Religious
Pluralism and Islam
(pdf available here)
Lecture
delivered to the Institute for Islamic Culture and Thought, Tehran,
in February 2005
The subject of the relationship between the religions is extremely
important, even more so today than in the past. For centuries almost
every war between the nations has involved religion, not as its primary
cause, but as a validating and intensifying factor. However I am going
to treat religious diversity now as a topic in the philosophy of religion,
although in the course of doing so it will emerge that some conceptions
of this relationship are much more easily exploited to justify and
encourage war and exploitation than others.
Why is this a philosophical problem? Each religion is accustomed to
think of itself as either the one and only true faith, or at least
the truest and best. Must not the situation, then, simply be that
one of them is right and the rest wrong, either absolutely or only
relatively wrong?
But here is a consideration which makes this view of the situation
problematic. In the vast majority of cases throughout the world, probably
98% or so, the religion to which a person adheres (and also against
which some rebel) depends on where they were born. Someone born into
a Muslim family in a Muslim country, or indeed a Muslim family in
a non-Muslim country, is very likely to become a Muslim. Someone born
into a Christian family is equally likely to become a Christian. And
the same is true of Jews, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Taoists. It is
very unlikely that someone born into a Buddhist family in Tibet will
grow up as a Christian or a Muslim; very unlikely that someone born
into a Muslim family in Iran or in Pakistan will grow up as a Christian
or a Buddhist; and so on round the world. The historical fact is that
we inherit, and always have inherited, our religion together with
our language and our culture. And the religion which has formed us
from childhood naturally seems to us to be obviously true; it fits
us and we fit it as usually none other can. It is true that there
are individual conversions from one faith to another, but these are
statistically insignificant in comparison with the massive transmission
of faith from generation to generation within the same tradition.
How then are we to understand this global situation in which, due
to the accident of birth, we all start from within what we have traditionally
regarded as the one true faith? To enquire into the relationship between
the religions is clearly to ask a difficult but unavoidable question.
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Several factors make the question especially urgent today. One is
that we now have available to us a much greater knowledge about
the other world religions than was readily available even a generation
ago. Another is that the different faiths are no longer concentrated
almost exclusively within different nations which are wholly of
that faith. There are, for example, now millions of Muslims living
in western Europe, some two million in my own country, Britain.
Indeed in the city of Birmingham, where I live, there are well over
a hundred mosques - not all of them purpose-built with traditional
Islamic architecture, although there is a growing number of these,
but also a number houses converted to local prayer houses. The city
also includes a substantial number of Sikhs and Hindus, and smaller
numbers of Jews and Buddhists and Bahai'is, as well as many members
of all the many different branches of Christianity, all amidst a
large secular or nominally or post-Christian population. We all
live together in the same city, and on the whole without friction
and indeed often with very positive relationships. Now the time
has come to consider the theological implications of this. We all,
within each faith, need our theologians and philosophers to give
thought to the overall question of how to understand the fact of
religious diversity. Should we see it as something to be regretted,
or as something divinely ordained?
A complicating factor which is not often noticed is that the individuals
and communities to which the biblical and quran'ic revelations came
many centuries ago, to restrict our attention to these two, had
a very limited awareness of the size of the earth and of its population
and of the variety of peoples and cultures and faiths that it contains.
Their horizon extended no further than the Middle Eastern and Mediterranean
world. As they expanded, of course, India and China, and later Russia
and later again the Americas came within the scope of their awareness.
But the original message was received and expressed in terms of
the language and culture of a relatively small part of the world.
But today we have to think globally, and to consider the relationship
of the entire human race to the divine source of revelation.#
The literature on this subject has been growing rapidly during the
last twenty or so years and is now vast, with hundreds of new books
and articles being published every year. It is still mostly in English,
though with an increasing amount in German, and also with a growing
amount in the languages of several Muslim countries, including Iran
and Turkey.
It has become widely accepted that there are three possible schools
of thought, which have come to be called exclusivism, inclusivism,
and pluralism. Let us look at exclusivism first.
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This is most easily described in terms of any one particular religion
rather than in general terms. Since I know more about Christianity,
and the Christian literature on this subject, than any other, I
shall be more confident in describing it as a Christian position.
But you readily can translate it into terms of Islam, or indeed
of any other religion.
