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Islamic Martyrdom: The Economy of Death in the Quran
Islamic Martyrdom? What a bargain!
The Economy of Death in the Quran
James M. Arlandson
Yet another suicide-homicide bomber strikes
Tel Aviv. A suicide car bomber in Iraq
killed the most civilians (120)
ever so far in a single blast. They were waiting to join the police and National Guard, signing up
near a medical clinic.
Islamic suicide-homicide bombers are relentless. Many national Iraqi terrorists as well
as foreign fighters who have traveled to Iraq from neighboring nations dream of achieving
martyrdom. They casually walk up to mosques and a US Mess Hall in Iraq and detonate bombs
strapped to their bodies under their clothing.
Muslim leaders in the West who have access to the national media tell unsuspecting
Westerners that Islam is the religion of peace and that terrorists are only an aberration.
While the leaders reassure us, another human bomb goes off.
Where is the truth between the two extremes?
If Islam is the religion of peace, then what inspires the terrorists? Political leaders?
Maybe. The Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei,
in a speech at Ayatollah
Khomeinis Mausoleum, June 4, 2002, supports the Palestinian suicide-homicide martyrdoms
that are deliberately carried out on innocent Israelis.
Let me say to you: these stances [of American administrators on suicide bombings]
will not be of any use. This quest for martyrdom is not based on emotions; it is based on
belief in Islam and faith in [the] Judgment Day and faith in life after death. Anywhere
Islam exists in its true sense, arrogance faces this threat.
These words of the Supreme Leader of Iran constitute a serious indictment against
Islam. It should no longer be claimed that suicide-homicide bombings are supported only
in the dark corners of the Islamic world; rather, the Supreme Leader himself supports
this death-cult.
Speaking the truth, he says that homicide bombers do not commit their atrocities out of
emotions, but out of the core doctrines of Islam: the Last Day and life after death.
Thus, he asserts that Islam in its "true sense"martyrdoms by homicide
bombingthreatens arrogance, that is, the US and Israel.
MEMRI TV also has a video clip
and a transcript of an interview with
a "martyrdom seeker" who will fight all Zionists. These "seekers"
(the report speaks of 40,000) will also attack America and Great Britain, becoming human bombs.
Does the dark prince of terrorism, Osama bin Laden, inspire evil martyrdom operations?
In his 1996
Fatwa declaring war on the US, bin Laden quotes a hadith passage (Muhammads words
and deeds outside of the Quran) that has the prophet describing heaven for the martyrs fallen
in a holy war. The first moment blood gushes, they are guaranteed Islamic heaven. They
receive crowns, jewels, and seventy-two dark-eyed houris or beautiful maidens, for each
martyr.
[A] martyrs privileges are guaranteed by Allah; forgiveness with the first
gush of his blood, he will be shown his seat in paradise, he will be decorated with the
jewels of belief, married off to the beautiful ones, protected from the test in the grave,
assured security in the day of judgment, crowned with the crown of dignity, a ruby of
which is better than this whole world and its entire content, wedded to seventy-two of the
pure Houris (beautiful women of Paradise) and his intercession on the behalf of seventy of
his relatives will be accepted.
This hadith source that bin Laden cites puts together different Quranic passages
describing Islamic heaven, complete with beautiful virgins (Suras 44:51-56; 52:17-29;
55:46-78), with those describing the immediate reward of heaven for jihadist
martyrs (Suras 61:10-12; 4:74; 9:111). (For multiple translations of these
"virgin verses" and other sensuous descriptions of Islamic heaven, go to
this site, and type in the references:
44:51-56; 52:17-29; 55:46-78.)
Where does this evil doctrine of martyrdom in a battle come from? The answer to the
question is that Khamenei and bin Laden are not the deepest sources of inspiration for
martyrdom bombers. If they were, we could stop terrorism quickly. Sad to report, these two
evil-doers, as well the faceless human bombs, get their inspiration from the Quran itself.
Islam at its core is not the religion of peace, but violence sits in the origins of Islam.
Suras 61:10-12, 4:74, and 9:111 guarantee Islamic martyrs heaven in an economic
bargain. Indeed, these three references explicitly use words that connote buying and
selling and signing a contract of sale, and the currency behind the deals is death by
martyrdom.
