani or some middle eastern descent…no wonder…watching the news on the telly has shown to me how barbarous these people can be, screaming and shouting, jumping and barking like lunatics.

 

Hmm. The bearded loons remind me so much of Christian apologists…consistently arguing for the “scientific” or “historical” accuracy of their sacred texts.

 

*******

 

evangelical christian hypocrites

 

When a 17-foot-tall steel cross was placed on the site of ground zero, the September 11 Memorial site, nonprofit group American Atheists decided to file a lawsuit.

 

They contended that the cross is a religious symbol, and to place it on a site that is government-approved and government-financed would be to violate the United States constitution that separates church and state.

 

I agree wholeheartedly. Besides, I would opine that to place such a religious symbol on the site would be contradictory to all the previous debate about not erecting a mosque in the area. Why forbid a mosque but agree to a cross?

 

Furthermore, a Christian cross would be detrimental to the whole peace process – are the Americans trying to provoke the Islamic fundamentalists even more? Are they showing to the world that the September 11 tragedy is a battle between Christianity and Islam, a clash of religions?

 

Anyway, what is even more appalling are the remarks made by Christians, probably evangelicals, on the Fox News facebook page in reaction to an interview the programme gave to Blair Scott, the communications director for American Atheists.

 

Here are some of the remarks made by the Christians on Fox News facebook:

 

“I say kill them all and let them see for themselves that there is God.”

 

Hmm. This reminds me so much of the hate-filled rhetoric of Osama bin Laden. Fundamentalist religion loves to commit the sin of murder in order to deal with the so-called sin of atheism.

 

“Here’s my solution, kill the group…just kidding, you’ll figure it out. I’m so sick of people that pick and choose when they want to truly be American. They can go to Hell oh wait they will.”

 

It was a woman who allegedly made the above remark. Contrary to popular American opinion, fundamentalist Christians love to kill infidels too – in fact, they commit the greater sin of even “thinking in their hearts” to kill, if one takes the words of Jesus in his sermon on the mount.

 

Besides, this woman makes the very common but erroneous mistake of assuming that to be American is to be Christian. It is a shame that she does not know her own history. The USA was NEVER a Christian nation in the sense that its official religion was Christianity. The makers of the constitution were never Christian in the proper sense of the word. Even though they might have invoked the name of “God”, they were never theists (but deists) at all.

 

“Stupid atheists. I hope God kills them all.”

 

Wow. Really, fundamentalist evangelical Christians love to kill atheists. They even wish for their loving God to kill atheists for them.

 

“I love Jesus, and the cross and if you don’t, I hope someone rapes you!”

 

My God. The person who made the above remark is sure darn hypocritical. If he loves Jesus, as he claimed, he would realise that to wish for someone to be raped is an even grosser sin than to rape itself. He would be guilty of hell fire just as much as the rapist!

 

“I think we should hang the leader of that group on the cross with nails through their hands and feet, place a crown of thorns upon their head, RAM a spear through their side all after being whipped and beaten publicly! Just so that they can endure what Christ did so they understand the sacrifice behind what that cross symbolises.”

 

Wow! Oh my Holy God and Father of Jesus! American Atheists decided against the cross not because of its theological implications (they have no interest in theology anyway) but simply because of its violation of the constitution as well as its societal ramifications. What has the sacrifice of Jesus got to do with it?

 

“Any court or lawyer who takes this case should be hung!!!!! If you look at some of the people who are atheists they are all miserable looking because they don’t have any faith in anything. You all should go live in another country. You have taken enough of my rights away.”

 

Very repressed, these Christians. He is making a very generalised assertion that atheists tend to be miserable people. I know of many atheists who are very happy and self-assured people.

 

The above remarks were just the tip of the iceberg. There were countless more similar comments and remarks made by evangelical Christians on the Fox News facebook page.

 

You can check out the Fox News report on this senseless name-calling and rubbish by Christians on youtube: Tool Time – Good Christians threaten Atheist

 

Sigh. I am very very frightened if Christians ever have total control of a country – we would be experiencing the Inquisition and the Holocaust all over again.

 

*******

 

halloween, chinese style

 

The Hungry Ghosts festival has started, probably a few days ago, slightly prior to the start of the Islamic Ramadan.

