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Muhammad, the Quran, and Prohibition: Islams punishments for drinking and gambling
Muhammad, the Quran, and Prohibition
Islams punishments for drinking and gambling
James M. Arlandson
As early as 1978, Saudi Arabia sentenced
nine Britons to flogging for drinking alcohol. The webpage has a photo of how the police
carry out the sentence.
In 2001, Iranian officials
sentenced three men to flogging not only for illicit sex (see Quran 24:2 and
this article analyzing the verse). They were also flogged
for drinking alcohol.
In 2003 in Saudi Arabia, an Australian was sentenced
to be flogged and imprisoned for smuggling alcohol.
In 2004, the Canadian Islamic Congress recommends
banning alcohol from college
campuses, even for the faculty.
In 2005, an Iranian judge sentenced
another drinker to eighty lashes. Fortunately, the sentence was commuted to one lash with
eighty twigs bound together. The man was sick, so the judge changed his sentence to this
one hit
instead of eighty different lashes.
In 2005 in Nigeria, a sharia court ordered
that a drinker should be caned eighty strokes.
In 2005, in the Indonesian province of Aceh,
fifteen men were caned
in front of the mosque for gambling. This was done publicly so all could see and fear.
Eleven others are scheduled to undergo the same penalty for gambling.
Why do these judges and imams impose such a severe penalty for drinking alcohol
and for gambling?
The answer is found in the Quran first and in the hadith second (the hadith are the
reports of Muhammads words and deeds outside of the Quran). Later legal rulings also
explain the source of this punishment.
This article explores Islams and Christianitys views on alcohol and
gambling. Needless to say, Islam flogs the offenders, whereas Christianity helps them
change from the inside out.
Islam
Islam imposes corporal punishment on drinkers and gamblers. Is this the best policy to
help them?
The Quran
The translations are all done by MAS Abdel Haleem, who was educated at Al-Azhar
University in Cairo, Egypt, and Cambridge University, and is now professor of Islamic
Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Overall, his
translation is excellent, though he occasionally whitewashes some of the harsh wording
found throughout his sacred book.
Sayyid Abul ALa Maududi (d. 1979) was an Indo-Pakistani who tried to establish
a theocracy in Pakistan through the Jamaat-i Islami Party, but he failed in his political
ambitions. Nevertheless, he is a highly regarded commentator on the Quran (The Meaning
of the Quran), representing traditional Islam.
Sayyid Qutb was an Egyptian radical, prolific author, and godfather of an assortment
of modern jihadist movements today. He was executed in 1966 for trying to overthrow the
Egyptian government. He wrote a valued and sometimes insightful multivolume commentary on
the Quran, In the Shade of the Quran.
We let these three highly qualified and devout Muslims speak for their own religion and
the Quran in this section. We also examine the historical and literary contexts of the
Quranic passages in order to get some clarity and to prevent the standard, reflexive
"out of context" defense of Muslim apologists (defenders).
First Prohibition (of sorts): yes and no
Maududi says that most of Sura 2 was revealed shortly after Muhammads Hijrah
(Emigration from Mecca to Medina) in AD 622. The following verse in Sura 2 shows that
Muhammad partially or confusedly permitted or condemned drinking and gambling at that time
(Maududi, vol. 1, p. 161, note 235).
2:219 They ask you [Prophet] about intoxicants and gambling: say, "There is
great sin in both, and some benefit for people: the sin is greater than the benefit."
They ask you what they should give: say, "Give what you can spare."
In no way is this verse a clear and uncompromising edict on the two personal practices
of drinking alcohol and gambling. (Islam teaches that all intoxicants are criminal; cf.
Bukhari, Drinks, vol. 7, nos. 5579-5589; Muslim no. 7186.) It seems contradictory to
call the two acts mostly sinful but partially beneficial. It may be argued that alcohol
is sinful in its morality, but beneficial in its health for the body (e.g. helping
digestion). However, Allah will later prohibit it completely, so either it is sinful
morally regardless of the year on the Muslim calendar, or it is not.
Second Prohibition: only during prayer
According to the historical evidence and the content of Sura 4, Maududi says that the
sura was revealed between the timeframe of AD 625 and 627, because various verses indicate
different events. For example, vv. 1-28 speak of the Battle of Uhud in AD 625. Verse 102
indicates a military expedition in AD 626 during which Muhammad taught his Muslims how to
pray while out on campaign. Verse 43 takes place during another military expedition in AD
627 when he taught his holy military warriors how to perform ablutions (washings) with
pure dust if water was not available.
Maududi speculates that the target verse 43 came at the chronological beginning of the
entire sura and therefore early in AD 625 because many Muslims showed up intoxicated for
public prayers "and made blunders in their recitations" of Quranic passages.
So Muhammad had to correct the problem. However, some hadith passages (the hadith is the
reports of Muhammads words and actions outside of the Quran) say that some Muslim
warriors showed up at the Battle of Uhud intoxicated and died, but this was before Allah
had prohibited it, so they were not held responsible (Sura 5:93; see Bukhari, Oppressions,
vol. 3, no 2463; Jihad, vol. 4, no. 2815; Commentary, vol. 6, nos. 4618, 4620).
Regardless of the exact timeframe, for our purposes all we need to know is that Sura 4
was revealed between Sura 2 (see above) and Sura 5 (see below). Thus, Allahs
"eternal" revelations on the morality of drinking intoxicants are changing
according to external circumstances.
