
Christianity and Islam in History
MSGR. WALTER BRANDMüLLERI will address the topic of Christianity and Islam by limiting myself to a brief presentation of historical facts, without entering into the specifics of religious and theological dialogue.
On
the same day when the Vatican made public Benedict XVI’s message
for the World Day of Peace next January 1, cardinal secretary of state Angelo
Sodano sponsored a meeting at the Pontifical Lateran University — the grand chancellor
of which is the pope’s vicar, cardinal Camillo Ruini. The meeting focused
on a topic crucial for the Church’s geopolitics: “Christianity and
Islam, Yesterday and Today.”
In his message, Benedict XVI pointed
to “nihilism” and “religious fanaticism” as the two deep
sources of Islamist terrorism.
But the analysis at the December 13 meeting
at the Lateran concentrated above all on the history of the relationship between
Christianity and Islam. The occasion for the meeting was the fifth centenary of
the birth of saint Pius V, the pope of the battle of Lepanto in 1571, at which
a league of Europe’s Christian states inflicted a decisive defeat upon the
Turkish fleet.
The topic was explored by an authoritative specialist
in Church history, monsignor Walter Brandmüller, president of the Pontifical Committee
for Historical Sciences.
Delivered in the presence of cardinal Sodano,
his address represented the Holy See’s current point of view on the question:
a point of view that is certainly less pliant than the one that prevailed during
the pontificate of John Paul II. - Sandro Magister

Christianity and Islam in History
by Walter Brandmüller
I will address the topic of Christianity and Islam by
limiting myself to a brief presentation of historical facts, without entering
into the specifics of religious and theological dialogue. This seems useful to
me, because the celebration of the fifth centenary of the birth of Pius V was
a bit muted, especially in academic circles. The victor at Lepanto in 1571, this
pope who had the courage and the energy to construct an alliance of almost all
the Christian kingdoms against the Ottoman empire — which was advancing to threaten
Europe and had already established dominion over the Balkans — today, precisely
on account of the unhappy restoration of hostility between the two worlds — one
formerly Christian, and to a certain extent still Christian, and the Muslim world
— seems to many to be an obstructing presence best left in the shadows.
The
so-called “secularism” that would silence all the monotheistic religions
through accusations of fundamentalism, or that exalts dialogue by negating their
differences, intends to blot out the age-old conflict that has pitted the two
religious communities against one another. Above all, it intends to neutralize
the Roman pontiff, who has shown himself capable of blocking the Islamic advance
and saving Christian civilization.
Although the two monotheistic religions
in question share, among other things and to different degrees, the Jewish tradition
— a specialist like Samir Khalil Samir emphasizes how before Mohammed the Arab
Jews and Christians called their God by the name of Allah — there are many differences
between Christianity and Islam, and the differences are fundamental.
Since
their very beginnings, there have been differences in how Christians and Muslims
think of conversion and the use of violence.
Those who maintain that understanding jihad
as a holy war constitutes a sort of deviation from the true Islamic tradition
are therefore not telling the truth, and history sadly demonstrates that violence
has characterized Islam since its origin, and that Mohammed himself systematically
organized and led the raids against the tribes that did not want to convert and
accept his dominion, thus subjecting the Arab tribes one by one.
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For the Christians, conversion was something that must be voluntary and
individual, obtained primarily through preaching and example, and this is how
Christianity did in fact spread during its first centuries. Obviously, we must
immediately note that this conception of early Christianity underwent changes
in later eras, connected with the diffusion of a spirit of religious intolerance
in Western culture. John Paul II himself acknowledged that in this regard the
Church’s children “must return with a spirit of repentance [for] the
acquiescence given, especially in certain centuries, to intolerance and even the
use of violence in the service of truth.” (Tertio Millennio Adveniente,
35).