As a Christian position, exclusivism is the belief that Christianity
is the one and only true faith and that salvation, which Christian
exclusivists understand as entry into heaven, or paradise, is confined
to Christians. For many centuries this was taken for granted by
most Christians and was enshrined in such official declarations
as that of the Council of Florence (1438-45 CE) that 'no one remaining
outside the Catholic church, not just pagans, but also Jews or heretics
or schismatics, can become partakers of eternal life; but they will
go to the "everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil
and his angels," unless before the end of life they are joined
to the church'. At that time Muslims were classified by the church
as heretics, and came under that heading in this condemnation. But
as early as the mid-nineteenth century the Catholic church - which
constitute the largest part of Christianity - was beginning to qualify
this. The Catholic church can never bring itself to say directly
that any of its earlier official pronouncements were wrong, but
it does sometimes leave them behind in the past and proceed now
to say something different. But it was only at the second Vatican
Council in the 1960's that it officially recognised that salvation
can occur within other religions. However this recognition is qualified
in a way that we shall come to when we turn to inclusivism. Unqualified
exclusivism is still strongly maintained by a small minority of
fundamentalist Catholics, but much more widely by many Protestant
(i.e. non-Catholic) fundamentalist Christians.
The leading philosophical defender of Christian exclusivism is Alvin
Plantinga of Notre Dame University. He is a high-powered logician
and a leading apologist for a very conservative form of Christianity,
his own background being in Dutch Calvinism. The argument of his
article "Pluralism: A Defence of Exclusivism" is basically
simple and straightforward, namely that anyone who is firmly convinced
that they know the final truth is fully entitled dogmatically to
affirm this and to affirm that all beliefs inconsistent with it
are therefore mistaken. It is not necessary for the exclusivist
to know anything about other religions, beyond the fact that they
are different from Christianity and have different beliefs, because
he or she knows a priori that they are mistaken. Plantinga argues
that, in so doing, exclusivists are not being arrogant or imperialistic,
and are not offending against any sound epistemological principles.
Knowing Alvin, I know that he is not personally arrogant, and nor
does any exclusivist have to be arrogant and imperialistic about
it, even though some are. But, for me, that is not the issue. Nor
is it more than a preliminary issue that a claim that your own group
alone knows the final truth is not epistemically out of order. For
this is a very low threshold for any belief-system to have to cross.
It justifies equally the claim, for example, that the South Korean
evangelist Sun Yung Moon is the final prophet and that his followers
alone know the final truth; or the claim of Seventh Day Adventists
within Christianity, or of Ahmadiyya Muslims within Islam, that
it is they who alone know the truth. The Plantinga defence justifies
equally the claim of any group anywhere, large or small, that it
alone possesses the absolute truth. And yet logical and epistemological
permissability seems to be the only issue that concerns Plantinga
in his defence of exclusivism. He has tried in his more recent book
Warranted Christian Belief to offer a broader apologetic for Christianity.
But epistemic warrant or permissibility is much too narrow a concern.
For me, what is at stake is whether it is realistic today to ignore
the global context in which we live, and the fact that other religions,
and I am thinking now particularly of Islam, turn human beings away
from selfish self-concern to serve God, just as much as Christianity
does. Plantinga does not take account of this. The global particularities
and complexities of real life have no place in his thinking. Further,
his approach is very cerebral, focussed entirely on propositional
beliefs, and he does not, in his defence of exclusivism, discuss
the question of salvation, or of the moral and spiritual fruits
of faith outside Christianity. Probably, if asked about the salvation
of the non-Christian majority of the human race, he would say that
this is something that only God knows. But if only God knows it,
how can Plantinga, or any other exclusivist, know that his own group
alone has the final and saving truth?
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I don't know to what extent there are Muslim exclusivists, believing
that only Muslims, or perhaps only those of the three religions
of the Book, can enter Paradise. I know that there are some, because
I have myself once been told very firmly by a Muslim that I will
go to hell if I do not convert to his particular minority form of
Islam. And in so far as there are Muslim exclusivists, my criticism
of it applies equally to them also.
But the basic criticism of both Christian and Muslim exclusivism
is that it denies by implication that God, the sole creator of the
world and of all humanity, is loving, gracious and merciful, and
that His love and mercy extend to all humankind. If God is the creator
of the entire human race, is it credible that God would set up a
system by which hundreds of millions of men, women and children,
the majority of the human race, are destined through no fault of
their own to eternal torment in hell? I say 'through no fault of
their own' because it cannot be anyone's fault that they were born
where they were instead of within what exclusivism regards as the
one limited area of salvation.
One exclusivist Christian philosopher, William Lane Craig, has tried
to meet this difficulty by appealing to the idea of 'middle knowledge',
the idea that God knows what every human being would do in all conceivable
circumstances. He then claims that God knows of all those who have
not had the Christian Gospel presented to them that, if it were
presented to them, they would reject it. It is therefore not unjust
that they, constituting the majority of humanity, should be condemned.
