Comments on past and present political, religious and pop cultural events.

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

What are we to do with Christians wanting to do something about Islam?

"What are we to do about Islam?" is a question Mike Licona asked in this morning's Baptist Press News. By 'we', Mike is referring to Christians. His talk presupposes that 'we' are a corporate actor, an agent, with the capacity to 'do' something. It ignores the fact that Christians are divided into many different sects--there are Baptists, Methodists, Lutherans, Universalists, etc. But this forgetting of the sectarian differences that constitute late modern Christianity, is a move made possible by the figure of 'Islam.' In other words, in Mike's talk, it is the face of difference that helps solidify 'we' against them. And it is most certainly a 'we' versus them mentality that organizes Mike's thoughts. This becomes clear when he says:

The objective of many Muslims is to Islamicize the world. When a person or a country stands in the way of Islam’s efforts, these regard it as a “war on Islam.” This does not mean all Muslims hate Christians. For over a thousand years there have been many friendships between Muslims and Christians. However, Muslims who have befriended Christians have disregarded the Koran in the process, since it prohibits such friendships (Q 5:51).

So, in effect, it is Christian people and countries versus Muslims and their apparent efforts to 'Islamicize the world.' But in noting that Muslims do missionary work, Mike obscures the enormous time, energy and finances that evangelical Christians spend on missionary work. In some sense, then, what we are seeing here is a turf battle between Christianizing and Islamicizng agents. Mike is a Christianizing agent.

As a Christianizing agent, Mike articulates three ways of dealing with Islamic agents. The first:

Understand that we stand in the way of Islam intentionally. We believe that Islam is a religion that promotes false teachings about God. The Apostle Paul wrote, “But even if we (or an angel from heaven) should preach a Gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be condemned to hell!” (Galatians 1:8). Since Islam’s message differs fundamentally from the Gospel, it is clear what Paul taught regarding the fate of Muhammad and those who propagate Islam. A few years later Paul wrote, “We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5). It is the responsibility of evangelical Christians to promote the Gospel of Christ to the exclusion of the core messages of other religions -- including Islam. In the eyes of Muslim Islamicists, this places evangelical Christians at war with Islam.

Again, 'we' is used by Mike to signify the boundaries between the Christian community and the Muslim community. These boundaries, as Mike says clearly, must exclude the 'core messages of other religions because 'Islam's message differs fundamentally from the Gospel.' But does it? Mike is using a logic of differentiation here. One might say that fundamentally, Islam, Christianity and Judaism are all three religions tied together through the figure of Moses. And, all three religions are monotheistic. So, Mike's logic of differentiation effectively obscures the historical links between the three religions. Mike is politicizing the relationship by hardening the boundaries into an a-histoircal configuration that fits nicely with the contemporary fears many Americans have of Muslims. Thus,

It is natural to feel anger and hatred toward Muslims who want to kill us. On a national level, we can support politicians who are committed to hunting down and destroying terrorists, upholding free speech, and standing in the way of Muslim thugs who declare war on everything which does not allow Islam to dominate. On a personal level, Jesus tells us plainly what our response should be:

"But I say to you who hear, love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.... If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? For even sinners love those who love them. If you do good to those who do good to you, what credit is that to you? For even sinners do the same. ... But love your enemies, and do good ... and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High; for He Himself is kind to ungrateful and evil men" (Luke 6:27-35).

So, in saying that it is 'natural to feel anger and hatred toward Muslims that want to kill us,' Mike is legitimating and normalizing this response over other possible responses. Other responses that include, turning the other cheek, as Jesus might have suggested. But more than that, Mike is conflating the US war on terrorism as part and parcel of a Christian response. This comes through most clearly when he says they want to 'kill us'--meaning 'us' Christians and 'us' Americans--and then when he appeals to a national-scale war-making effort. What is fascinating is how love and war work together in Mike's discourse. This helps construct the difference between the nation on one hand and the individual on the other hand and legitimate the violence that the nation perpetrates against others and the missionary work individual Christians do. In other words, as the nation wages war, realize that Jesus calls us to a "holy war" -- the difference is that our holy war actually involves, well, holiness, and does not involve weapons and violence.

Thus, 'we' are clearly different than them. 'We' are holy and they are not. 'We' are waging a legitimate war and they are not. 'We' have the right religion and they do not. But can these strict 'we'-they boundaries not be deconstructed? Is Mike not helping to cultivate fear? Is Mike not helping discipline those that call themselves Christian? I wonder if Mike has ever met a Muslim.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

You say that Mike is using a logic of differentiation that obscures the common historical roots of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. But Mike, whom I have not read, is probably not doing that; most likely, when he's pointing to the idea that Islam's message is different from Christianity, he's getting that differentiation from their messages. Which are different.