But on the part of the Muslims, from the earliest times, even while
Mohammed was still alive, conversion was imposed through the use of force. The
expansion and extension of Islam’s sphere of influence came through war
with the tribes that did not accept conversion peacefully, and this went hand
in hand with submission to Islamic political authority. Islamism, unlike Christianity,
expressed a comprehensive religious, cultural, social, and political strategy.
While Christianity spread during its first three centuries in spite of persecution
and martyrdom, and in many ways in opposition to Roman domination, introducing
a clear separation between the spiritual and political spheres, Islam was imposed
through the power of political domination.
It therefore comes as no surprise
that the use of force occupies a central place in Islamic tradition, as witnessed
by the frequent use of the word “jihad” in many texts. Although some
scholars, especially Western ones, maintain that jihad does not necessarily mean
war, but instead a spiritual struggle and interior effort, Samir Khalil Samir
again clarifies that the use of this term in Islamic tradition — including its
usage today — is essentially uniform, indicating warfare in the name of God to
defend Islam, which is an obligation for all adult Muslim males. Those who maintain
that understanding jihad as a holy war constitutes a sort of deviation from the
true Islamic tradition are therefore not telling the truth, and history sadly
demonstrates that violence has characterized Islam since its origin, and that
Mohammed himself systematically organized and led the raids against the tribes
that did not want to convert and accept his dominion, thus subjecting the Arab
tribes one by one. Naturally, it must also be said that at the time of Mohammed
warfare was part of the Bedouin culture, and no one saw anything objectionable
about it.
But the biggest difference between Christianity
and Islam concerns the crucial issue of understanding the human person. This is
shown by the fact that many Islamic countries have not accepted the declaration
of human rights promulgated by the United Nations in 1948, or have done so with
the reservation of excluding the norms that conflict with Qur’anic law —
which means practically all of them.
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The interpretation
that Muslims today try to make of the crusades — an interpretation that finds
many followers among Western historians — also fails to correspond to historical
reality.
According to this representation, Western Christians were invaders
in a peaceful region that was respectful of the different religions — the Holy
Land, which back then was part of Syria — using religious motives to disguise
imperialist ambitions and economic interests.
But the idea of the crusades
emerged, above all, as a reaction to the measures that the Fatimid caliph Hakim
bi-Amr Allah took against the Christians of Egypt and Syria. In 1008, al-Hakim
outlawed the celebrations of Palm Sunday, and the following year he ordered that
Christians be punished and all their property confiscated. In that same year of
1009, he sacked and demolished the church dedicated to Mary in Cairo, and did
not prevent the desecration of the Christian sepulchers surrounding it, or the
sacking of the city’s other churches. That same year saw what was certainly
the most severe episode: the destruction of the Constantinian basilica of the
Resurrection in Jerusalem, known as the Holy Sepulcher. The historical records
of the time say that he had ordered “to obliterate any symbol of Christian
faith, and provide for the removal of every reliquary and object of veneration.”
The basilica was then razed, and Ibn Abi Zahir did all he could to demolish the
sepulcher of Christ and any trace of it.
Today in many intellectual circles
there is a lot of talk about the religious tolerance shown over many centuries
by the Islamic authorities, because — while in terms of the pagan populations
the saying “embrace Islam and your life will be spared” held true,
and the pagans who did not convert were killed — the “people of the book,”
the Jews and Christians, were able to continue practicing their religion.
In reality, the situation was much less idyllic: the Christians and Jews could
survive only if they accepted Muslim political dominion and a situation of humiliation,
which was aggravated by the obligation to pay increasingly burdensome taxes. So
it’s no wonder that most of the Christians, even though they were not constrained
by force, converted to Islam on account of the constant economic and social pressure.
This led to the total disappearance of a form of Christianity that had flourished
for more than half a millennium, as in the part of Africa ruled by the Roman empire,
the land of Tertullian, saint Cyprian, Tyconius, and above all saint Augustine.
But the biggest difference between Christianity and Islam concerns the
crucial issue of understanding the human person.
