As I think Wayfarer has alluded to, a secular Islamic state is pretty fuckin' rare, — Heister Eggcart
What is your proposal for addressing it?and which needs to be addressed. — Heister Eggcart
Every attempt to analyse Islam on the basis of theology and not in terms of sociology and politics is vacuous. — StreetlightX
What is your proposal for addressing it? — andrewk
It's a complex issue, there can be either theocratic or ecclesiocratic states associated with religions. — John
Christianity is a much older religion that Islam, so it is not surprising that predominately Christian countries have developed nearly universal separation between politics and religion earlier than Islam has. — John
There are also many economic, geographical and historical factors in play. Thinking about complex issues simplistically leads to simple-minded conclusions. The tendency to want to view cultural issues simplistically is driven by either laziness or negative emotion or a combination of both, and leads to conclusions which are not rationally supportable. — John
If Islam came first, and without a largely centralized religious framework, then Muslim countries probably wouldn't have been able to progress as steadily as the Christian West has in reality. — Heister Eggcart
But in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iran, etc., there is an ever growing secular, consumerist culture that has begun to come into direct conflict with the governments that are paradoxically obtuse to such developments. — Heister Eggcart
If Islam came first, and without a largely centralized religious framework, then Muslim countries probably wouldn't have been able to progress as steadily as the Christian West has in reality. However, this all is speculation, even if I defend myself with books and articles in the dozens. — Heister Eggcart
Excluding religious critique is equally vacuous in my estimation, as such would imply that Muslim doctrine plays no part in society, either at the macro or micro level, and thus doesn't deserve careful consideration. — Heister Eggcart
I agree with that.I'd say this goes country by country. For example, getting away from Saudi Arabia and Qatar's fossil fuel economies would be helpful in leveraging better human rights compliance from their theocratic, Muslim governments. — Heister Eggcart
"Until the contemporary period, secularization in Muslim countries had taken place routinely, with no tension between secular and religious authorities (except in Iran in the twentieth century, but precisely because Iran has a form of church that does not exist in the Sunni world). — StreetlightX
Apologies for just jumping in and critiquing (my mental quota for posting here gets filled pretty fast, but I keep reading), but how does a purely theoretical concept like this support any real argument? — Noble Dust
That may be true, but those in power always seem to want to hang onto it; and it doesn't seem to have much to do with theological issues. — John
If Islam had come first and enjoyed the geographical and cultural advantages that Christianity has, then it might well have had a more centralized structure. If Islam had been around instead of Christianity then Constantine might have chosen it to unify his empire instead of Christianity. Of course, that is really pretty empty speculation; and if Hegel is right and history is a dialectic, then Islam as we know it could not have preceded Christianity in any case. You are of course free to cite "books and articles by the dozen" or present the arguments from those in your own words. — John
What should devout Muslims see when they look at America, or at the wider West?
This is the issue lurking behind a lot of Western anxiety about Islam. On the one hand, Westerners want Islam to adapt and assimilate, to “moderate” in some sense, to leave behind the lure of conquest, the pull of violent jihad.
But for several reasons — because we don’t understand Islam from the inside, but also because we’re divided about what our civilization stands for and where religious faith fits in — we have a hard time articulating what a “moderate” Muslim would actually believe, or what we expect a modernized Islam to become.
And to any Muslim who takes the teachings of his faith seriously, it must seem that many Western ideas about how Islam ought to change just promise its eventual extinction.
This is clearly true of the idea, held by certain prominent atheists and some of my fellow conservatives and Christians, that the heart of Islam is necessarily illiberal — that because the faith was born in conquest and theocracy, it simply can’t accommodate itself to pluralism without a massive rupture, an apostasy in fact if not in name.
But it’s also true of the ideas of many secular liberal Westerners, who take a more benign view of Islam mostly because they assume that all religious ideas are arbitrary, that it doesn’t matter what Muhammad said or did because tomorrow’s Muslims can just reinterpret the Prophet’s life story and read the appropriate liberal values in.
The first idea basically offers a counsel of despair: Muslims simply cannot be at home in the liberal democratic West without becoming something else entirely: atheists, Christians, or at least post-Islamic.
The second idea seems kinder, but it arrives at a similar destination. Instead of a life-changing, obedience-demanding revelation of the Absolute, its modernized Islam would be Unitarianism with prayer rugs and Middle Eastern kitsch – one more sigil in the COEXIST bumper sticker, one more office in the multicultural student center, one more client group in the left-wing coalition.
[Muslims] are threatened by Islamophobic forces against which they need the protections offered by liberalism — freedom of speech, freedom of religion, nondiscrimination. But the same liberalism also brings them realities that most of them find un-Islamic — irreverence toward religion, tolerance of L.G.B.T. people, permissive attitudes on sex. They can’t easily decide, therefore, whether liberalism is good or bad for Muslims.
does mean that Muslim opinion leaders — imams, scholars, intellectuals — should give serious thought to a key question: Is liberalism a good or bad thing for Muslims? Should they embrace freedom or not?
Often Muslims support liberalism when it serves them and reject it when it does not. They use the religious freedom in the West, for example, to seek converts to Islam, while condemning converts from Islam to another religion as “apostates” who deserve death. Or ask for the right to freely organize political rallies in Europe, while you are crushing opposition rallies at home — as the Turkish government recently did during its spat with the Netherlands.
Such double standards can be found in every society. Mr. Wilders himself, who cheers for “freedom” while aiming to ban the Quran, is a striking example. But some contemporary Muslims do it too easily, switching at will between “our rules” and “their rules.” The prominent Turkish theologian Ali Bardakoglu, the former head of the Religious Directorate, wrote about this “double morality” in a recent book and called on fellow Muslims to be more self-critical about it. Muslims should not be, he argued, “people who can surf between different value systems.”
Bullshit. — Mongrel
Every attempt to analyse Islam on the basis of theology and not in terms of sociology and politics is vacuous. — StreetlightX
This is clearly true of the idea, held by certain prominent atheists and some of my fellow conservatives and Christians, that the heart of Islam is necessarily illiberal — that because the faith was born in conquest and theocracy, it simply can’t accommodate itself to pluralism without a massive rupture, an apostasy in fact if not in name.
"There's a conflict in every human heart." -- somebodyNo religion "at heart" can stand pluralism. — Cavacava
This is a topic that has taken my interest in the last week, after I heard a discussion between a liberal and an Evangelical Christian on ABC Radio National, in which the Evangelical said that Evangelicalism was better because when churches became liberal, they shrank.This may be true, but the assimilation of Christianity into modernity has to a large extent destroyed it — The Great Whatever
Liberalisation of a religion destroys it only if one measures the success of the religion by numbers of members. — andrewk
Most people would instead measure the success of a religion by whether it brings spiritual fulfilment and community to those that are unable to find it elsewhere, without causing undue misery. — andrewk
Point 1 is a truism, but does not apply to liberal Christianity. There are plenty of flourishing liberal Christian congregations. — andrewk
What is 'spiritual fulfilment'? This means different things to different people. — andrewk
I don't agree with that unsupported claim either.liberal Christianity is basically atheism. — The Great Whatever
I didn't note that at all. I presume your mistake comes from too hasty a reading, as I imagine you understand the difference between 'the membership falls' and ''no one will stick around'.And so as you note, no one will stick around, because the religion no longer has any content. — The Great Whatever
Nor do I agree with the unsupported claim that liberal religions have no content. — andrewk
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