4:43 You who believe, do not come anywhere near the prayer if you are intoxicated,
until you know what you are saying . . .
Because the Muslims showed up intoxicated for public prayer, "they changed the
timings of their drinking so as not to clash with the timings of their prayers," says
Maududi (vol. 1, p. 337, note 65). So Muhammad prohibited drunkenness only during prayers.
This means that Muslims were permitted to drink some alcohol in between the times of
prayers, though the number of prayers per day would limit drunkenness. However, this
further means that after the nighttime prayer, the final one, Muslims could even get
drunk. How were the early Muslims supposed to sort this out? Was alcoholism so bad in
the Muslim community that Muhammad had to tell them to stay away from prayers, but not
prohibit alcohol? It is one thing if he had told them not to show up for prayers drunk,
and then to allow them mild drinking without intoxication. (After all, the Bible
distinguishes between mild use of alcohol and drunkenness, as we will see, below.) But
he already said in Sura 2:219 that intoxicants have sin in them. Also, Sura 5:90-91 will
prohibit intoxicants completely. It is quite odd that in this confused state of affairs
Muhammad did not completely and absolutely prohibit intoxication at this time, when the
Muslim community needed it most. Quranic revelation on this matter falls short. How is
this guidance?
Prohibiting alcohol (and gambling) is a religions prerogative, so we should not
quibble too much over this. The real issue is how Muhammad and his early companions dealt
with drunkennessexcessively, as the sections on the hadith and classical legal
rulings show us.
Third Prohibition: final and absolute
Maududi says that Sura 5 was revealed in the timeframe of AD 628 and 629, so it is a
late sura (Muhammad dies of a fever in AD 632). It lays down rules for a growing community
after the Treaty of Hudaybiyah in AD 628 in which Muslims were promised a free and
unmolested pilgrimage to Mecca a year later, which took place. So it was important for
Muslims to prepare themselves and to give up all intoxicants. Hence, these two verses came
down from Allah:
5:90 You who believe, intoxicants and gambling, idolatrous practices, and [divining
with] arrows are repugnant actsSatans doing: shun them so that you may
prosper. 91 With intoxicants and gambling, Satan seeks only to incite enmity and
hatred among you, and to stop you remembering God and prayer. Will you not give them up?
It must be conceded that these verses have a certain common sense backing them up. A
small community getting drunk and gambling in between prayer times would probably suffer
from "enmity" and "hatred" against each other. This would happen in
any small community whether it were Jewish, Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, secular, or
fill-in-the-blank. So v. 91 is an accurate description. However, a shortcoming has
burrowed into the Quran because this description could not be discovered earlier in the
ten years Muhammad lived in Medina (AD 622-632), especially when the Muslims showed up
drunk for prayer and battle.
The best expositor and defender of the gradual revelation in the matter of drinking and
gambling is Sayyid Qutb, who divides the problem up in four areas in his commentaries on
Suras 2:219, 4:43, and 5:90-91, in his volumes 1, 3, and 4, respectively: the theological,
the social, psychological, and historical. For each he writes a seemingly plausible
explanation for the gradual revelation, but each falls short and contradicts the other.
First, as to the theological wisdom found in the Quran, Qutb says that "in matters
of faith or abstract belief, Islam gives specific and definite pronouncements" . . .
(vol. 1, p. 332). He offers the example of the Islamic ruling on Gods oneness, which
was laid down at the outset, "without any hesitation or room for compromise" (p.
332). This is important because he contrasts the theological with the social and
psychological, which need a gradual approach if people are to change.
In reply, however, the historical reality behind the words in Sura 5:90-91 contradicts
Qutbs reading of human nature. In this mid- or late Medinan sura, Allah has to
remind the Muslims not to indulge in idols (Qutbs translation of v. 90). This can
only mean that some Muslims were engaged in idolatrous practices when this verse was sent
down. Yet according to Qutb, the oneness of Allah and the evils of polytheism must be
commanded at the first without compromise. Something is wrong here. This shows that human
nature is slow to obey divine commands even in abstract matters like the oneness of
Allahespecially in abstract matters. Then how much more are average humans slow to
obey practical commands against drinking and gambling, which are "well-entrenched
social habits" (vol. 1, p. 332)? Therefore, in the progressive revelations of Allah
and his prophet and in Qutbs defense of them, they misread human nature, which needs
firm commands from the outset, as Moses demonstrates, coming down from Mt. Sinai,
enveloped by smoke and fire, visible for all the ancient Hebrews to see.
Qutbs second and third defense of these three progressive Quranic revelations
analyzes the social and the psychological aspects. He says, for example, ". . . when
it comes to matters of tradition or complex social practices, it [Islam] takes a more
pragmatic and measured approach, preparing the ground for smoother adoption and
implementation" (vol. 1, p. 332). He then discusses Sweden and the US, which had
their troubles with alcohol. Sweden had to limit it by government takeover. The US passed
an amendment to the Constitution in 1919 that prohibited alcohol completely. However, the
black market sprang up overnight, so the flow of alcohol was never shut off completely.
This shows, says Qutb, that this intoxicant is deeply rooted in society and in the human
mind and that American law moved too quickly, whereas Islam moves gradually as seen in the
First to Third Prohibitions (vol. 3, pp. 151-52; cf. vol. 4, pp. 243-46; see Bukhari,
Virtues of the Quran, vol. 6, no. 4993).
