It seems as if alongside the question of violence and its legitimacy (and inevitability) the question of how religions relate to each other and tolerate the other has become one of the key issues of the day. Christian theologians for some time have been formulating a theology of religions, ranging from thorough pluralists to outright exclusivists. John Hick openly has espoused a radical form of pluralism predicated upon a Kantian distinction between the noumenal Real (or God as we normally call her) and a plethora of phenomenal 'reals', lived and historically embedded religions that seek to make sense of God. Since we can never know God as such, the ineffable mystery, we need to effect a humility before the unknown and hence forgo the certainty that often affect fundamentalist forms of faith. In our time when diversity and pluralism are clearly seen as moral goods - a position with some qualification with which I broadly agree - even some of the traditional institutions try to embrace change and come unstuck; one thinks of the odd situation somewhat recently of the Vatican endorsing a more pluralistic, far further than Vatican II form of universal salvation that even embraces atheists in their final destiny (and one feels a certain indignation on the part of atheists being dragged kicking and screaming into the Kingdom of Heaven), and almost immediately afterwards pulling back in favour of the comfort of extra ecclesiam nulla salus - the equivalent of a Muslim exclusivist's 'you will burn but that doesn't mean we cannot get along' form of 'ethical engagement'.
Mohammad Khalil's Islam and the Fate of Others: the Salvation Question, a revised version of his Michigan doctoral dissertation, is a timely and
modest work that deserves to be widely read, not just by those in Islamic
studies and theology but also by those interested in current politics. It is modest because it downplays how radical his historical findings are whilst being quite aware of the significance of his case studies for our contemporary debates. Our
everyday obsession with religion and politics that has punctuated life at least
since 9/11 means that we often are asked about the nature of belief and its
implications not least for the afterlife. The basic assumption that many people
hold is that Islam (which Islam? who speaks for it?) is both a supercessionist and exclusivist faith, denying the validity of other traditions,
not least the Abrahamic ones that went before and certainly denying the
possibility of salvation and success in the afterlife for those who are not
Muslim. However, while such a view may arise out of a simple and literalist
reading of some scriptural texts, Khalil’s aim is to demonstrate that the
scholarly and theological actuality over time is not so simple – and in fact,
even some of the figures cited by proponents of violence and exclusion in the
contemporary period do not fit the stereotype. Furthermore, such a view of
Islam as a monolithic, exclusionary faith begs the question of how one might go
about defining a Muslim. Some of these rather difficult questions are neatly sidestepped - one wishes for a more ambitious and bold Khalil sequel that will engage this.
Khalil’s strategy is
to interrogate many of the assumptions that we may hold including how we define
our terms. One may argue that the very language of salvation and the question
reveals a Protestant (or Western Christian) bias: the question arises as a
response to the need to overcome the original sin in which all the children of
Adam are born. Many Western Christian responses therefore develop the
tripartite theory of final destination: exclusivists insist that salvation is
only and only through Christ and the Church, inclusivists attempt to find space
for the salvation of others through mechanisms such as arguing that godly people
from other faiths will find salvation through the holy spirit acting through
them, and pluralists defend the salvation of others. One might ask whether
these three options are exhaustive and to what extent they extend to the study
of all religious traditions. Since we cannot entirely re-invent our language of
religion, at element of genuflection towards these categories is inevitable.
Khalil argues that in fact within Islamic discourses there are notions of
salvation and success in the afterlife that do not require us to accept the
doctrine of original sin; furthermore, Islamic theologies recognise that the
beginning of humans is a good and positive place in the presence of the divine
and hence the end desired is a return to that primordial space. Khalil argues
that the question of the final destination of non-Muslims (and indeed of
different types of Muslims) is important because it reveals much about the
nature of God and the nature of the afterlife. Two key sets of questions in
this context are: how can a merciful God damn for all eternity those who refuse
to believe in him and his communication to them? What does that say about
Islamic notions of mercy? How does one square mercy with the basic consensus
that some will be in paradise and some in hell in the afterlife? Second, if
salvation is potentially universal because the Islamic kerygma is universal,
then why do scriptural texts only identify some groups of people as the saved
in the afterlife? Does soteriology actually reveals serious tensions between
universalist claims and exclusivist realities in Islam? On one point, Khalil is
very clear: one cannot distinguish ethical interaction from views on final
destination – it is certainly problematic to damn the other for eternity and
yet insist that such an opinion should not obviate harmonious co-existence!
