What to Make of Allah
August,
2007
Often
the church is its own worst enemy.
Sure, there is plenty of opposition
and animosity towards Christianity,
but sometimes those calling themselves
believers can do as much damage
or more to the Christian faith.
Consider
the case of a Dutch Roman Catholic
Bishop, Tiny Muskens. He has recently
argued that people of all faiths
should refer to God as Allah. He
says this will bring more tolerance
and harmony in Holland, a country
with one million Muslims.
Said
Muskens, “Allah is a very beautiful
word for God. Shouldn t we all
say that from now on we will name
God Allah? What does God care what
we call him? It is our problem.”
What
are to we make of such a proposal?
Firstly, it can be said that God
does care about how he is revealed,
and how he is named. His self-revelation
is an important part of how he communicates
to us, and what he wishes us to
know about himself. Names do matter,
and the one true God is to be defined
on his own terms, not ours.
But
more significantly, what should
we think about equating the God
of the Bible with Allah? Can we
use the name of Allah and experience
no theological problems?
This
of course has been a long-standing
theological debate, especially in
missiological circles. It has been
a very practical question to ask:
how much should Christian missionaries
working amongst Muslims seek to
contextualise the Gospel?
Contextualisation
is always important, but how far
does one go? Should this include
using the name Allah? Various answers
to this problem have been forthcoming
over the years. And it is true that
in parts of the Arab world, Christian
and Muslim Arabs use the words God
and Allah interchangeably.
But
many would argue that Allah of Islam
in no way resembles Yahweh of the
Old Testament or God the Father
of the New Testament. There are
numerous reasons for this.
But
first, by way of background, it
should be pointed out the Arabic
word Allah is a somewhat generic
term for God. It predated Islam,
and had been used of a pagan deity
in Mecca prior to Muhammad. Muhammad
used the term, but sought to strip
it of its old pagan connotations.
Also,
it should be pointed out that Muslims
argue that Allah is the god of both
Jews and Christians. Moreover, they
insist that all three groups worship
the same God. Jews and Christians
are considered by Muslims to be
“people of the book,” and in Muslim
missionary endeavours, this insistence
upon the one God argument is imperative.
But
is Allah in fact just another name
for the Judeo-Christian God? No
it is not. Let’s begin with the
Old Testament. Several important
names are used as part of the divine
self-revelation. YHWH is one of
the more significant names. Exodus
3:13-15 is a foundational passage
in which God declares his name to
Moses.
While
this is not the place to go into
all the complexities of this term,
it can be said briefly that it might
best be translated, “I am who I
am,” or “I will be who I will be”.
Part of the Old Testament conception
of God is that he has made himself
known to us, that he reveals himself
to us. Thus YHWH is knowable in
a very real sense.
In
Islam, Allah is utterly inscrutable
and unknowable. Allah is utterly
transcendent, and cannot be known
by man. Only some of his activities
are revealed, but not his true essence.
At heart Allah is incomprehensible.
Also
little mentioned in the Koran is
the love of God, While this is a
prevailing theme in both biblical
Testaments, it is at best an insignificant
trait of Allah. And Allah is seen
as totally omnipotent and sovereign.
His ways cannot be resisted, and
the term Islam means to submit.
Muslims simply submit to the mysteries
and transcendent demands of Allah.
Theirs is not to reason why, simply
to obey.
But
the Biblical God – who is also sovereign
and majestic - invites us to come
reason with him, to ask questions
of him, to seek relationship with
him, and to pray to him, with the
sense that in some ways our prayers
can be really efficacious. In contrast,
there is a deep fatalism amongst
Muslims. What happens is Allah’s
will, and we are not to question
it.
While
some versions of Christianity –
such as extreme Calvinism – may
be equally fatalistic and over-emphasise
the sovereignty of God, the balanced
Biblical picture is of a God who
is both sovereign yet stoops to
meet with us and interact with us.
One
aspect of YHWH, mentioned numerous
times in the Old Testament, is his
holiness. This is a defining characteristic
of God. Yet it is merely tangential
in Islam, and Allah is only called
holy twice in the Koran.
And
of course the God of Christianity
is a triune God: one God in three
persons. The strict monotheism of
Islam has no place for such a Trinitarian
conception. Thus the place of Jesus
Christ in Christianity is fundamentally
at variance with the position accorded
him in Islam.
As
already mentioned, a major difference
between Allah and the God of the
Bible is that Allah is aloof, transcendent,
far removed from his creation. This
is worth exploring a bit further.
The utter transcendence of Allah
is a major theme in Islam. The God
of the Bible, by contrast is certainly
transcendent, but he is also immanent.
That is, he stoops to our level,
he interacts with us, he has relationship
with us. And in the Incarnation,
he even becomes one with us, one
of us.
In
the Bible we find the possibility
of having a close and intimate relationship
with God. And in the New Testament,
we can experience a very close relationship
with God through his son Jesus Christ.
We can even call God father, something
unheard of in Islam. Allah is stern,
aloof and utterly separate from
mankind and mere human concerns.
He is certainly not to be thought
of as a loving heavenly father.
In
the Bible, our relationship with
God can also be spoken of in terms
of friendship, as was the case with
Abraham, or as Jesus called his
disciples. Such talk would be blasphemous
in Islam. Allah is far removed from
his creation. But the Biblical God
is intimately involved with his
creation, and is in fact involved
in a deep love relationship with
us.
While
sin separates us from a holy and
just God, the work of Christ at
Calvary opens the way for us to
reignite a love relationship with
the father. As such, the gospel
message is really just a plain old-fashioned
love story: boy meets girl, girl
rejects boy; boy wins back girl.
Then they live together happily
ever after.
That
is the core Gospel message. The
triune God created us to have an
intense love relationship with him,
just as the three members of the
Godhead had a loving relationship
amongst themselves for all eternity.
But the creature rebelled against
the creator, and a broken-hearted
God sought to woo back his beloved.
Indeed, so great was God’s love
for us, that he sent his son to
make reconciliation possible.
Now
all who come to God through Christ
by means of the Spirit have that
love relationship restored. And
as the book of Revelation makes
clear, the grand climax of human
history will be a wedding. Jesus,
the groom, will wed his church,
the bride.
Such
a cosmic love story is the heart
of Christianity, but is totally
absent in the Koran and Muslim teaching.
Indeed, in the Islamic ninety-nine
“beautiful names of God,” love is
not one of them. Yet God is love,
we are told in 1 John 4:8.
In
sum, the Muslim must cower in fear
before an inscrutable, harsh and
remote deity. In Christianity, the
believer is invited to run into
the outstretched arms, and nail-pierced
hands, of a loving saviour. The
two could not be more different.
So no, Allah is not the God of the
Bible, and yes, it does matter how
we describe and understand God.
[1364
words]
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Bill
Muehlenberg is an Independent Commentator on Cultural, Social and Religious
issues.
Bill describes
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up for God's standards in the secular world.
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