But this is manifestly an a priori dogma, condemning hundreds of
millions of people without any knowledge of them; and even many
other very conservative Christian philosophers have found it repugnant.
For on any reasonable view exclusivism, practiced within any religion,
is incompatible with the existence of a God whose grace and mercy
extends to the entire human race.
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I turn next to inclusivism. In its Christian form this is the belief
that, on the one hand, salvation for anyone depends solely on the
atoning sacrifice of Jesus on the cross, but on the other hand that
this salvation is available not only to Christians but in principle
to all human beings. Thus non-Christians can be included within
the sphere of Christian salvation - hence the term 'inclusivism'.
In the words of a notable Catholic theologian, Karl Rahner, they
can, even without their knowledge, be 'anonymous Christians'. That
phrase has been offensive to many non-Christians, who ask whether
Christians would like to be classified as anonymous Muslims, or
anonymous Hindus? But without the use of that particular phrase,
inclusivism is today the most widely held position among Christian
theologians and church leaders. It has for them the advantage that
on the one hand it maintains the unique centrality and normativeness
of the Christian gospel, whilst on the other hand it does not entail
the unacceptable conclusion that all non-Christians go to hell.
But it does nevertheless have what are to some of us unacceptable
implications. To put it graphically, consider the analogy of the
solar system, with God as the sun at the centre and the religions
as the planets circling around that centre. Inclusivism then holds
that the life-giving warmth and light of the sun falls directly
only on our earth, the Christian church, and is then reflected off
it in lesser degrees to the other planets, the other religions.
Or if you prefer an economic analogy, the wealth of divine grace
falls directly upon the church and then trickles down in diluted
forms to the people of the other faiths below. And the serious question
that we have to ask is whether this is an honestly realistic account
of the human situation as we observe it on the ground.
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Starting again, then, and restricting attention for the moment to
Christianity and Islam, both affirm the reality of God, the gracious
and merciful nature of God, the justice of God, the unity of humankind
as created by God, the divine command that we should deal honestly
and kindly with one another, and the fact of a life to come. We
both affirm a divine reality transcending the material world.
Let me stay for a moment with this last point. Philosophically,
it means that we reject the non-realist forms of religion according
to which God is not a reality independently of ourselves but only
an idea or an ideal in our minds. This was powerfully initiated
in the nineteenth century by Lugwig Feuerbach and is advocated today
by such writers as my personal friend, but philosophical foe, Don
Cupitt. On the one hand, unless we believe in the validity of any
of the philosophical proofs of the existence of God, which I do
not, there is no proof that non-realism in religion is wrong. Nor
of course is there any proof that it is right. The real issue is
epistemological, between the three options of naïve realism,
critical realism, and non- or anti-realism. Critical realism, developed
by American philosophers in the last century in relation to sense
perception, is the view that there is an existing reality beyond
our own minds, but that we can only be aware of it in the forms
made possible by our own cognitive capacities and conceptual repertoire.
To this we have to add the principle of critical trust, the principle
that it is rational to trust our experience, except when we have
good reason not to. I hold that this principle properly applies
to religious experience also. For it is a principle about apparently
cognitive experience as such. This means that it is fully rational
to trust our human religious experience of the divine except when
we have good reason not to; but that the divine reality is necessarily
known to us in the forms made possible by our own conceptual resources
and spiritual practices. This stands between the naïve realism
whose religious form is fundamentalism, and the non or anti-realism
which denies any divine reality transcending (though also immanent
within) the material universe. This is a subject deserving of a
much fuller treatment than is possible here, and I have in fact
discussed it at length elsewhere, particularly in An Interpretation
of Religion - of which, incidentally, a new edition including a
response to critics, has recently been published. Let me add that
Don Cupitt's more recent work, expressing a strong post-modernist
philosophy, is to me equally unacceptable. He proclaims that there
is no such thing as truth. Truth is something that we each make
up for ourselves all the time. But he proclaims this as the fundamental
truth which he wants us all to accept! In other words, he does not
apply his philosophy to itself. This is the same flaw that undermined
logical positivism. There is thus, as it seems to me, a fundamental
incoherence in Cupitts' strongly post-modernist conviction. In going
beyond this to a post-post-modernist position we find that we come
back full circle to the principle by which we live all the time
in daily life - when something seems to be there we take it that
it is there, unless we have some reason to doubt it as illusion
or delusion.