The core of Khalil’s
argument comprises four chapters on four thinkers over the ages who have addressed
the question – and along the way he considers other views not least of
contemporary Muslim academics especially in religious studies who have ventured
to answer it as well. He does not spend much time justifying his selection –
Ghazālī, Ibn ʿArabī, Ibn Taymiyya and Rashīd Riḍā – although he does say that
they are all representative of major traditions and well known to Muslims
across the world. So his selection is based on how different Muslims in the
present see their traditions, and not based on those views that may or may not
be the most intellectually and spiritually satisfying or rigorous. Each chapter
is therefore a careful study in intellectual history paying close attention to
text, and including along the way some other kindred thinkers whose example is
cited in modern times – for example, the chapter on Ibn ʿArabī includes a short
section on Mullā Ṣadrā (d. 1635), the famed Iranian Shiʿi thinker popular in
Iranian scholastic circles. The first chapter on Ghazālī considers his works
and concludes that he is a thinking inclusivist who considers damnation to be
the exception. Despite being a Sufi – and the debate about what constitutes
Ghazālī’s ‘real’ views – Khalil does not consider him to be a ‘closet
universalist’. What is clear is that Ghazālī allows for the salvation of
non-Muslims (and his definition of Muslim and heresy is one best followed
through examining Frank Griffel’s work). In this way, Khalil’s work complements
Sherman Jackson’s study of Fayṣal al-tafriqa and Moosa’s work on Ghazālī’s liminal theology. An excursus in
this chapter considers the inclusivism of the Indian Sunni thinker Shāh Walī
Allāh (d. 1762). While useful to find historical calques, this is a missed
opportunity. Ghazālī as one would expect discusses other Abrahamic faiths –
Khalil might have used Shāh Walī Allāh to consider the question of the
salvation of non-Abrahamic believers such as Hindus and Buddhists which would
have been a meaningful question in his Indian context. Being an Abrahamic
inclusivist or pluralist is not the same as being an inclusivist or pluralist
as such. What one does find in Shāh Walī Allāh that is of interest – echoing an
earlier position of al-Bīrūnī and finding consonance in many modern
inclusivists such as Muṭahharī (d. 1979) whom he mentions elsewhere is the
notion that those who are stupid or ignorant of God’s message to them are
absolved from the implications of their incorrect choices in this world. Muṭahharī's scheme clearly distinguished between the incapable (and unaware) and those who are perfectly cognisant of the truth but stubbornly deny it and hence live up to the name of kāfir.
The second chapter
on Ibn ʿArabī (d. 1240) presents him as a quasi-universalist – and it is no
accident that the most eloquent Muslim arguments in favour of universalism
articulated by William Chittick and Reza Shah-Kazemi are grounded in an
interpretation of his work. Ibn ʿArabī’s supercessionism is not in question;
however, his insistence upon mercy for all is critical. In fact, the
controversy over Ibn ʿArabī has much to do with his position on salvation not
least because of his argument that punishment in hellfire is not eternal even
if residing in the hellfire is eternal. This issue of eternity in the hellfire,
with the concomitant question of whether Pharoah’s conversion to faith as he was
drowning in the Red Sea was genuine and accepted by God, became the forum for
serious debate in medieval and modern Islam. The excursus in this chapter is on
Mullā Ṣadrā. While his espousal of Ibn ʿArabī’s position on the non-eternity of
punishment is quite clear, much of the presentation of his ideas here, drawing
upon Muhammad Rustom’s recent work are questionable. Mullā Ṣadrā’s Sufism is
not so clear – without some clear definition of what that means – and he did
not suffer opposition as presented here. One also wonders if the non-eternity
of punishment means a universalism of final destination. The question is thus
not resolved with respect to Mullā Ṣadrā.