Deducing claims from these verses and using the logic of evil, suicide-homicide bombers
with modern and private weapons accept this bargain and throw themselves into battle against
disciples of the Great Satan (the US) and the little Satan (Israel). Derived from these
verses, the martyrs death-acts show their total surrender to Allah; they count their
lives as nothing compared with their devotion to him and security in achieving heaven.
So Allah is pleasedit is a done deal.
To explain how the economy of this death-cult and the derived evil logic originate in
the Quran, a specific exegetical method is used. First, Muslim translators are cited so
that they, not Westerners, speak for their religion. Second, the historical context is
outlined because it sheds light on the words in the verses themselves. Third, the literary
context of each passage is summarized because the words in the targeted passages take on
meaning from the surrounding verses. These second and third steps not only elucidate the
meaning within the key verses, they also prevent the standard, reflexive "out of
context" defense from Muslim apologists. Fourth, we interpret the verses themselves.
Finally, one of the analyzed passages and anothers literary context invite a comparison
with the Torah and the Gospels, so we end the article accepting this invitation.
Suffice it to say, the Torah and especially the Gospels do not have this death-cult
of martyrdom in military battles or in any context. The later religion of Islam, picking
and choosing ideas from the two earlier religionsespecially Christianity in this
casedegrades and distorts the positive call to total devotion to Godthe
historical context makes all the differences in the world between the first two religions
and the later one.
Sura 61:10-12
In this passage, the Arabic word "jihad" (root is j-h-d) is the means
or currency to trade in this life for the life to come.
61:10 You who believe, shall I show you a bargain that will save you from
painful punishment? 11 Have faith in God and His Messenger and struggle [j-h-d]
for His cause with your possessions and your personsthat is better for you, if only
you knew12 and He will forgive your sins, admit you into Gardens graced with
flowing streams, into pleasant dwellings in the Gardens of Eternity. That is the supreme
triumph. (M.A.S. Abdel Haleem, The Qur'an, Oxford University Press, 2004)
Other translators agree with Haleems "bargain" (t-j-r) in bold print,
but render the key word as follows: "profitable course" (Dawood, not a Muslim,
but an Iraqi), "merchandise" (Shakir and Maulana), and "trade"
(Fakhry, Hilali and Khan, and the team of scholars translating Ibn Kathir). Regardless
of the various words, they still convey the central meaning of an economic exchange.
It is difficult to pin down the historical context of Sura 61:10-12 because internal
evidence directly bearing on external events is slim; the sura, after all, is only
fourteen verses long. Reputable scholars, though, place the sura not long after the Battle
of Uhud in March 625 (so named after a hill to the north of Medina), which pitted the
Muslims against the Meccans. This battle was the Meccan riposte to the surprise victory of
the Muslims over the Meccans in the Battle of Badr a year earlier in March. But in this
present case, the Meccans got the better of the Islamic community. Muhammad was rumored
even to be have been killed, but he was actually chased up into higher ground. The Muslim
defeat stung at first, but that night, burying their dead, Muhammad realized that he did
not lose substantially, so he sent a raiding party the next morning to confront the
Meccans, who had stayed in the vicinity because Arab custom demanded that an army
returning from battle must not appear to retreat, a sign of weakness. The leader of the
Meccans was not in a position to attack, for he suffered losses too, so eventually he and
his army made their way back to Mecca.
Moreover, the sura may have been revealed later than Uhud, but still in 625. In this
case the Muslims are gaining ground despite the slight loss at Uhud, because they expelled
the Jewish Nadir tribe from Medina in August 625 on the flimsy charge of refusal to pay
blood-wit (compensation for loss of life) and a revelation that members of the tribe
were attempting to assassinate him. (For more on this expulsion, refer to
this article.)
The larger historical context of Sura 61:10-12, then, is warfare with the Meccans and
other outsiders and internal conflict in Medina, all of which the Muslim community managed
to overcome.