Therefore, so goes Qutbs reasoning, Islams way is better than either the
religious or the secular way in the West.
Before we analyze this dubious second and third defense, Qutb informs us that the
historical results (his fourth explanation) of the Islamic way of prohibition were
miraculous. "Islam, on the other hand, was able to successfully eradicate this
well-entrenched habit, deploying only a few verses of the Quran to do so" (vol.
2, p. 152). His words "on the other hand" mean in opposition to Sweden and the
US.
Also, when the final revelation came down in Sura 5:90-91, Qutb reports on the
miraculous results in these words:
All the Muslims stopped drinking. Once the command was given, all wine containers were
emptied and broken throughout Madinah [Medina]. Indeed, those who were in the process of
drinking did not swallow what was in their mouths when they were informed of the prohibition.
It was, thus, a great triumph for the Quran and its approach. (vol. 3, p. 155).
Qutb writes further: "How did it all happen? How was this miracle, unparalleled in
human history, achieved?" (vol. 3. p. 155; cf. vol. 4, pp. 247-50; see Bukhari,
Sales, vol. 3, no. 2226, Oppressions, vol. 3, no. 2464; Drinks, vol. 7, nos. 5582-5583).
Thus, history demonstrates that the Quranic approach to human frailty is far better
than Western (read: Christian) answers.
The reply to Qutbs utopian description is not difficult. These last three
defenses (the social, psychological and historical) of the Qurans progressive
revelations are contradicted by the brute facts. It may be true that some Muslims stopped
drinking instantaneously after Sura 5:90-91 was sent down (though these reports seem
exaggerated and counterfactual), but all of the Muslims? Indeed, the hadith and later
classical legal rulings (the next two sections) demonstrate that the results were not
always and exclusively positive. Muhammad had to whip alcohol drinkers, and so did the
first generations of Muslims, that is, the companions of Muhammad, like Abu Bakr, Umar,
and Ali. Later jurists then followed their example and decreed the penalty of whipping
drunkards and even light social drinkers. Thus, Islam follows the less-than-ideal results
in the US during Prohibition, after all.
Therefore, Qutb exaggerates the results with his talk of miraculous obedience once
Sura 5:90-91 was announced in the mosque in Medina. More significantly, he misreads
human nature. But why should we blame him too harshly if the original Muslims, including
Muhammad, misread human nature as well, as we will see by their corporal or bodily
punishments of alcoholics or social drinkers, in the hadith and classical legal rulings.
But Qutbs idealistic beliefs that are disconnected from hard facts are also false
according to the Quran and other historical realities. Qutbs "wise" sacred
book bluntly and swiftly lays down the law in one verse about theft: a male or female
thief must get his or her hand chopped off
if he or she steals an object of a certain monetary amount (Sura 5:38). Where is the
gradual approach in this severe punishment? If any punishment needed a measured pace of
which Qutb boasts about drinking and gambling, it is this one because it is irreversible.
It is true that more people drink than steal, but that only describes a social fact.
Besides the sociological, Qutb also divides the subject into the theological,
psychological, and the historical. How is it that Allah knows that theft is wrong in
only one revelation, whereas he seems not to know this about drinking and gambling?
Indeed, at the end of Qutbs analysis of the three verses in three different volumes,
he retreats into the "mystery of Allah" on why the deity left intoxicants
permissible for a while: "God must have had a good reason for leaving it permissible
for a while" (vol. 4, p. 252). Thus, Muslims must not question this or seek an
answer. This retreat demonstrates confusion. Also, how does this non-gradual revelation
about theft accurately read human psychology? It does not.
As to other historical oversights that Qutb engages in, he misses the fact that Islam
is an expansionist religion, and history demonstrates that it marched out of Arabia with
armies in the background or in the foreground. Wherever it went, it imposed sharia or
Islamic law on the newly conquered territories because it allegedly expresses the best for
humankind or the will of Allah. How is this conquest and imposition of the law about
drinking and gambling a measured approach for the newly conquered who converted to Islam?
Even if a judge were to give the guilty a second chance before he imposes the sentence,
the prohibition is still in the Quran. Therefore, another judge may not show mercy.
Moreover, dhimmis or People of the Book (Jews and Christians) who were treated as
second-class citizens may have been exempt from Islamic law in this matter, depending on
the region. So why do they get to drink and gamble? Regardless, surely Muslims do not
believe that converts to Islam reach sinless perfection instantaneously. Yet, the law
against drinking and gambling is not imposed on them in stages; it is already in the
Quran, and they are supposed to obey its final form. In fact, the hadith and the classical
legal rulings (the next two sections) indicate that Islamic societies had to deal (and
have to deal) with these problems, just as western societies did (and do). The links in
the introduction to this article demonstrates this. Such is human nature world over. The
Quran for them is not "sensitive" and "gentle" towards their psyche or
society, as Qutb erroneously would have us believe.
In short, Qutb overlooks too many facts, so his defense of progressive revelations by
dividing the subject up into the four fields of theology, sociology, psychology, and
history fails to make a sound case. The Quran and its divine inspirer misread human
nature, and so does its commentator, Qutb.
Egypt was Qutbs homeland. Here is a
webpage that advertises an Egyptian casino in Cairo.
