Friday, 20 February 2015

Post 37--Muslim Pseudo Tolerance (2)

  
Though the subject of the previous and this post was elicited by the Charly Hebdo violence in Paris, and though I continue in the spirit of the last post, that Paris incident now recedes into the background while the notion of “pseudo tolerance” continues as the centre of our attention today.

Freedom and peace?  In Islam? The proof of the pudding, of course, is the experience of non-Muslims living under Muslim regimes There are countless books, tomes and tomes of them, published over the centuries, not the least during our own decades, about how Islam or its adherents, Muslims, undercut and persecute(ed) Christians. Today, Pakistan and the Middle East are prime examples of fierce persecution. 

But destroying a faith community as Islam has done to the Christian communities of North and Saharan Africa and in the Middle East, does not always require the violence of the sword. A century ago, my hero, Abraham Kuyper, wrote the indented paragraphs below in Dutch and I translated them. The period covered by these paragraphs stretch over a long period of time—from the early expansion of Islam to Kuyper’s time of 1900.  And, really, one could say beyond Kuyper’s time to include our own, a century later.  

Even though Muslims exerted little pressure on Christians to convert, the social humiliation inflicted on them in the long run proved to be unbearable.  Persecution steels and stimulates; it fires up a holy enthusiasm and revives heroism, but never-ending social humiliation depletes energy and leads eventually to total collapse.  Imagine being excluded from everything prestigious and honourable, constantly to be treated like an inferior, to be held back at all fronts, to see your family move about with oppressive inferiority, your children robbed of any future improvement, to be walking around in shameful clothes day after day. And then, on the contrary, to see everyone who accepts Islam crowned with honour, helped to advance and gain in power.  This contrast constitutes life-long torture that at the end becomes too heavy to bear.  And then to realize that with only one word it is possible to throw off this yoke, to be free from the head tax, and to open for yourself and for your children the path to honour and power.  And come to think of it, Islam did not demand a lot.  The kiss [of peace] was offered as soon as you call upon Allah and His Prophet.  This is the temptation for which entire Christian families, century after century, have fallen.  To be sure, there has also been courageous resistance and energetic opposition so that whoever digs deeply into this sad history of nameless suffering will experience profound admiration for the toughness and the unyielding spirit with which numerous families preferred this harsh humiliation to denying Christ.  But this fire of holy faith could only glow where faith had sunk deeply into the heart—and that was exactly where the masses were lacking.  For this reason, the masses gradually moved over to Islam, family after family. As the number of Christian families in the cities and villages gradually diminished, it became increasingly difficult for the remnant to hold out.  As apostasy of others became the pattern, your own apostasy seemed less sinful.  And so it was that, with the exception of small remnants, everywhere in Asia and Africa entire nations were converted to Islam.    

(This is found in a section of a Kuyper book I have translated into English and published under the title “The Mystery of Islam.” A better title would have been “The Enigma of Islam.” It is currently available free of charge as an ebook from < www.lulu.com > as well as on < www.ccel.com >. I expect to republish it soon on the Kuyperiana page of my website <  www.SocialTheology.com  >.)

So, though for centuries there was a kind of toleration and freedom for Christians, the restrictions under which they laboured eventually wore many of them out.

It is a similar process under which today Christians in the West are capitulating to increasing restrictions, forced privatization and other forms of pressures, especially the pressure of the local variety of “common sense,” that are producing weariness and exhaustion among them. In neither case do these situations represent true freedom and peace. Rather, they represent a slow strangulation of Christian communities that have lost their spiritual vigor and continue to succumb to this process, family after family, individual after individual. 

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