The literary contextthe eleven verses surrounding vv. 10-12reveal five
themes. First, Muhammad scolds the hypocrites (nominal Muslims who do not jump when
Muhammad cracks the whip) for promising to do things, but not following through, in the
context of fighting in solid lines or ranks in the cause of Allah (vv. 3-4). This faction
of "conscientious objectors" does not wish to join Muhammad in his wars. Second,
it is interesting that the sura is entitled "Solid Lines" because of v. 4;
Allah loves it when his soldiers line up neatly in battle. This neatness of lining up is
reminiscent of Muslims lining up to pray. According to reliable hadiths, Muhammad placed
orderly marks on the floor in his mosque so his Muslims would pray in rows. Third, the
word "fighting" in v. 4 comes from qital (root is q-t-l), which means
only warring and killing. Fourth, Muhammad appeals to Moses and Jesus as inspirations
because they too encountered resistance from their followers (vv. 5-6; 14). Muhammad is
just like them and better. Finally, Allah tells his prophet that it is Islam, despite
the opposition, which will rule the world and rise above all other religions (vv.7-9)
(For more on this "great commission" which is a distortion of the Great Commission
in the Gospel of Matthew (28:18-20), refer to this article.)
Thus, the literary context of Sura 61:10-12 is warfare (q-t-l); Allahs love of
soldiers who fight in solid lines or ranks (the suras title); the condemnation of
hypocrites who do not wish to fight, and Muhammads identity with Moses and Jesus,
though Muhammad and his new religion triumphantly fulfill the first two leaders and their
religions.
Interpreting Sura 61:10-12 reveals three unpleasant themes. First, the divine
"bargain" has death as the currency behind it. What do Allah and his followers
get in the exchange? The martyrs receive the forgiveness of sins and heaven, and Allah
receives complete devotion to him in establishing his community and religion. Allah has
sent Muhammad as his messenger with the truththe final answerwhich must win
the world. Also, the bargain apparently saves even Muslims from a painful torment in hell.
This image of humans suffering in hell, which includes even reluctant and disobedient
Muslims like the hypocrites, occurs frequently enough in the Quran (2:81, 206; 23:103;
66:8; 20:124-126, to cite only a few); Muhammads prediction of it for many who
disobey him demonstrates how much social control of the worst kind he exerts over his
followers, many of whom waited for him to get his haircut so they could take even one
hair and cherish it. The economic metaphor is effective, but diabolical in the context
of warfare and fiery devotion.
Second, Muhammad guarantees martyrs a place in Islamic heaven in exchange for a struggle
not only with their possessions, but also with their persons or lives. Hence, jihad
in this context means more than a bloody struggle, but jihad also must include
bloodshed in these three verses. They answer the misinformation spread by Muslim
apologists that jihad means only and exclusively a struggle with sin in the soul.
It may include that, but it must also include a bloody war in some contexts like the one
for Sura 61:10-12.
Finally, in the bargain, Muhammad mixes salvation with works, which is bound to force
Muslims to strive hard (j-h-d) to earn their place in heavenpure, unadulterated
grace gets lost in Islamic theology, but an unhealthy mixture of faith and works is the
core belief. Hence, martyrdom is the ultimate good work; and from a psychological
standpoint, doing the highest of the best deeds frees the jihadists minds
from the torment of doubt over their eternal destiny. Today, the promise of a Garden
is a strong inducement for troubled, would-be martyrs to kill themselves in their
self-conceived jihad against the Great Satan, against the little Satan, and now
even against the Iraqi Shiites, simply because their theology differs from the
Sunnis.
Thus, Sura 61:10-12 can only whisper temptations in the ear of a Muslim with a radical
bent and only propel him forward in the deadly economic trade of his life for the life to
come in the context of jihad. Muhammad and his Quran are the deepest source of
inspiration for todays jihadists. Their path to heaven is secured by the
ultimate good work mixed in with their twisted faith.
Sura 4:74
In this verse the Arabic switches from jihad to qital (q-t-l), and this
word means warring, fighting and killing with swords, and it again becomes the currency
for fatally selling or trading this life for the Hereafter.
4:74 Let those of you who are willing to trade the life of this world for the
life to come, fight [q-t-l] in Gods way. To anyone who fights [q-t-l] in Gods
way, whether killed [q-t-l] or victorious, We shall give a great reward. (Haleem)
Other translations of the key word "trade" (sh-r-a) in bold print read as
follows: "sell" (Hilali and Khan, Fakhry, Yusuf Ali, Maulana, Pickthall,
Shakir), "exchange" (Dawood), "barter" (Ahmed Ali) and "barter
away" (Maududi), all of which have an economic connotation.