This page
advertises one too, with a fully stocked bar. This
page also tells foreigners where to go for bars and pubs. Though these places are designed
for foreigners, do all Egyptian Muslims avoid these establishments? As we will see in the
section "Classical legal rulings," below, drinking alcohol during Umars
reign (a companion of Muhammad) became "excessive."
To conclude this section, the Quran takes the long route in the sandy desert to decree
that intoxicants and gambling are sins. Sura 4:43 seems to imply that a Muslim is allowed
to get drunk, but not during forced prayer times. This means that after he says his last
prayers in the evening, he can open a container of alcohol. Qutb argues that this shows
the wisdom of his sacred book because it gradually imposes divine law on recalcitrant
humans, but he fails to factor in historical reality, and he misreads human psychology
and society. Theologically, this gradual, changing revelation puts the deity who inspired
the Quran in a difficult position. He too misreads human nature. What does this say about
Muhammads capacity to be rightly guided? It is better to lay down the law
immediately so that humans can know where they stand and obey or disobey the standard. It
should not float around in the air, confusing people. However, it must be said that Sura
5:90-91 does come down strong, though belatedly, on two potential vices, and that many
Christians, especially in the American South, would agree with these two verses.
But no one of a sober mind would agree with the Islamic punishments for alcoholism and
one punishment for gambling, seen in the hadith and classical legal rulings.
The Hadith
The hadith are the reports of Muhammads words and actions outside of the Quran.
The three most reliable hadith collectors and editors are Bukhari (d. 870), Muslim (d. 875),
and Abu Dawud (d. 875). The Quran and the hadith are the foundations for later legal rulings.
This section deals first with drinking and then with gambling.
Statements on intoxicants are found throughout the hadith. For example, Muhammad
announced the prohibition in the mosque, presumably Sura 5:90-91, or perhaps all three
Quranic passages at different times (Bukhari, Prayers, vol. 1, no. 459; Sales, vol. 3,
no. 2226; Commentary, vol. 6, nos. 4541-4543).
Also, Ali, Muhammads cousin, recounts a hadith that shows him about to marry
Fatima, Muhammads daughter by his first wife Khadija. Hamza, Muhammads uncle,
was drunk, and a singing girl egged him on to go after Alis two fat she-camels.
Hamza cut off their two humps and cut their flanks open. Ali told Muhammad, and the
prophet scolded his uncle. But when Muhammad realized that "Hamza was drunk, he
retreated, walking backwards, went out and we left with him" (Bukhari, Military
Expeditions, vol. 5, no. 4003). Muhammad backpedaled. Ali and Fatima were married about
two years after the Hijrah, so did Muhammad decree in Sura 2:219 that intoxicants were
sinful / beneficial at that time? Since he seems reluctant to enforce this verse against
his uncle, it may have been revealed after this embarrassing episode. Or maybe
Allahs revelation in Sura 2:219 was too unclear to interpret firmly, if it was
revealed before this shameful behavior of a Muslim hero.
These and other anecdotes have an interesting character all by themselves, but we
instead focus on the punishments for intoxication and gambling, though the hadith and
later classical rulings do not have as much to say on gambling as they do on drunkenness.
Bukharis hadith collection says that in beating a drunk, palm leaf stalks and
shoes can be used. But Abu Bakr, a close companion of Muhammad, uses another implement,
the lash.
The Prophet beat a drunk with palm-leaf stalks and shoes. And Abu Bakr gave (such a
sinner) forty lashes. (Bukhari, Punishments, vol. 8, 6776)
Abu Bakr uses a lash. The words "such a sinner" are not original in Arabic,
but are supplied by the translator Muhammad Muhsin Khan and his team. But Islam wrongly
punishes the alcoholic as a criminal, even a light drinker who does not get drunk (this is
possible).
This poor "criminal" was brought to Muhammad who became angry:
The Prophet felt it hard (was angry) and ordered all those who were present in the
house, to beat him [the drunkard dragged into Muhammads presence]. (Bukhari,
Punishments, nos. 6774-6775)
Thus, we see no offer of help for the alcoholic, when he is dragged before Muhammad.
Later traditions say that Muhammad could perform miraclesthough the Quran never
mentions a miracle apart from the existence of Quran itself, a miracle, but which is
a weak criterion, as this article demonstrates.
Why could not a miracle transformation take place for this and other drunks? Why does
he not offer rehabilitation? Why does he always seem to go immediately to corporal
punishment?
Next, this passage says that Umar raised the number of lashes from forty to eighty if
the drunkard becomes mischievous and disobedient. Along with Abu Bakr, Umar no longer used
makeshift instruments like shoes and clothing, but a lash.
. . . We used to strike the drunks with our hands, shoes, and clothes (by twisting
it into a rope in the shape of lashes) during the lifetime of the Prophet, Abu Bakr [ruled
632-634] and the early part of Umars caliphate [ruled 634-644]. But during the last
period of Uthmans caliphate [ruled 644-656], he used to give the drunk forty lashes;
and when drunks became mischievous and disobedient, he used to scourge them eighty lashes
(Bukhari, Punishments, no. 6779)
Sometimes the hadith contradict each other. This one misses the fact that Abu Bakr used
a lash (see no. 6776, above).
Muslim is the second hadith collector and editor discussed in our analysis.