The third chapter
considers Ibn Taymiyya (d. 1328), the bête-noire of Islamic studies.
Surprisingly, he turned out to be a universalist, accepting the non-eternity of
punishment in hell (even if he opposed most of the metaphysics that justified
it in Ibn ʿArabī). His student Ibn Qayyim followed him in this position. The
excursus in this chapter is quite revealing because it demonstrates one of the
pitfalls of Islamic studies and the need to address questions such as whether
Islam advocates the salvation of others. Academics who are not Muslims and
indeed not Muslim theologians often take it upon themselves to pronounce upon
what constitutes a good Muslim or what the position is of Islam on a certain
matter. The case that Khalil considers is the dispute between the Aḥmadī
Mohammad Ali in his translation of the Qurʾan and James Robson, a professor and
Qurʾan specialist at the University of Manchester in the early part of the
twentieth century.
The final chapter on
Rashīd Riḍā, the ‘founding’ figure of modern Salafī thought reveals a figure
who advocates ‘interim inclusivism, ultimate universalism’. He tries to iron
out historical difference and unsurprisingly advocates the position of Ibn
Qayyim. In this chapter, Khalil considers some modern views – exclusivism thus
turns out to be associated with Islamist thought not least Sayyid Quṭb (which
will not surprise many although some may dispute it), many neo-traditionalist
Muslims find their position along a spectrum of inclusivist positions, and
pluralism attracts the likes of Farid Esack, Abdulaziz Sachedina and Abdol
Karim Soroush (it is interesting that many advocates of pluralism in the
contemporary period seem to come from a Shiʿi background but this is not
discussed by Khalil). There is no excursus here – but the discussion of modern
views fulfils that structural role in this chapter.
Two major points
that one can take from the study are not only that Islamic discourses and
theological traditions are diverse and multiple, and often eschew monolithic
singular interpretations, but also that scripture despite the claims of some is
neither clear nor unequivocal of some key issues such as those of eschatology
and soteriology. A concomitant conclusion is that positions on salvation are
not simply summarised as scripturalists favour exclusivism and Sufis favour
pluralism. The book does need a conclusion – Khalil could have drawn together
the conclusions of the study and also reflected upon what this entails for our
contemporary discussions not least in current inter-faith contexts. In a sense,
his edited volume Between Heaven and Hell(Oxford, 2013) does precisely that taking into consideration modern discussions
across the spectrum. It would be fruitful reading this latter work as a
companion alongside Khalil’s book. One problem with the discussions is that
given the question being posed about non-Muslims, Khalil does not consider
salvation in terms of Muslims: many of the thinkers that he considers may well
have been more magnanimous to others than to those who also claimed to be
Muslims. Ghazālī and Ibn Taymiyya anathemised different group of Shiʿi Muslims
(and Ibn ʿArabī and Riḍā were not exactly philo-Shiʿi either) and thus one
wonders in what sense one can safely describe them as universalists. Clearly for many Sunni thinkers in the past (and present) extra congregationem nulla salus holds true (ʿalayka bi-l-jamāʿa if you prefer). Nevertheless, Khalil has produced an excellent scholarly work that should be
the starting point for those interested in Islamic discourses on salvation and
one looks forward to further more theologically creative works that wish to
take the debate further.
It seems to me that any further debates which will arise from the Khalil book and collection need to start a process of rethinking: not only whether the tripartite options drawn from Christian theology of religion is adequate, but also how we might wish to distinguish between three types of problems: how do we reconcile rival truth claims? how do we allow for the salvation of different traditions with different accounts of truth and soteriology? and how we live and engage with each other ethically knowing that we hold different values dear to ourselves? Epistemology, soteriology, and ethics - those remain the big questions. And that requires not just a nuanced and fresh approach to Islamic philosophy but a careful reading of the scriptural accounts - after all the function of revelation is to bring the human close to and onto the path to the divine.
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