Like Sura 61, the historical context of Sura 4 is difficult to discover. Three
different passages reveal that the sura occurred in nearly a three-year span: after the
Battle of Uhud in 625 in which Islam lost 70 holy warriors (vv. 1-35); the so-called
Prayer of Fear in which Muhammad instructs his soldiers how to pray during a military
campaign in 626 (v. 101-103); and during still another military expedition in 627, in
which he instructs his soldiers how to perform ablutions when no water is available (sand
is used) (v. 43). Whichever timeframe Sura 4:74 fits into, the overall historical context
shows Muhammad establishing his community in Medina during warfare outside of the city.
The literary context of Sura 4:74 consists of warfare (q-t-l) outside of Medina and
strife within Medina between Muhammad and the faction of hypocrites, some of whom want
only the spoils of war, and others of whom want peace, prayer, and almsgiving. Muhammad,
however, chooses the warpath, along with forced prayer and forced almsgiving, two of the
Five Pillars in Islam. Peace does not reign in early Islam.
Moreover, Muhammad splits the world in two according to believers and unbelievers in
the context of warfare or q-t-l (v. 76). A believer fights (q-t-l) for God, but an
unbeliever fights (q-t-l) for an unjust cause and for Satan. So the world is divided up
into Dar-al-Islam (Abode of Islam) and Dar-al-Kufr (Abode of Unbelief), which belongs
therefore to Dar-al-Harb (Abode of War). This means that Islam may wage war on unbelief,
because this holy warfareboth q-t-l and j-h-deliminates the disciples of
Satan, for example, citizens of the Great Satan and of the little Satan. If a civilization
does not come under the control of Islam, then ipso facto it perpetuates injustice and
unrighteousness, so Islam needs to subjugate it in order to purge out its bad qualities.
A strategy in the gradual conquest can include aggressive martyrdom, as we will see in
two Muslims interpretation of Sura 9:111, below.
The interpretation of Sura 4:74 is simple. First, the trade or selling of ones
life forms the currency in which one conducts the trade with the deity. Allah demands a
Muslims whole life in the context of warfare. As a return payment, he gives the
martyr Islamic heaven. In this scenario Allah receives the establishment of his true
religion and guidance. Second, the short verse piles on violent and bloody qital in
various forms, three times. This word clearly does not mean a struggle with sin only in
the soul, to say the least. Next, a qitalist fights in Gods cause or way, and
two results ensue: either he lives to fight another day so that maybe he can be martyred,
or he dies in battle and securely goes to Islamic heaven, completing the ultimate good
work. Finally, in a religious system (Islam) that requires an unspecified quantity of good
works, todays jihadists and qitalists have a strong psychological pull
on their troubled minds to kill themselves in martyrdom. This lifts their burden of
insecurity over their eternal destiny. They are inspired by their Founder who fought in
sacred bloody battles (historical reality) and by his sacred book that conveniently
endorses his sacred bloody battles (textual reality).
Sura 9:111
Muhammad continues using qital (q-t-l) in its various forms as the currency for
his death-cult:
9:111 God has purchased the persons and possessions of the believers for
the Gardenthey fight [q-t-l] in Gods way: they kill [q-t-l] and are killed
[q-t-l]this is a true promise given by Him in the Torah, the Gospel, and the
Quran. Who could be more faithful to his promise than God? So be happy with
the bargain you have made: that is the supreme triumph. (Haleem)
Some translators agree with Haleems key words "purchased" (sh-r-a)
and "bargain" (b-aa-c), but others use "bought" (Maulana,
Yusuf Ali, Maududi, Fakhry, Pickthall, et al.), and one uses "pledge" for
"bargain" (Shakir). With the possible exception of Shakirs translation,
which raises the commitment beyond just a bargain, all of these translations still remain
within an economic semantic field.
The historical context of Sura 9:111 sees Muhammad returning from a military expedition
against the Byzantine Empire in 630, two years before his death of a fever in 632.
Muhammad heard a rumor that the Byzantines amassed an army some 700 miles to the north
in Tabuk in order to attack Islam, so he led an army of 30,000 holy warriors to
counter-strike preemptively. However, the Byzantines failed to materialize, so
Muhammads expedition was fruitless, except he managed to extract (extort) agreements
from northern tribes that they would not attack him and his community. They were also
forced to pay a "protection" tax for the "privilege" of living under
Islam. Muhammads military expedition qualifies as an Islamic Crusade long before the
European ones. And as for the extortion of taxes, an army of 30,000 soldiers from the
south must have deeply impressed the disunified, loose northern tribes, so in no way did
they plan to attack Islam; thus, Muhammads forced tax was aggressive and hence
unjust, not defensive and hence just.