In the section titled "Prescribed Punishment for (Drinking) Wine," he begins
with the prophet and Abu Bakr whipping a drunkard forty times with two lashes:
He [Muhammad] gave him forty stripes with two lashes, Abu Bakr did that, but when
Umar (assumed the responsibilities) of the Caliphate, he consulted people and Abd al-Rahman
said: the mildest punishment (for drinking) is eighty (stripes) and Umar prescribed this
punishment. (no. 4226)
It is easy to see how the traditions in Bukhari overlap somewhat with this one in
Muslim. It seems Muhammad would not use only hands, shoes, or wound-up clothes, but a
special lash or whip. See Muslim no. 4228, which parallels Bukhari more closely, still
concluding that eighty stripes is an acceptable penalty.
Finally, Abu Dawud is the third hadith collector and editor.
He agrees with Bukhari and Muslim, so we do not need to repeat his traditions here.
However, he does record the decree that if a drunkard repeats his crime four times, Allah
will make him drink the "[D]ischarge of wounds flowing from the inhabitants of
Hell" in the afterlife (no. 3673). He also says that if a man dies who is addicted to
drink, he will not taste wine in Islamic heaven (no. 3671; cf. Bukhari, Drinks, vol. 7.
no. 5575). Islamic heavenly wine does not impact the head with inebriation, so apparently
the earthly drunkard is missing quite a heavenly treat. Would he be willing to give up his
earthly delights for a heavenly gain? It is a lot better than drinking hellish pus.
However, Abu Dawud finds the early Muslims raising the penalty to the ultimate degree:
The Apostle of Allah [said]: If they (the people) drink wine, flog them, again if they
drink wine, flog them. Again if they drink it, kill them. (no. 4467; cf.
4468-4470)
The translator of Abu Dawud provides a footnote that says this ultimate punishment was
abrogated by a tradition recorded by Tirmidhi (d. 892), a student of Bukhari, presumably
in a passage like the following from Tirmidhi:
Jabir reported the Prophet as saying: "Beat anyone who drinks wine, and if he
does it a fourth time kill him." He said that after that a man who had drunk wine
four times was brought to the Prophet and he beat him, but did not kill him.
(Miskhat al-Masabih, trans. James Robson, vol. 1, Punishments, Chapter 4, p. 771.)
Does this text give permission for the death penalty or not? The words say yes, but the
example says no. Abu Dawud offers four passages that allow the death penalty (4467-4470);
however, no. 4470 says in one clause that "the punishment of killing (for drinking)
was repealed." As we saw in the three stages of Quranic revelations, what does this
change in the hadith say about Muhammads capacity to be rightly guided? Should a
major religion even "flirt" with the death penalty for the sin of drinking wine
four times? Any sober-minded observer, whose mind has not been drunk on a lifetime of
devotion to Islam, must answer no.
According to Abu Dawuds report, intoxicants are prohibited in even small amounts:
Jabir . . . reported the Apostle of Allah . . . as saying: If a large amount of
anything causes intoxication, a small amount of it is prohibited. (no. 3673)
This reasoning may be accurate for an alcoholic who must not touch a single drop if he
is to stay sober. But extreme cases make bad policy for the rest of humanity. If a little
wine is enjoyed, for example, during a meal, and does not at all intoxicate the drinker
(this is possible), then the sin of drunkenness is not committed. We will see in the next
section that some Islamic jurists make the distinction between taking in a little
fermented beverages and drunkenness. But generally Islam takes things to extremes,
especially in punishing people. So why should we be surprised if Islam prohibits even a
single drop of fermented beverages? This extreme is its own version of holiness. However,
we do not need to quibble over this, when the bigger problem in Islam is how it punishes
drinkersexcessively, which is never just.
Before leaving this section, we should mention gambling, which the hadith does not deal
with in detail, compared to intoxication. Not even the conservative scholar Maududi, who
knew Islamic law well, offers us hadith passages or later legal rulings on gambling.
We should note carefully the wording in this hadith edited by Bukhari:
. . . and whoever says to his companions, "Come let me gamble," then he
must give something in charity (as an expiation of such a sin). (Good Manners, vol. 8,
no. 6107; cf. Oaths and Vows, vol. 8, no. 6650; Asking Permission, vol. 8, no. 6301, which
says, "Come, let us gamble!")
As we will see, a later jurist notes that a man is required to give to charity to
expiate for his sins even for uttering the words, "Come let me (or us) gamble!"
What if he and his friends actually engage in gambling?
Muslim repeats Bukharis hadith (no. 4041), and Abdul Hamid Siddiqi, the
translator of Muslim, adds this footnote, in the context of a man swearing by two Arab
gods Lat and Uzza and telling his friends to gamble with him. He must repent in this way:
[He] should give Sadaqa [charitable gift] making amends of the wrong done by him.
According to Imam Abu Hanifa [a major jurist; see next section], it is imperative to
expiate his sin as laid down in the Shariah by feeding ten poor men, or clothing ten
deserving persons or observing three fasts. The other jurists are of the view that Sadaqa
is enough, no matter what its amount or measure is. (note 2087)
One of the deficiencies in Islam is that a Muslim must pay for his own sins. Where does
this end? How can he be assured of getting into heaven? Taking a trip to Mecca? What about
all the Muslims who are unable to do this, especially before modern transportation? In
Christianity, per contra, Jesus pays for the sins of his followers by his death on the
cross. All they have to do is believe in him, and then they are on their way to heaven.
However, it is one thing to make material restitution for ones sins, say, in the
case of theft (restitution is good), but it is quite another to "expiate"
ones sins by self-effort to ensure access to heaven.
