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A speech on "Faith, Reason
and the University" would hardly seem a likely occasion to declare war
on Islam. But some in the Muslim world seem to believe that Pope
Benedict XVI was doing exactly that in his speech at Regensburg,
Germany, last week. The pope has expressed regret that his words —
actually those of a medieval Byzantine emperor, Manuel II Palaeologus —
have caused hurt in the Islamic world, but the controversy shows no
sign of abating.
The
quotation that has sparked the outrage came from a translation of a
14th-century text, ascribed to Manuel II Palaeologus, the last
Christian emperor of the Byzantine Empire, or what was left of it in
1391. In that year, Emperor Manuel II transcribed his debate with a
Persian scholar in which Manuel — not Benedict — says, "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."
The pope
has said that he does not share Manuel II's view of Islam. And in the
pope's speech, he prefaces his remarks first with the admonition from
the Koran, "There is no compulsion in religion," and then describes the
dialogue he is about to quote from as one that reflects "a brusqueness
which leaves us astounded." But these caveats have been conveniently
ignored by the pope's critics.
Very
little in Pope Benedict XVI's speech had to do with Islam. It was,
instead, an erudite discursion on the rupture between reason and faith
that has occurred in post-Enlightenment Christianity. Nonetheless, the
pope did distinguish between Christianity's and Islam's understanding
of the relationship between reason and faith. The pope argues that for
Christianity (at least until the Reformation), reason is inextricably
bound to faith. "But for Muslim teaching," Pope Benedict XVI says, "G-d
is absolutely transcendent. His will is not bound up with any of our
categories, even that of rationality."
The irony
is that those who have taken most offense at the pope's comments have
responded in ways that seem to prove Manuel II's point. Al Qaeda in
Iraq has declared, "We will break up the cross, spill the liquor and
impose the 'jizya' tax [a tax applied to non-Muslims], then the only
thing acceptable is a conversion or the sword."
The
Mujahedeen Shura Council, a group of Sunni extremists in Iraq, has
warned, "You infidels and despots, we will continue our jihad and never
stop until G-d avails us to chop your necks and raise the fluttering
banner of monotheism, when G-d's rule is established governing all
people and nations."
In Iran,
the top Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has used the pope's
comments to call for "attacks" on "those who benefit from the pope's
comments and drive their own arrogant policies," in other words, the
United States. And in Somalia, a Muslim fanatic killed a Catholic nun
at a hospital in Mogadishu by shooting her in the back.
These
actions hardly suggest that Christianity has declared war on Islam.
Indeed, the bloodshed in Iraq between Sunni and Shiite, in Kashmir
between Muslim and Hindu, the attacks of Islamist suicide bombers in
Israel, England, Spain, Kenya, Bali and elsewhere, and the murderous
attacks of September 11th all point to a war by Islamists on perceived
infidels.
If the
pope decides to give another speech in which he references Islam,
perhaps he should quote from Scripture: "By their fruits, you shall
know them." Islamists wage jihad on all, including other Muslims, who
do not share their specific interpretation of G-d's will. Christianity
teaches: Judge not, unless you wish to be judged. Do unto others as you
would have done unto you. He who is without sin, cast the first stone.
If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other cheek.
These hardly seem like a call to war.
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