The historical context of Sura 9:111, then, is warfare (q-t-l) on a large scale against
the Byzantines.
The literary context of the targeted Sura 9:111 shows Muhammad scolding the hypocrites
who finished building a mosque while he was away in Tabuk (vv. 107-110). They asked him to
bless it when he returned to Medina, but instead he ordered it torn down. Truthfully, it
is likely that they would have used it to stir up trouble within the Muslim community. In
contrast to the hypocrites, in the verses after 9:111 Muhammad defines what true believers
are: they do good works, bow down and prostrate themselves and forbid what is wrong
(v. 112). Finally, Muslims ask their prophet if they should pray for their polytheistic
relatives. He orders them not to, fabricating a story about Abraham who had prayed for
his polytheist father, but who changed his mind and washed his hands of his father, after
Abraham learned that he was the enemy of God. If Abraham prayed for his father only
because he had made an earlier arrangement with him, but then washed his hands of him,
why would Muslims pray for their relatives and ancestors (vv. 113-116)?
Thus, local verbal and political fighting (j-h-d and q-t-l); squabbling with his
internal enemies like the hypocrites (cf. Sura 9:4, 73, 123); and disagreement with
and correction of his uninformed Muslims who want to pray for their polytheist ancestors
and relatives make up the literary context. (See this article
for more information on Muhammads wars on the polytheists and hypocrites.)
To judge from the second and third steps (historical and literary contexts) in Suras
61:10-12, 4:74, and 9:111, it should be clear by now that Muhammads community in
Medina does not experience very long stretches of peace, and this fact colors the very
origins of Islam and what goes into the Quran. Islam at its core is not the religion of
peace, contrary to the standard line fed to the unsuspecting West.
Sura 9:111 has caught the imagination of two widely used Muslim commentators, so we
should let them speak for their own religion.
Sayyid Abdul Ala Maududi (d. 1979) was an Indo-Pakistani revivalist and radical
who advocated the establishment of an Islamic state on the model of the prophets,
from the top down without depending on swaying the public to accept the Islamic state.
In other words, he opposed democracy and supported a centralized and powerful theocracy.
Sayyid Qutb was an Egyptian radical and godfather of modern jihadist movements
today. He was tried and executed in 1966 for plotting to overthrow the Egyptian government.
Maududi emphasizes the spiritual and psychological aspects of the divine transaction.
A Muslim believer must be willing to relinquish his soul and possessions for Allah.
A believer "surrenders his freedom and sacrifices his desires and wishes in
this present world in return for His promise of the Gardens and eternal bliss in
the Next World" ... Total devotion to a deity and total surrender of desires
and wishes is the heart of the human-centered message of all of the great religions
of the world. And total devotion can be positive. However, in the context of warfare
(qital), combining the doctrine of total surrender with martyrdom is twisted
and distorted.
Hence, Maududi commits two errors, one as a commentator, the other as a theologian. He
fails to deal adequately with the context of Sura 9:111fighting in war and killing
and being killed. He seems to want only the spiritual side of sacrifice and to avoid the
bloody mess of martyrdom in a pitched battle. The second error is theological. He says
that a believer must go on fulfilling the terms of the transaction (selling his life to
Allah) "up to his last breath." In an earlier note in his commentary on
Sura 9, he says that a Muslim may atone for his sins by doing acts of charity. Of the many
problems with the Islamic doctrine of salvation, the main one is its ambiguity. It does
not specify the quantity of good works necessary to reach heaven. As noted, when this
ambiguity is mixed in with the absoluteness of martyrdom in achieving heaven, the results
can be deadly. Thus, a Muslim suffering from anxiety over his failure to totally surrender
reads in his Quran (61:10-12; 4:74; 9:111) that if he dies as a martyr, he reaches heaven.
Why would this not motivate him?
This is apparently true of Muhammad Atta, the Egyptian terrorist who crashed a fuel-laden
jet into one of Twin Towers on 9/11. In
a letter
to his fellow jihadists, he accurately understands the doctrine of Quranic martyrdom:
You should feel complete tranquility, because the time between you and your marriage
[in heaven] is very short. Afterwards begins the happy life, where God is satisfied with
you. And eternal bliss in the company of the prophets, the companions, the martyrs
and the good people ...