But we should not complain too loudly about this practice of giving charity for merely
suggesting gambling, apart from actually doing it. Charity is a lot better than corporal
punishment, getting whipped forty or eighty stripes. But is the gambler totally exempt
from a beating? The next section answers this question.
To sum up this section, Muhammad and his companions in the hadith punished wine
drinkers with forty to eighty lashes. At first, hands, shoes, or wound-up clothes were
used, but they were quickly replaced with a lashand perhaps a lash was used at the
same time that hands, shoes or clothes were, but lashes or canes seem to be the implement
of choice today. Next, Muhammad even decreed that if the drunkard violated the Quran four
times or more, he should be killed. Fortunately for wine drinkers in those days (and all
of them today), this decree was repealed. The change from the death penalty for alcoholics
to whipping them questions Muhammads wisdom and capacity to be rightly guided.
Finally, the hadith does not detail how to penalize gambling. It says that the gambler
should expiate his sins by giving to charity, for merely suggesting that he and his
friends should play games of chance, quite apart from actually playing them. How should he
be punished if he actually commits this sin? Unclarity, not clarity, rules Islam on this.
Consequently, the legal rulings will be sparse and unclear, as well.
Classical legal rulings
Sharia means the body of Islamic law rooted in the Quran and the hadith; fiqh means the
science of interpreting and applying this law, done by qualified Islamic judges and legal
scholars. Over the first two centuries after Muhammads death in AD 632, four main
Sunni schools of fiqh emerged, led by these scholars: Malik (d. 795), who lived in Medina,
Arabia; Abu Hanifa (d. 767), who lived in Kufa, Iraq; Shafi (d. 820), who lived mostly in
Mecca, Arabia, but who was buried in Cairo, Egypt; and Ibn Hanbal (d. 855) who lived in
Baghdad, Iraq. They base their legal opinions and rulings on the Quran and the hadith.
We examine the opinions of some of these schools in law books and manuals that summarize
earlier opinions.
A brief law book from the Medieval Age, A Sunni Shafi Law Code (trans. Anwar
Ahmed Qadri, Lahore: Sh. Muhammad Ashraf, 1984), says the following:
If any persons drinks wine or any other intoxicating thing, its hudd [legal
punishment] is forty stripes, and it is lawful that by means of tazir or discretionary
punishment, to bring it to eighty stripes. The hudd becomes obligatory upon the
drunkard, by two causes: if proved by witnesses [translators note: by one man and
one womans evidence and by only two women witnesses . . .], or by confession (p. 119).
Thus, this ruling agrees with the hadith: forty stripes. It is revealing of womens
rights even today that two female witnesses count for only one male witness. Can Islam
reform and rewrite classical fiqh?
Another Shafi law book, Reliance of the Traveler: A Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred
Law, (rev. ed., trans. Nuh Ha Mim Keller, Beltsville, Maryland: Amana, 1994), compiled
in the Medieval Age, says that the following criteria must be obtained before imposing the
punishment of forty to eighty stripes: (a) he drinks; (b) he has reached puberty; (c) he
is sane; (d) he is a Muslim; (e) he does so voluntarily; (f) and he knows it is unlawful
(p. 617, o16.0). The manual also notes that if the offender dies from forty stripes an
indemnity is due for his death. If the caliph increases the penalty to eighty stripes and
the offender dies, the ruler is required to pay an indemnity (p. 617 o16.0) According to
this report,
in Iran a teenage boy broke his Ramadan fast, so a judge sentenced him to be lashed with
eighty-five stripes. He died from the punishment. This shows that lashing can be fatal.
As for gambling, this same Shafi manual says that "every game played by two or
more people that relies on luck, conjecture, and guessing is unlawful, no matter whether
money is stipulated or not." However, if the games assist in jihad, such as target
practice with bows and arrows, then they are legal (p. 453, k30.0). How can anyone deny
the depth of jihad in classical Islam? But the manual is unclear as to the punishment for
gambling. It recalls the hadith passages that say that if a man merely suggests with words
that he and his friends should gamble, he is to expiate for his sin by giving to charity.
The manual in turn asks rhetorically: "If merely saying this is a sin that calls for
charity in expiation, what must one suppose about actually doing it? It is a form of
consuming others wealth through falsehood" (p. 697, p72.0). The category
of taking peoples property through falsehood includes highway robbery, which can be
punished by crucifixion or mutilation, and theft, which is punished by mutilation (p. 666, p20.0).
The gamblers who got caned in Indonesia should be grateful for their punishment. It could
have been a lot worse.
Imam Malik composed a law book that is also considered a collection of reliable hadith:
Al-Muwatta of Imam Malik ibn Anas: The First Formation of Islamic Law (rev. trans.
Aisha Bewley, Inverness, Scotland: Madina Press, 1989, 2001). He reviews the hadith (see
previous section) and concludes that forty to eighty lashes should be administered. Malik
cites a hadith that says that when a drunk talks confusedly, he tells lies. So Umar,
Muhammads close companion, imposed eighty lashes on the analogy that a slanderer got
eighty lashes. Finally, a Muslim receives the punishment for drinking "whether or not
he becomes drunk" (p. 355, 42.1). This fails to distinguish between moderation and
drunkenness.
