A second opinion

I’m still making my way slowly through Sam Harris’s End of Faith. I just finished a pair of chapters that details the brutish histories of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. The second of the pair is on Islam, and by the end of it I found myself more afraid of Muslims than I care to admit–more afraid of their God, their customs, their worldview. And seeing “them” as something unified, too–something all, or at least mostly, alike.

I think Harris is scared, too. His whole book is about how religion, and Islam to the greatest degree, will either have to die, or be the death of us all, given the kinds of mass destruction that modern warfare-combined-with-religion is capable of. But here’s the most robust irony: he is actually giving himself more, and increasingly legitimate, reason to be afraid. By means of his book, he is creating more division, more distrust, more fear of the “other”, and therefore more layers of violence, than would otherwise exist had the book not been written.

This evening I attended a lecture given by Reza Aslan, a scholar of world religions, and expert on Islam. He’s written a book called “No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam,” and lectured tonight on what he’s calling the Islamic Reformation. According to him, Islam is in an extreme state of flux right now, with authority shifting increasingly away from its clerics/scholars and into the hands of everyone (think Martin Luther, sola fide, sola scriptura). Groups are popping up across the globe of people reading Koranic texts differently, newly, outside of mosques, in the equivalent of home churches. And like in any decentralized institution, groups are forming along the whole spectrum of liberal to conservative, feminist to misogynist, violent to peaceful.

Aslan’s excitement to be alive in this season of change is palpable, and too his eagerness to present a more accurate picture of today’s Islam than any unified story can tell.

I know little of Islam (and plan to read Aslan’s book). But I know lots about Christianity, and can’t imagine, now that Aslan has popped the fear-bubble Harris created for me, that Islam is any more immune to the forces of peace and of violence than Christianity has been. While I plan on finishing Harris’s book (and to explore here some of the good points I think he makes), I’m eager to get a broader picture of Islam in my brain, in my bones, so that I can more fully participate in this project I’m giving my life to, this work of undoing fear.


7 Responses to “A second opinion”

  1. Heather says:

    Interesting. Sounds like you have quite a calling - “this work of undoing fear”. I’d be interested in hearing more of that.

  2. Kristin says:

    Heather, maybe I’ll write a post on it soon.

  3. becky says:

    I’m reading Richard Dawkin’s latest book, The God Delusion. In it, he says that Harris won’t have his book translated into Arabic, for fear of how a Muslim audience may perceive what’s he’s written. I haven’t read Harris yet, but he’s high on my list of things to-read.

    I’m jealous that you heard Aslan speak — I’ve been a fan of his for some time. His book is another on my (ever-expanding) reading list.

  4. Kristin says:

    Becky–I haven’t heard of Dawkins yet–I’ll have to check him out. I must be late to this game, too, because I hadn’t known of Aslan, either, until last night. He is an amazingly clear and dynamic speaker. I hope he comes your way sometime soon! I’ll have to pick your brain for even more book suggestions sometime…

  5. Becca says:

    I am very interested in what you are writing about … I will check back often to see what you are thinking and in the meantime read some of your recommended books.

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