He also told them to tame their souls because they must have "100%
obedience." But how does one define absolute obedience? Islamic martyrdom. He
fulfilled the terms of the economic transaction by doing the highest and best deed
imaginable: selling his life to Allah in a worldwide battle against the Great Satan, the
Dar-al-Kufr (Abode of Unbelief), which is subject to warfare (Dar-al-Harb). It must also
be stated that many of the Muslim martyrs may be mentally troubled, but surely some of
them act with level heads. They follow a simple, rational equation:
Total surrender = martyrdom in a holy war = Islamic heaven.
For Islam, this is 100% obedience. Historically, Muhammad the Founder of Islam
engaged in this warfare on Dar-al-Kufr, for example, against the polytheist
Meccans and against the Christian Byzantines. Fighting them for Allah signifies
total surrender, which in turn leads to Islamic heaven. How could terrorists not be
inspired by their prophet and his book?
Qutb is a radical, but a straightforward radical because, unlike Maududi, he deals with
the historical context of warfare in his comments on Sura 9:111; indeed he embraces it
with deep emotion. "Hence the sense of dread that I now feel as I am writing these
words" [of 9:111]. In a section he subtitles "A Very Special Contract,"
Qutb, following Muhammad, scolds the Muslims around the world who are unwilling to
sacrifice their lives in the cause of Allah (code for war). His rebuke also reveals a call
that echoes in the head of all jihadists of the last several generations:
The [economic] deal fills us with awe. Yet those who are claiming to be Muslims
everywhere, from the far east to the far west are sitting idle, unwilling to strive hard
in order to establish the fundamental truth of Gods Lordship [read: Islam] on earth,
or to remove the tyranny which usurps the qualities of Lordship over human life on earth
[read: non-Islamic governments]. They are unwilling to fight, kill and be killed for
Gods cause ...
This excerpt reflects his ideology laced throughout his multivolume commentary. He
assumes that Islam is the fundamental truth of Gods Lordship, and Muslims must be
willing to fight in order to impose it on the world.
Furthermore, as Sura 9:111 says at the end of the verse, Qutb reminds his fellow
jihadists that they must rejoice in the bargain; they should gladly give up
their lives, which amounts to nothing compared with the virgin-rich Garden. This reflects
another verse that demonstrates that the early Muslims were eager to die in battle. In
the historical context of the Battle of Uhud in 625 (see above, Sura 61:10-12), Muhammad
tells his jihadists: "Before you encountered death, you were hoping for
it" ... (Sura 3:143). This means that martyrs are allowed to hope for death in
battle, and, logically, this permits Muslim suicide-homicide bombers today to seek out
a means of death in a worldwide struggle to eliminate the enemies of Allah. In fact,
Sura 3:143 is precisely the verse that Muhammad Atta quotes in his letter, and he too
tells his jihadists to be optimistic and cheerful.
Finally, Qutb believes that all governments that are non-Islamic are ipso facto
tyrannical because they impose order apart from Allah and his revealed will in the Quran
and in the Sharia, the code of law derived from the Quran and the words and deeds of
Muhammad. It never occurs to Qutb that the Quran and the Sharia are tyrannical by their
very nature. It is no wonder that Qutb did not endorse democracy and neither does Zarqawi,
the Jordanian evil-doer who beheads innocent civilians,
saying recently
that democracy is evil and that he will wage a fierce war on it.
To sum up the essence of Suras 61:10-12, 4:74, and 9:111, the doctrine of Islamic
martyrdom has been placed in economic terms in the historical context of aggressive
warfare. A Muslim sells his life through martyrdom in a holy war in a bargain with Allah.
In return, the believer gets the guaranteed reward of Islamic heaven. For the deitys
part, he uses the surrender to spread his true religion around the world. Allah will
establish Islam and get the ultimate victory. This guarantee appeals to Muslims today, who
sell their lives in martyrdom against the Great Satan and the little Satan. Allah asks his
fighters to "rejoice" in the bargain they have made with him, that is, to be
inspired by it.
Biblical Martyrdom
The literary context of Sura 61:10-12, as well as Sura 9:111, invite the readers to
contrast Muhammad and the Quran with Moses and the Torah and Jesus and the Gospels. Islam
claims to implement a new way of thinking about God and living under his reign, under the
"blessing" of the Sharia. We answer three Muslim apologists, Qutb, Maududi, and
Yusuf Ali, in their commentaries on Sura 9:111. We repeat that the Christian doctrine of
salvation (grace through faith in the sacrifice of Christ on the cross) does not and
cannot lead to deliberate martyrdom in a holy military war. Islam degrades the positive
path of total devotion found in the Gospels (and the Torah). The subject of martyrdom
challenges Islams superiority.
