The Inclusiveness of 7TH century Islam
Respected writer of Islamic history, Karen Armstrong, reveals a faith perspective of Islam – in
the 7th century – that is not always understood:
[T]he Qur’an insisted that its message was simply a ‘reminder’ of truths that everybody knew.
This was the primordial faith that had been preached to the whole of humanity by the prophets of the past.
God had not left human beings in ignorance about the way they should live: he had sent messengers to every
people on the face of the earth . . . All had brought their people a divinely inspired scripture; they might
express the truths of God’s religion differently, but essentially the message was always the same. Now at
last God had sent the Quraysh a prophet and a scripture. Constantly the Qur’an points out that Muhammad had
not come to cancel the older religions, to contradict their prophets or to start a new faith. His message is
the same as that of Abraham, Moses, David, Solomon, or Jesus. . . . [A]ll rightly guided religion that
submitted wholly to God, refused to worship man-made deities, and preached justice and equality came from the
same divine source. Hence Muhammad never asked Jews or Christians to accept Islam, unless they particularly
wished to do so, because they had received perfectly valid revelations of their own. The Qur’an insists
strongly that ‘there shall be no coercion in matters of faith’, and commands Muslims to respect the beliefs
of Jews and Christians, whom the Qur’an calls ahl al-kitab, a phrase usually translated ‘People of the Book’ but which is more
accurately rendered: ‘people of an earlier revelation’. [1]
Muhammad had not envisaged a violent break either with the past or with other faith communities.
[2] Radical as the following statement may appear, the Qur’an insists:
Do not argue with the followers of earlier revelation otherwise than in a most kindly manner –
unless it be such of them as are bent on evil-doing – and say: ‘We believe in that which has been bestowed
from on high upon us, as well as that which has been bestowed upon you; for our God and your God is one and
the same, and it is unto Him that we [all] surrender ourselves.’ [3]
As Islam spread beyond the Arabian peninsula, it found that nearly everybody belonged to the
ahl al-kitab, the People of
the Book – people who had received authentic scriptures from God. [4] Consequently, they were not forced
to convert to Islam. [5] Rather, the Muslims assumed that Islam was a religion for the descendants of
Ishmael, while Judaism was the religion for the lineage of Isaac. [6] Once Christians became protected
subjects (dhimmis) under
Muslim rule, they were allowed to practise their own faith, as the Qur’an enjoined. [7] Furthermore,
some Christians, who had been persecuted by the Eastern Church (Greek Orthodox) for their heretical beliefs,
preferred Muslim to Byzantine rule. [8]
ENDNOTES
[1] Armstrong, Islam: A Short History,
7-9.
[2] Ibid., 9. Armstrong elaborates further: “Hence Muslims continued to perform the customary rituals at the Kabah, the cube-shaped
shrine in the heart of Mecca, the most important centre of worship in Arabia. It was extremely
ancient even in Muhammad’s time, and the original meaning of the cult associated with it had been
forgotten, but it was still loved by the Arabs, who assembled each year for the hajj pilgrimage from all over
the peninsula.”
[3] Muhammad, Asad, trans., The Message of the Qur’an (Gibraltar: Dar al-Andalus, 1980), Surah
29:46.
[4] Armstrong, Islam: A Short History,
26.
[5] Ibid. Armstrong adds that “indeed, until the middle of the eighth century, conversion was not
encouraged.”
[6] Ibid. Armstrong comments that “Arab tribesmen had always extended protection to weaker clients (mawali). Once the Jews,
Christians and Zoroastrians in their new empire had become dhimmis (protected subjects),
they could not be raided or attacked in any way. It had always been a point of honour among Arabs to
treat their clients well, to come to their aid, or to avenge an injury done to
them.”
[8] Ibid.
Photo credit:
Microsoft Clip Art
|