We've had discussions on my blog about the possibility of locating truth values in propositions. Having visited here, I'm very pessimistic about getting anywhere in that discussion. Here's an example where you have turned a simple comparison of messages--and Islam's message can indeed be compared to Christianity's--and taken it as a power play.

That's illegitimate. It removes all content from any discussion. It devoids the teaching of both religions of all actual meaning. I'm not sure it's honest, though I imagine you probably think it is. But then, if there is no truth value in assertions, you can't say anything untrue, can you?

Too bad that doctrine also eliminates your possibility of saying anything true.

Jacob said...

Thanks, Tom, for the comment. It is one of my very first. As I've said before, content is secondary in my view. What is important, or at least more important, is the boundaries that divide one community (Christians) from another (Islam). Because it is the boundary that enables content in the first place.

Aaron Snell said...

Hi, Jacob. You said, "it is the boundary that enables content in the first place," and I think this near the crux of the disconnect between your position and ours. I would see it as the other way around - without content, there would be no boundaries, so the content is logically prior to said boundaries. Do you have any support for your claim here?

Jacob said...

Aaron,

What defines the limit of the content is the boundary. Thus, I would have to disagree. Boundaries are constitutive of the content and therefore logically prior to any content. Though for sure, content is important.

Aaron Snell said...

Is this boundary a thing? Or is it simply the "end", so to speak, of the content? I would say the latter, and reword your statement to say, "What defines the boundary is the limit of the content." This is where we diverge, I suppose.

Congrats on the new blog, by the way. I hope it is enjoyable and beneficial for you.

Aaron Snell said...

In other words, Jacob, boundaries don't exist until there is content to define them. It's not like the boundaries are there, and then the content fills up all the way to them. So I still assert that content is logically prior to boundaries. Make sense?

Jacob said...

Tom,

We can certainly read Mike's message as "a simple comparison of messages." But that depoliticizes what Mike is doing. It constructs Mike's message as an innocent comparison.

Another way of reading Mike's message is as an act, as an interpretation that is engaged in defining the meaning of the situation, which is political. Mike is not innocent. He is engaged in a struggle over meaning. But more than that, Mike directly links his message to the state-government's fight against terrorism. Mike is being as political as political can get. Worse still, Mike is making Christianity an instrumentality of the US state.

Tom, you still want to make truth transendent. I want to keep truth right here on the ground. As I've pointed out on numerous occassions on your blog, we are operating from two different ontological perspectives. They are not complementary. They are paradigmatically different. Truth is truth not because it is an innocent reflection of Reality, but because folks like Mike struggle like hell to make truth. Tom, your comments are not innocent either. Which side do you think you are on? You too are engaged in a struggle. As am I. They just happen to be at odds with one another.

Jacob said...

Aaron,

What are social and political boundaries? They mark the point at which "we" stop and "they" begin, where "your" view of the world stops and "my" view of the world begins.

The possible content is practically endless. "We" can be you and me. "We" can be all of us in the US. "We" can be the whole world. The content is fluid and changing. What is most interesting to me, is the effects of defining the limits of the content.

For instance, the limit point of "Christianity" might be "Islam." Everybody knows that a "Muslim" is not a "Christian." That which seperates the two, is a boundary. In different times in history, that boundary has changed and thus the content has changed.

By the way, thanks. Good luck on your blog as well.

Aaron Snell said...

Jacob,

What are social and political boundaries? They mark the point at which "we" stop and "they" begin, where "your" view of the world stops and "my" view of the world begins.

You just made my point for me. It is the content that comes first; boundaries are just place markers for content. "We" and "they" are the content here. I just think you have this totally backwards, but I don't know if either of us is going to succeed in convincing the other.

By the way, I don't think a description of boundaries is exhausted by "us" and "them." I can easily conceive of "them" and "them" boundaries.

Jacob said...

Aaron,

The relationship between content and boundary is closely linked. In some ways, they are mutually constitutive of each other. "We" is an ambiguous signifier--it may point to a multiple scales that include you and me talking on this blog to all Americans to all humans beings in the world. The content can vary widely. But the point that I want to make is that "we" is surely not "them." And in that difference between "we" and "them" is a boundary.

I think that you are right that there can be multiple "thems"--e.g. the "axis of evil" consists of three "thems" that stand against "we" the Americans and "we" the West.

I think your also right that we probably won't change each others minds.

Me

Konnarock, Virginia via Washington, DC
Father. Husband. Academic. Avid reader and writer with dreams of returning to the Appalachian mountains.
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