To begin with, Muhammads knowledge of the Torah was limited and confused.
Attempting to clarify his prophets confusion, Qutb says that the Old Testament
orders jihad, but that distortions have crept into these Scriptures and hence
into "their concept of God and what striving for His cause means." Maududi
seeks to clear up Muhammads confusion as well, saying that the Torah does not have
a developed view of heaven (in this he may be right). But he also says that God commands
the ancient Hebrews to fight, but that they degraded the original command of winning
heaven; instead, the Hebrews fought to win Canaan. But Qutb is as wrong as his prophet,
and Maududi in his latter claim is wrong as well. It is true that the First Law says that
the ancient Hebrews under Moses should fight under specific conditions in order to purge
the land of Canaan, but in no way does the Torah exalt to high heaven the cult of martyrdom
in an economy of deaththis is proven by the so-called "undeveloped" doctrine
of heaven in the Torah. God does not purchase the ancient Hebrews in exchange for paradise.
(For more on the differences between Gods wars and Allahs wars, refer to
this article.)
Furthermore, Muhammad in his "inerrant Quran" is dead wrong when he asserts
that the Gospels encourage the economy of death for Jesus and his followers. True, out of
the deep and authentic love of God, Jesus willingly lays down his life for the sins of the
worldeven for the sins of the polytheists whom Muhammad slaughtersbut a
martyrs death-cult is never built up for his followers to seek out fame on earth and
a place in heaven. Christ died to secure his followers place in heaven, so that
Christians do not have to kill themselves or to die from persecution in order to get into
heaven, for this would insult Christs unique redemption on the cross. He was the
final and ultimate "Martyr," and the effect of his "Martyrdom"
transfers to all believers in him.
Yusuf Ali in his commentary on Sura 9:111 (note 1362) disputes this path of salvation,
asserting that the "corrupted" Christian view of the atonement of Christs
death on the cross is rejected by Islam. What Allah wants is submission, which may include
"fighting for the Cause, both spiritual and physical." In reply to Yusuf Ali,
however, it is difficult to find a Muslim who understands fully what the Christian
doctrine of atonement means, though it is not so difficult to grasp. If he were to grasp
it, he may not dismiss it so easily as "corrupted" and hence inferior,
especially when it is contrasted with fighting and killing and being killed as a martyr in
Allahs cause (9:111). For all generations of Christians from the first century until
now, the New Testament, which is the original source of Christian theology, says that only
Christ saves through his blood on the cross; no reservoir of human good deeds can save,
and certainly not a reservoir filled with jihadist blood from warfare for a
"divine" cause. Christs atonement on the cross is the more peaceful and
the more secure way to heaven.
Next, Maududi quotes Matt. 5:10; 10:39; 19:29, all of which speak of laying down
ones life and giving up ones possessions. He infers that the Gospels also
contain passages that exhort Christians to lay down their lives in a physical way. Thus,
the New Testament and the Quran match up. It is true that the New Testament verses he
cites speak of a willingness to give up all material possessions for the kingdom of God
and to lay down ones life mainly in a spiritual way, and possibly in a physical
death under severe and fatal persecution, but the verses are not found in the context of a
bloody religious war. Rather, Jesus calls his disciples to pick up their cross and follow
him (Matt. 10:38, 16:24; Mark 8:34; Luke 9:23, 14:27), but he also says that they should
do this daily (Luke 9:23). The image of the cross means that they must follow Jesus no
matter what, on a daily basis, which precludes an earthly martyrdom, which is done only
once; per contra, a "daily martyrdom" is continuous. A twisted love of physical
death is not in view in those New Testament passages in the context of qital.
It is also true that some of the early Christians suffer martyrdom, but, again,
never in the cause of warfare; rather, they are persecuted and put to death because the
listeners and local authorities are offended at their message, not because the Christians
"fight in Gods way: they kill and are killed" (Sura 9:111). Stephen is the
prime example and the first martyr in Christianity (Acts 6:8-8:1). He was stoned to death
because he preached the truth, not because he was chopping off heads in a battle, only to
have his head chopped off in turn by an enemy who had sneaked up behind him. His place in
heaven was already secure before he preached or died, because Christ had saved him in his
"Martyrs" death on the cross.