Malik prescribes a beating for games of dice: "Yahya related to me . . . from
Abdullah ibn Umar that when he found one of his family members playing dice, he beat
him and destroyed the dice" (p. 402, 52.2.7). This punishment here is imposed
within a family, but apparently it can also be imposed on the general populace, as
this article
in the introduction demonstrates.
For the other schools of law, we use the compendium of Ibn Rushd, known in the West as
Averro雜 (d. 1198). By far he is the most thorough compiler and editor of legal opinions.
He was a judge, medical doctor, and scientist, but he pursued his career mostly as a judge
in Spain, where Islam ruled from the eighth century to the fifteenth. He was buried in
Cordova. His two-volume work, The Distinguished Jurists Primer, (trans. Imran
Ahsan Khan Nyazee, Center for Muslim Contribution to Civilization, Reading, UK: Garnet,
1994-1996), took over twenty years to write. Bringing together the first three schools of
law and an assortment of other legal opinions, Ibn Rushd provides a foundation in Islamic
law for judges and legal scholars throughout the Islamic world, where it is still used
today.
Ibn Rushd follows the hadith closely in his summary of jurists, so we do not need
to repeat them here. But he notes two interesting tidbits. First, the jurists of Iraq
(the schools of Abu Hanifa and of Ibn Hanbal) say that in the case of other intoxicants
(fermented beverages) besides wine "only the act of intoxication is prohibited"
. . . (vol. 2, pp. 534-35). Though this disagrees with a hadith that says even a little
intoxicants are prohibited, this permission is reasonable and implies that at least a few
jurists make a distinction between drinking moderately and drunkenness. This is exactly
how the Bible, both Old and New Testaments, come down on the issue of alcoholmaking
a distinction between moderate drinking by which a person may still retain all of his
faculties, and drunkenness. Second, Ibn Rushd says that the majority of jurists cites
the rulership of Umar during which "the drinking of khamr [wine] in his times
became excessive" (vol. 2, p. 535), so eighty stripes were imposed. This rejects
Sayyid Qutbs ridiculous claim that Islam enjoyed a miracle of prohibition as soon
as the third decree in Sura 5:90-91 was read from the mosque. This also denies the
unsupportable belief that Islamic societies are pure and holy in the matter of
intoxication. It is simply impossible to absolutely stop human vices by outside force,
ultimately. See "Supplemental material," below.
To summarize this section, the classical jurists followed the hadith closely for
intoxication. One school distinguishes between drinking moderately and drunkenness. This
is a reasonable distinction because if someone drinks only a little drop of fermented
beverage, he will not become inebriated, so the sin does not take place. However, this
reasonable ruling disagrees with an excessive and irrational hadith that says that even a
little wine is a sin, whether or not it causes drunkenness, so it elicits forty stripes at
least. Gambling was not dealt with thoroughly and clearly, except that an uncertain amount
of charity expiates an offenders sins, even if he suggests only verbally that he and
his friends should gamble. Malik says that a member of a family was beaten in early Islam.
This family member had a light sentence. On the analogy that gambling is like taking property
through falsehood, which in some cases could bring death or mutilation, he could have been
severely punished. He should be grateful for merely a beating.
Before moving on to the Biblical view on alcohol and gambling, we should take stock of
the last three sections. The Quran goes through confusing stages before it reaches the
conclusion that the two practices are sinful. First it says that alcohol is sinful and
beneficial (Sura 2:219). Then it allows drunkenness, but not during forced prayer times
(Sura 4:43). Finally it prohibits drinking and gambling (Sura 5:90-91). However, it is one
thing for a religion to prohibit these two practicesthat is a religions
prerogative. But it is quite another if it punishes sinners with whippings. Then it goes
too far. Islam seems always to go for physical punishments in order to transform society,
but Islamic societies are still not pure and pristine. Why does it not offer help for the
sinner in its origins and in his heart?
Christianity
Jesus offers to freely help all those who ask him. He does not flog sinners or the
needy. Not even the Old Testament, which can impose harsh laws, commands physical
punishment for drunkenness.
The Old Testament
The Old Testament on alcohol is clear. It allows people to drink, but only in
moderation. It condemns drunkenness. Gambling will be analyzed in the section
"Application," below.
The New International Version of the Bible is used in this section and the next one.
First, the Torah demonstrates that drunkenness leads to all sorts of troubles,
so one should not do it. Genesis recounts two stories of Biblical patriarchs who got
drunkno, these passages have not been corrupted, as so many Muslims assert because
they misguidedly believe that a prophet has to be sinlessly perfect. Biblical passages
that reveal sin and weakness in even a Bible hero teach us that when we sin, we too can be
forgiven and still serve God. They comfort us. Be that as it may, Noah got drunk after the
Flood, and this causes family troubles (Genesis 9:18-29). The inference is clear: do not
get drunk, and the family will experience a lot less heartache. Drunkenness in another
family causes troubles. Lots daughters got their father drunk and committed sexual
sins with him (Genesis 19:30-38). This passage teaches society that inebriation is wrong,
and the verses also illustrate by means of a story that the sin of incest is wrong, as the
Torah commands elsewhere (Leviticus 18:1-30). The third example from the Torah concerns
family troubles as well. When a son becomes rebellious, the parents are to take him before
the elders and tell them about their sons lifestyle, which includes drunkenness:
"This son of ours is stubborn and rebellious. He will not obey us. He is a profligate
and a drunkard" (Deuteronomy 21:20). It must be emphasized that the son is not being
punished for drinking, but for rebellion of which drinking plays only one part. If he were
in rebellion without drinking, he would still be punished. The fourth example is seen when
the ancient Hebrews deviated from Moses and the Ten Commandments and bowed down to the
golden calf. After sacrificing to it, "they sat down to eat and drink and got up to
indulge in revelry" (Exodus 32:6).