 

Pollution filled the air these few nights as devotees burned incense and paper, allegedly to the spirits of their deceased. The Chinese believe that during this month, the spirits of the deceased (probably only Chinese spirits, one wonder why) would pay them a visit and enjoy the foods that would be placed along street corners.

 

Although some buddhists also participate in this “festival”, it has its origins in Chinese folklore and legend, rather than buddhist scripture. Anyhow, one wonders if there truly exists a place where the spirits of homo sapiens dwell, why is it only for Chinese spirits? Won’t it be for the entire world as well?

 

The provincial aspect of tribal folklore is something that is hard for me to digest, let alone swallow. If something is true, it would be true for all. Science is true and is true for all, regardless of race, language, sex or religion. So if the hungry ghosts festival is “true”, it should be true for all, not just the Chinese.

 

And one of the most disturbing aspects of Singapore society is the manner in which such criticisms of popular religion would be censored by the authorities that be, in the name of religious harmony.

 

It is akin to saying that one cannot criticise proponents of the stork theory of human reproduction, or the flat-earthers, or the geocentricists; of propagating falsehood and intellectual dung in the name of “tolerance” and “respect”.

 

One simply does not show tolerance to intellectual falsehood and rubbish.

 

Worse still, all over the world, the Chinese who would be participating in this festival would be contributing negatively to the already over-heated planet. Speak of global warming. And what are the Chinese doing about it?

 

It is also peculiar to me, that for this year, 2011, this month is both “unholy” and “holy” at the same time – while the spirits of the Chinese departed would be roaming around feasting on food placed all over Singapore, the muslims would be fasting and praying; knowing very certain that these Chinese “spirits” are nothing but demons in disguise.

 

Or perhaps even nothing at all.

 

So daft.

 

*******

 

religious zeal starts today

 

Ramadan starts today.

 

Ramadan is the annual muslim “holy month”, of which every practising muslim will fast food and water from dawn to dusk for about 30 days.

 

It will also be a time when the muslims in our midst will be behaving “holier than thou” towards the rest of us, especially the zealots and fundamentalists.

 

That is not good.

 

*******

 

some thoughts on the religious mindset

 

I often wonder why, if the human soul is distinct from the functions of the mammalian human brain, when damage is inflicted to certain portions of the brain, certain elements of our “soul” ceases to exist?

 

It would be fair to say that it is entirely possible to “convert” a religious zealot into an atheist by simply tweaking portions of the brain that are responsible for religious thought. Real-life cases do exist of religious persons becoming atheists after suffering some damage to their brains due to accidents.

 

If that is the case, is it fair to claim then, that the concept of the “soul” is but a function of the physical brain – an “illusion” of consciousness that is a product of our human evolution? We think that we are separate and distinct from our bodies because our brains “deceive” us into perceiving it as such.

 

The common evangelical disagreement to this would be that such an idea is not a scientific or empirical one but a philosophical one. We are simply presupposing a naturalistic premise – that the material world or nature is all there is. But if we allow for another layer of consciousness that is beyond the material world, then believing in a “soul” distinct from the brain is possible and reasonable.

 

In theory, such an argument is reasonable. But empirical evidence does not allow such a notion. Why are people able to lose their religiosity, their “christian-ness”, their “muslim-ness”, after a damage to their brains? Why are people able to lose their innate “identities” when suffering from Alzheimer’s? If the soul is distinct from the body, a chemical imbalance or problem to the brain should not affect the “soul”.

 

But that isn’t the case.

 

Besides, studies have also shown that religious and mystical experiences can be evoked by simply applying electromagnetic waves to the brain, especially the temporal lobe. People whose temporal lobes are particularly sensitive can be easily manipulated into experiencing fear, numbness, mystical ecstasy, “supernatural” presences, “ghosts” and other paranormal activities by interfering their brains with electromagnetic waves.

 

This can actually explain the numerous so-called “haunted” places in the world – they are simply places that have higher concentrations of electromagnetic radiation – probably due to underground wirings or some other sources of radiation nearby.