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Returning now to history, taken as huge communities of many millions
of men and women, neither Christians nor Muslims live up to the
divine will as we know it. We all fall short and are in need of
God's mercy. But do the people of one faith, taken as a whole, behave
either better or worse than the people of the other? Or are virtues
and vices, saints and sinners, to be found, so far as we can tell,
equally within both? I think the latter. And what has made me, as
a Christian, come to reject the assumption of the unique superiority
of my own Christian faith is that these observable fruits are not
specially concentrated in the Christian church but, on the contrary,
are spread more or less evenly around the world among its different
cultures and religions. Obviously this can be argued. I would only
say that the onus of proof, or of argument, is upon anyone who claims
that the members of his or her religion are in general better human
beings, morally and spiritually, than the rest of the human race.
But if so, inclusivism, whether Christian or Muslim or any other,
is not realistic.
Is there an Islamic form of inclusivism? I suppose that the concept
of the People of the Book could be regarded as a limited inclusivism
- with the full and final truth being in Islam but with Jews and
Christians nevertheless coming close to it, in distinction from
the eastern religions of Buddhism, Hinduism, Sikhism, Taoism. But
I would invite you to ask whether the moral and spiritual fruits
of religion in human life are manifestly better among the People
of the Book than among Buddhists, Hindus and the others? I question
whether they are. It is very difficult for Muslims, Christians,
and Jews to take full and well-informed account of the eastern religions,
but I would like to leave the issue with you as one which has one
day to be faced. That day may not be yet, but it must come sooner
or later.
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I now turn to the third option, religious pluralism. In its broadest
terms, this is the belief that no one religion has a monopoly of
the truth or of the life that leads to salvation. Or in the more
poetic words of the great Sufi, Rumi, speaking of the religions
of the world, 'The lamps are different but the Light is the same;
it comes from beyond' (Rumi: Poet and Mystic, trans. R.A. Nicholson,
London and Boston: Unwin, p. 166).
Let us at this point ask what we mean by salvation. By salvation,
as a generic concept, I mean a process of human transformation in
this life from natural self-centeredness to a new orientation centred
in the transcendent divine reality, God, and leading to its fulfilment
beyond this life. And I hold that so far as we can tell, this salvific
process is taking place and also failing to take place, to an equal
extent within all the great world religions. A pluralist theology
of religions is an attempt to make sense of this situation.
It is developed in a variety of ways by different thinkers. But
there are two main approaches, which are not however mutually exclusive.
One is to start from within one's own faith and work outwards, so
to speak, by exploring its resources for an acceptance of the salvific
parity of the other world faiths - the acceptance of them, in other
words, as equally authentic paths to salvation. For each tradition
does in fact have within it strands of thought which can be developed
to authorise the pluralist point of view. There is no time to point
to these within each of the world faiths. But any reader of the
Qur'an is familiar with such verses as: 'If God had pleased He would
surely have made you one people (professing one faith). But He wished
to try and test you by that which He gave you. So try to excel in
good deeds. To Him you will all return in the end, when He will
tell you of what you were at variance' (5: 48, Ahmed Ali translation),
and the many verses which endorse without distinction the long succession
of prophets through the ages. But the development of each faith's
resources for a wider understanding can only be done within that
faith in its own terms and by its own adherents. And it needs to
be done on an ever increasing scale.
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The other approach, which has been my own concern as a philosopher
of religion, has been to try to understand how it can be that the
different religions, with all their manifest differences and undeniable
incompatibilities of belief, can be on an equal level as different
complexes of belief and practice within which their adherents can
find salvation.
So let me very briefly outline my own suggestion. I take my clue
from something that is affirmed within all the great traditions.
This is that the ultimate reality is in itself beyond the scope
of human description and understanding. As the great Christian theologian
Thomas Aquinas said, God 'surpasses every form that our intellect
reaches' (Summa contra Gentiles, I, 14: 3). God in God's ultimate
eternal self-existent being is ineffable, or as I would rather say,
transcategorial, beyond the scope of our human conceptual systems.
And so we have a distinction between God in God's infinite self-existent
being and God as humanly knowable. We find this in some of the great
Christian mystics, such as Meister Eckhart, who distinguished between
the Godhead, which is the ultimate ineffable reality, and the known
God of the scriptures and of church doctrine and worship, conceived
and understood in our limited human terms. We find parallel distinctions
within the other great traditions. The Jewish thinker Maimonides
expressed it as a distinction between the essence and the manifestation
of God. There are also well known Hindu and Buddhist versions of
the distinction, although there is no time to go into them now.