True, the risen Christ predicted martyrdom for a few of his followers in the church
at Smyrna (Rev. 2:10), but they did not initiate it in warfare; they were being
persecutedseverely and fatally. Moreover, after their deaths, this New Testament
church did not raise a small army to wage a jihad on their persecutors (as Muhammad
did on his Meccan persecutors). It is better to die loving ones executioner than to
kill the executioner in rage. This stands in sharp contrast to Muhammads misguided
belief that fighting enemies will relieve the rage that his Muslims have against them
(Sura 9:15).
It is also true that some later Christians even sought out martyrdom, though not in
the context of military warfare, but to win fame. Church authorities rightly rebuked them.
The following cannot be repeated too often because it diametrically opposes the Islamic
doctrine of salvation: only Christs "Martyrdom" guarantees a
believers place in heaven; only his ultimate good work on the cross paves the way to
God. Thus, the Christian does not (or should not) have a psychological inducement to kill
himself or to be killed in battle to achieve heaven. He needs only trust in Christ.
So Jesus and his disciples through the first three centuries turned the world upside
down by simple proclamation, not by butchering with swords (or by threatening to butcher
with swords) people who opposed their ministrythe warpath of Emperor Constantine in
the fourth century and the Medieval Crusaders do not set the genetic code in the very
origins of Christianity in the New Testament. On the other hand, Muhammad is foundational
to Islam, and he says that a martyrs death in the cause of Allah (cause = war)
guarantees heaven. The contrast between the two religions is stark. Christs way
leads to life and the light; Muhammads way leads to death and darkness.
Hence, the deadly bargain of martyrdom is completely foreign to devout Christians
and even to nominal Christians world over, who no longer take their faith seriously.
Christians want heaven, and they are assured of it by the atoning death of Christ, once
they receive his Holy Spiritthe divine, life-transforming Spirit of God, who is
not the angel Gabriel as claimed in Muslim theology.
Why would a Christian choose the inferior path to heaventhe one that Muhammad
teachesdeath by martyrdom in a qital or war? Total devotion and surrender
should not be perverted. Instead, total devotion and surrender to Christ is far better,
for he produces divine love and true inner peace, and hence his real path to heaven far
surpasses Muhammads claims and "revelations" that conveniently support his
wars. Christ rose above such petty, dubious assertions and cleared the way to heaven with
his Death and Resurrection.
Thus, Islam does not complete or fulfill Christianity. Rather, Muhammads religion
is a degradation and a distortion of Christianity, devolving downwards from it.
Further reading on the Islamic ‘martyrdom operations’:
The following excerpt from a Muslim
article confirms the interpretation that was presented above:
Establishing Allah’s religion on the entire earth is big responsibility
that requires enormous sacrifice, preparation, energy, money, etc. Therefore,
Allah made it (accepting that responsibility) an integral part of embracing Islam.
By embracing Islam, we are signing a business transaction with Allah. The details
of this business transaction are spelled out in Taubah 111:
(Verily, Allah has purchased of the believers their lives and their properties;
for the price that theirs shall be the Paradise. They fight in Allah's Cause,
so they kill (others) and are killed. It is a promise in truth which is binding
on Him in the Taurat (Torah) and the Injeel (Gospel) and the Qur'an. And who is
truer to his covenant than Allah? Then rejoice in the bargain which you have concluded.
That is the supreme success) Taubah 111
The Verse above is very serious indeed. It states the relationship between Allah
and the Believers. The Verse started with a verb in the past tense form. This means
that the transaction has been consummated. The terms of this transaction are
as follows:
Buyer: Allah
Seller: The Believers
Goods: The seller’s person, property, money, and everything he/she possesses
Price: Paradise
Payment Due Date: Upon delivery of goods
Means of Delivery: Jihad, fighting, getting killed or killing Kuffar
Allah has fulfilled his end of the bargain. Have we? Each and every one of us ought
to ask himself, “Have I honored my agreement with Allah?” If the answer is no,
isn’t fair to question our state of Imaan?
Copyright by James Malcolm Arlandson. Originally published at
americanthinker.com,
this article was slightly edited for Answering Islam.
Articles by James Arlandson
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