This is shown by the
fact that many Islamic countries have not accepted the declaration of human rights
promulgated by the United Nations in 1948, or have done so with the reservation
of excluding the norms that conflict with Qur’anic law — which means practically
all of them. From an historical point of view, therefore, it must be recognized
that the declaration of the rights of man is a cultural fruit of the Christian
world, even though these are “universal” norms, in that they are valid
for all. In Islamic tradition, in fact, the concept of the equality of all human
beings does not exist, nor does, in consequence, the concept of the dignity of
every human life. Sharia is founded upon a threefold inequality: between man and
woman, between Muslim and non-Muslim, and between freeman and slave. In essence,
the male human being is considered a full titleholder of rights and duties only
through his belonging to the Islamic community: those who convert to another religion
or become atheists are considered traitors, subject to the death penalty, or at
least to the loss of all their rights.
In Islamic tradition, in fact, the concept
of the equality of all human beings does not exist, nor does, in consequence,
the concept of the dignity of every human life. Sharia is founded upon a threefold
inequality: between man and woman, between Muslim and non-Muslim, and between
freeman and slave.
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The most irrevocable of these inequalities
is that between man and woman, because the others can be overcome — the slave
can be freed, the non-Muslim can convert to Islam — while woman’s inferiority
is irremediable, in that it was established by God himself. In Islamic tradition,
the husband enjoys an almost absolute authority over his wife: while polygamy
is permitted for men, a woman may not have more than one husband, may not marry
a man of another faith, can be repudiated by her husband, has no rights to the
children in case of divorce, is penalized in the division of the inheritance,
and from a legal standpoint her testimony is worth half as much as a man’s.
So if Islam implied, and still implies, not merely religious membership,
but an entire way of life, sanctioned even at the political level — a way of life
that naturally involves and prescribes how to act with other peoples, how to behave
in questions of war and peace, how to conduct relations with foreigners — it is
very easy to understand how the victory of Lepanto guaranteed for the West the
possibility of developing its culture of respect for the human person, for whom
equal dignity regardless of his condition came to be guaranteed.
If this
characterization of Islam is destined to remain unchanged in the future, as it
has been until now, the only possible outcome is a difficult coexistence with
those who do not belong to the Muslim community: in an Islamic country, in fact,
the non-Muslim must submit to the Islamic system, if he does not wish to live
in a situation of substantial intolerance.
Likewise, on account of this
all-embracing conception of religion and political authority, the Muslim will
have great difficulty in adapting to the civil laws in non-Islamic countries,
seeing them as something foreign to his upbringing and to the dictates of his
religion. Perhaps one should ask oneself if the well-attested difficulties persons
coming from the Islamic world have with integrating into the social and cultural
life of the West are not explained in part by this problematic situation.
We must also recognize the natural right of every society to defend its own
cultural, religious, and political identity. It seems to me that this is precisely
what Pius V did.

Additional
Resources
And the pope’s speech to the Muslims
he met in Cologne on August 20, 2005: Dear
Muslim Friends...”
The article in
the October 18, 2003 edition of “La Civiltà Cattolica” — published
with the approval of the Vatican secretary of state — which signaled an initial
toughening of the Holy See in condemning the “warrior aspect” of Islam
in history: Christians in Islamic Countries
On the Church’s complex geopolitics, on the website: Between
Venus and Mars, the Church of Rome Chooses Both (14.12.2005)
Go to
the English home page of www.chiesa.espressonline.it,
to access the latest articles and links to other resources.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Monsignor Walter Brandmüller. "Christianity and Islam in History."
Christianity and Islam, Yesterday and Today (December, 2005).
Address
delivered at “Christianity and Islam, Yesterday and Today” conference
held at the Pontifical Lateran University.
Text provided by Sandro Magister.
English translation by Matthew Sherry: traduttore@hotmail.com
Sandro Magister manages Chiesa.com. Sandro Magister’s e-mail address
is s.magister@espressoedit.it
THE AUTHOR
Monsignor Walter Brandmüller
is president of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences.
Copyright
© 2005 Chiesa