Additional comments on Islam
After reviewing assignments or
getting certain questions I often send out messages through Nicenet
dealing with points that have come up. For each section I am
going to
include some of these past messages and occasionally add to them.
UNDERSTANDING ISLAM
As you begin trying to understand the
third of our Abrahamic traditions
in the next couple of weeks, I'd like to make a point about how
Christianity until the Reformation would be rather different from both Judaism and Islam.
Someone who is really observant as either a Jew or a Muslim is
expected to make his religious practices part of his daily life in a
way that Catholic Christianity did not. For the most part,
Catholic
practices centered on the church--attending Mass, for instance--far
more than on the home. An observant Jew or an observant Muslim
has
daily prayers and severe restrictions on what can be eaten or how food
is to be prepared. For the Catholic tradition (like the Buddhist
in
this respect), only those who accepted a monastic lifestyle would be
expected to live differently than the ordinary person, with long hours
in prayer ("the divine office") a defining characteristic of what it
meant to be a monk or nun.
With the Reformation something
changed here. Now much more was expected of the ordinary person:
longer hours in church along with an emphasis on a personal reading of
the Bible (something not really possible before the invention of
printing) and often a stricter code of conduct that regulated dress and
entertainment. This same thing has characterized newer
Christian movements, such as the Latter Day Saints and the Jehovah's
Witnesses.
Entire communities could be expected to live a more strict lifestyle,
and personal restrictions could begin to match something of what once
would be expected just of those living in a monastery.
The
assignments for coming weeks invite you to learn more about what it
means to be an observant Muslim. Keeping in mind that this course
is
intended as a comparative study, try to see the parallels with being an
observant Jew or with being a someone belonging to what we might call a
"stricter" Christian denomination. As you do so, pay attention to the
problem of how different religious communities interact. For some, like the Hasidim
in Judaism or the Amish in Christianity, the extreme is withdrawal so
that there is minimal interaction. For others, there are
differing
degrees of assimilation with the test often being whether intermarriage
can be allowed.
Throughout, please try to avoid the
stereotypes
that are always going to come to mind. This is especially true
today
when the popular image of Islam has been so strongly colored by what
has been called "jihadism" and, since 9/11, prejudice against Muslims
has often become as virulent as earlier prejudice against Jews.