 

People who suffer from temporal lobe epilepsy are also known to experience religious or mystical experiences, even when some of these patients were atheists. Thus there are scholars who controversially believe that the great mystics of the ancient and present world could be people who suffer from temporal lobe epilepsy.

 

People like St. Paul, Ellen G. White (a seventh-day adventist “prophetess”) and perhaps even the founder of Islam.

 

Notice how such mystics claim to experience “seizures” of sorts while having their episodes of “visions” and “dreams”.

 

Although scientists are quick to assert that such research do not negate God as an experience of tremendous value to humankind (they have to make such a claim anyway to appease the religious crazies of the world), it does put into question the very notion of God and the supernatural as metaphysical realities.

 

God and the sacred might very well be products of our own human consciousness, inherited via our evolutionary genes. The “God-centre” in our brains exist so prevalently in homo sapiens because such a mechanism had aided humankind in our survival and thriving as a species.

 

The God who is the “Beyond in our Midst.”

 

One common experience that most practitioners of the mystical traditions claim to have is the losing of self, the diminishing of self-consciousness.

 

Just think of the nirvanic experience of buddhist meditation, the cloud of unknowing in Catholic contemplative prayer and the communion with God of tongues-speaking in Pentecostal prayer.

 

Such similarities do extinguish the childlish idea that any one religion is the sole arbiter of truth, such as the exclusivism of evangelical Christianity and Islam.

 

*******

 

the predicament of pluralism

 

 

We have been like a company of people marching down a long valley, singing our own songs, developing over the centuries our own stories and slogans, unaware that over the hill there is another valley, with another great company of people marching in the same direction, but with their own language and songs and stories and ideas; and over another hill yet another marching group – each ignorant of the existence of the others.

 

But then one day they all come out onto the same plain, the plain created by modern global communications, and see each other and wonder what to make of one another.

 

You might think that the different groups would then simply greet one another as fellow companies of pilgrims. But in fact that is made difficult by part of the content of our respective songs and stories.

 

For if we are Christians, we have been singing for centuries that there is no other name given among men, whereby we may be saved, than the name of Jesus.

 

And if we are Jews, we have been singing that we are God’s only chosen people, a light to lighten the world.

 

And if we are muslims, we have been singing that Muhammad (peace be upon him) is the seal of the prophets, bringing God’s latest and final revelation.

 

And if we are Buddhists or Hindus, we have been singing yet other songs which imply that we have the highest truth while other have only lesser and partial truths.

 

An excerpt from John Hick’s lecture, God Has Many Names.

 

*******

 

 

a stirring film

 

 

 

 

This is one of those documentaries that would often ruffle evangelical feathers and especially those who claim to subscribe to the absolute infallibility and inerrancy of the Bible.

 

I suppose it is not so much of an issue today, with many people born in the post-90s who are more accepting of alternative lifestyles. That being said, fundamentalism is on the rise and with that, so will rabid homophobia.

 

Homosexuality has always been a taboo subject in Singapore, more so among the monotheistic faiths of Islam and Christianity. Often appealing to their sacred scriptures, homosexual sex is viewed as an abomination to the natural order of things. But please.

 

Please watch this documentary.

 

It will open your eyes to the everyday trials and tribulations of the average Joe and Jane on the street who happens to be homosexual. Through the vantage point of five average American families, including the story of Bishop Gene Robinson of the Episcopal church; the viewer is drawn into the inner lives of the average American psyche, often influenced by religious prejudice and biblical ignorance.

 

Yes, biblical ignorance.

 

The fundamentalist is more illiterate about the bible than he himself cares to admit. It is often the uneducated and the ill-taught who read the Bible at face value, as though something as ancient and culturally separated from our modern times as the Bible can be so easily understood and interpreted.

 

Just think of all of the ancient works of literature the world has ever known. How often is it a true case whereby the average Joe on the street is able to pick one of these works up and understand it in a few sittings? It is very very unlikely.

 

Scholars take decades just to plumb the depths of such literary classics.

 

If we want to take the Bible seriously, as Christians should, we should take the Bible as it intends to be received, as the human-engineered myth of the ancient communities of Israel and the early Christian community. Only then are we able to interpret it critically as a culturally dependent text.

 

*******

 

 

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