"It's all or nothing" type of thinking
Reply #3 - June 02, 2014, 06:39 PM
I found myself coming to terms with this as well. Initially, as I believe I've even stated before, I noticed the way I was tailoring the Qur'an to suit my own conclusions and felt extremely dishonest. I immediately saw it as an all or nothing, take it or leave it sort of deal. The verse, "Say, shall you believe in part of the book and disbelieve in part...[basically, 'well if you do then you are going to hell, too.']" definitely helped push me towards "leave it."
Then, I began to notice just how convinced and sincere certain people who still claim Islam, despite having no justifiable reason to do so according to traditional sunni sources, really seemed to be. Muslims like Usama Hassan who somehow believe that the Qur'an is compatible with evolution, or LGBT Muslims who seem to honestly believe that being a homosexual is not in contradiction with the claim of being a Muslim, really got me thinking of just how boundless the possibilities really are.
At first, I admit I found it easy to completely dismiss them as misguided. Then, I thought to myself, "Well why not? Who's to say they can't do with Islam whatever the hell they want to do with it?"
Who is to say that people in Indonesia who want to express spirituality through singing the Qur'an can't do so? Who is to say that people who want to re-interpret the Qur'an so that it does not mean all of those nasty repulsive things to them anymore shouldn't be encouraged to do that.
Then. I started thinking practically about this from my own perspective. I grew up celebrating Eid, for example. Even as a kid, the Eid celebrations I knew bore little resemblance to what the wahhabi conservatives call Eid. There were games, there was music, there were pots and pots of home cooked dishes and desserts right out of the pages of festive Americana. We really had just adopted Eid then and tweaked it and spiced it up to fit our culture. Why can't I do that now? Why can't I go out and have an Eid drink or an iftar party? Cetainly, what most people do for Christmas nowadays is nothing like what the Church must have had in mind when they first instituted the holiday. How accommodating to change can people like me, who don't actually believe in traditional Islamic teachings, actually force Islam to become. What could our role be?
Pardon me while I go a little out of the box here, but these are some things I've thought from a philosophical perspective. What if the entire concept of Islamic Aqeedah was completely turned on its head?
What if we were to hijack terms like "Allah" and reinterpret them to mean things like our life's philosophy or our personal ethos? What if, for example, I took the name of Allah, Al-wadood, The Love, then said, "well, if Allah is love, then anything that contradicts my understanding of love can not be from Allah."
Or if I took Al-Aleem, The All Knowing, and said, well, if Allah is All Knowing, then anything that contradicts established and verified knowledge can not be from Allah. So on and so forth, with The Most Merciful, The Just, The Wise, etc. So many troubling aspects of Islam could be eliminated if understandings like that could spread amongst people who still have an interest in maintaining the label of "Muslim" for whatever reason.
It's not unlike what has happened in Christianity and the transformation of its idea of God.
I fear I could write quite a bit on this subject, as it's something I've thought of a lot, recently. I'm not sure all of my ideas about it are practical, and I'm not sure if this free range of ideas actually offers anything concrete, so I'm hesitant to go into too much detail. The reality, of course, today is that the monster we call Islam is still far less benign in many of its teachings and practices than anything I've described above. That is the real obstacle to overcome. But perhaps a little reinterpretation is part of the solution.