In the case of Islam, so far as my knowledge goes, the distinction
occurs mainly within the mystical strand. The ultimate ineffability
of God is declared by a number of writers. For example, Kwaja Abdullah
Ansari says, in prayer to God, 'You are far from what we imagine
you to be', and 'The mystery of your reality is not revealed to
anyone'. (Intimate Conversations, trans. W. Thackston, New York:
Paulist Press, London: SPCK, pp. 183 and 203). Developing the implications
of this, Ibn al-'Arabi distinguishes (like Maimonides) between the
divine essence, which is ineffable, and God as humanly known. In
The Bezels of Wisdom he says, 'The Essence, as being beyond all
these relationships, is not a divinity . . it is we who make Him
a divinity by being that through which He knows himself as Divine.
Thus he is not known [as Allah] until we are known' (The Bezels
of Wisdom, trans. R.W.J. Austin, New York: Paulist Press and London:
SPCK, p. 92). Again, he says, 'In general, most men have, perforce,
an individual concept of their Lord, which they ascribe to Him and
in which they seek Him. So long as the Reality is presented to them
according to it they recognize Him and affirm him, whereas if presented
in another form, they deny Him, flee from Him and treat Him improperly,
while at the same time imagining they are acting toward Him fittingly.
One who believes [in the ordinary way] believes only in the deity
he has created for himself, since a deity in "belief"
is a [mental] construction' (Ibid., p. 137).
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So we have a distinction between the Ultimate as it is in itself
and that same ultimate reality as it impinges upon us and is conceived
by our little human minds. Our awareness of the Ultimate is thus
a mediated awareness, receiving its form, and indeed its plurality
of forms, from the human contribution to our awareness of it. The
basic critical realist principle, that in our awareness of anything
the very activity of cognition itself affects the form in which
we are conscious of it, is well established today in epistemology,
in cognitive psychology, and in the sociology of knowledge. But
it was well stated centuries ago by Thomas Aquinas in his dictum
that 'Things known are in the knower according to the mode of the
knower' (Summa Theologica, II/II, Q. 1, art 2). In ordinary sense
perception the mode of the human knower is much the same throughout
the world. But in religious awareness the mode of the knower differs
significantly among the different religious traditions, which have
been formed and developed within different historical and cultural
situations. So my hypothesis is that the world religions are oriented
towards the same Ultimate Reality, which is however manifested within
their different thought-worlds and forms of experience in different
ways. This is the model that seems to me best to make sense of the
total situation.
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Religious pluralism is emphatically not a form of relativism. That
would be a fundamental misunderstanding of the critical realist
principle, which requires criteria for distinguishing between perception
and delusion. In contrast to this, for relativism anything goes.
The religions themselves include essentially the same criteria,
which are ethical, distinguishing between, for example, Islam and
Christianity, on the one hand, and such movements as, for example,
the Aum Shinrikyo sect which put sarin gas in the Tokyo underground
system in 1995, or the Order of the Solar Temple in Canada in 1997,
and many others, as well of course as the dark places and evil moments
within the history of the world religions themselves.
One further point. It is sometimes said that religious pluralism
is a product of post-Enlightenment western liberalism. But this
is a manifest error, since the basic pluralist idea predates the
18th century European Enlightenment by many centuries. It was taught
by such thinkers as Rumi and al-Arabi in the 13th century, and Kabir,
Nanak, and many others in 15th century India. Indeed it occurs in
the edicts of the Buddhist emperor Asoka in the 2nd century BCE.
So far from its having originated in the modern west, the fact is
that the modern west is only now catching up with the ancient east!
Indeed even within Christianity itself there were expressions of
religious pluralism long before the 18th century Enlightenment.
Thus Nicholas of Cusa in the 15th century wrote that 'there is only
one religion in the variety of rites' (De Pace Fidei, 6). So it
is an error, born of ignorance, to think that religious pluralism
is a modern western invention.
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Let me end now by returning to a point I made at the beginning by
asking Why does all this matter? Indeed, does it matter? Well, yes,
it does matter a very great deal. We live as part of a world wide
human community that is at war with itself. In many places men,
women and even children are killing and being killed in conflicts
that are both validated and emotionally intensified by religion.
And this is possible because each faith has traditionally made its
own absolute claim to be the one and only true faith. Absolutes
can justify anything. Today, to insist on the unique superiority
of your own faith is to be part of the problem. For how can there
be stable peace between rival absolutes? In the words of the Catholic
theologian Hans Kung, 'There will be no peace among the peoples
of this world without peace among the world religions'. And I would
add that there will be no real peace among the world religions so
long as each thinks of itself as uniquely superior to all the others.
Dialogue between the faiths must continue on an ever increasing
scale. But the only stable and enduring basis for peace will come
about when dialogue leads to a mutual acceptance of the world religions
as different but equally valid relationships to the ultimate reality.
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©
John Hick, 2005. .
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