The Torah is therefore clear: drunkenness is wrong.
Perhaps the most picturesque passage that condemns inebriation comes from Proverbs. Who
has woes? Who has sorrow? Who has strife and complaints? Who has needless bruises and
bloodshot eyes? Proverbs asks and answers these questions in Chapter 23:
30 Those who linger over wine, who go to sample bowls of mixed wine. 31 Do
not gaze at wine when it is red, when it sparkles in the cup, when it goes down smoothly!
32 In the end it bites like a snake and poisons like a viper. 33 Your eyes will
see strange sights and your mind imagine confusing things. 34 You will be like one
sleeping on the high seas, lying on top of the rigging. 35 "They will hit
me," you will say, "but Im not hurt! They will beat me, but I dont
feel it! When will I wake up so I can find another drink?" (cf. Proverbs 20:21
and 23:20-21)
This drunkard is far gone. He lingers over wine, so he is past moderation and into
excess, which is never right.
If the reader would like to see these and other passages on the sin of drunkenness, go to
this website or this
one and type in the following: 1 Samuel 1:13-14; 25:36; 2 Samuel 11:13; 1 Kings 16:9, 20:16;
Psalm 69:12; Ecclesiastes 10:17; Isaiah 19:14, 24:20, 28:1-3; Jeremiah 13:13, 25:27; Ezekiel 23:33;
Joel 1:5.
But the Hebrew Bible also says that alcohol in moderation without drunkenness is
allowed. In fact, in one ceremonial offering in the Torah wine is commandedthe drink
offering of a quarter of a hin [a hin is four quarts or four liters] of wine. "With the first
lamb offer . . . a quarter of a hin of wine as a drink offering" (Exodus 29:40; cf.
Leviticus 23:13; Numbers 15:5-10, 28:7). Numbers 28:7 clarifies that the drink offering is
fermented, so it is not merely grape juice. Here the Old Testament also allows wine in
moderation. Ecclesiastes says: "Go, eat your food with gladness, and drink your wine
with a joyful heart, for it is now that God favors what you do (9:7). Wine is not
intrinsically sinful, but its misuse is.
To sum up this section, the Hebrew Bible has a grownup outlook on alcohol. It may be
enjoyed in moderation and is commanded even in a religious ceremony, but as soon as someone
lurches over into drunkenness, then it becomes wrong. This is a realistic approach to human
nature. Many humans can control themselves, so they should not be penalized because of the few
who cannot. These latter ones must be curtailed. They must be told that drunkenness is wrong,
but the Old Testament, which can mete out the death penalty for crimes other than first degree
murder, does not say that the drunkard should even be whipped, not to mention be executed.
But what kind of help does the Bible offer the needy? We answer this question in the
"Application" section, below.
The New Testament
The New Testament is in complete agreement with the older sacred text. It denounces
drunkenness, but permits moderate drinking.
Jesus himself says that drunkenness is wrong. In the context of a parable on watchfulness
while the master is away, he describes the opposite of a vigilant person who says to himself:
"My master is taking a long time in coming." Then the unwatchful man began to abuse
those under his authority "and to eat and drink and get drunk" (Luke 12:45).
The words "eating and drinking and drunkenness" are another way of saying in this
context "throwing parties" and "carousing" to the neglect of duties.
This is excessive, so it is wrong. Next, in the context of Jesus teachings on the Last
Days, he warns his disciples: "Be careful, or your hearts will be weighed down with
dissipation, drunkenness, and the anxieties of life" (Luke 21:34). The Greek word
translated as "dissipation" means not only drunkenness but also carousing, which
agrees with Luke 12:45. This too is excessive and therefore wrong.
But Jesus shows us that wine per se is not wrong if it is used in moderation. For
example, he elevated the bread and the wine (called the "fruit of the vine")
during the Last Supper, at the very least symbolizing his body and blood, which he
sacrificed on the cross for the sins of the world (Matt. 26:26-30; Luke 22:14-23). So
during this holy moment, wine was drunk moderately. Next, Jesus attended a wedding in Cana
in Galilee. The party ran out of wine, so he turned the water in six large stone jars into
wine, apparently of high quality, which the master of the ceremonies noted to the
bridegroom (John 2:1-11). Going to this party agrees with his practice of spending time
and even befriending "tax collectors and sinners" and those who drank fermented
beverages; in fact he was falsely accused of being "a glutton and drunkard," as
opposed to John the Baptist, who as a Nazirite (see Numbers 6:2) was therefore placed
under special restrictions to stay away from alcohol and other things (Luke 7:31-35; Matt.
11:16-19). So Jesus does not whip drinkers of alcohol (as Muhammad did); instead he seeks
to convert them by befriending them.
The early church after the Resurrection of Jesus followed his example, for the New
Testament authors permit some alcohol, but condemn drunkenness. Paul says that drunkards
will not inherit the kingdom of God, but when they repent, they are gladly welcomed into
it. They receive the Holy Spirit sent from Jesus so that they have the power to stay sober
(1 Corinthians 6:9-11). Next, Paul tells his disciple Timothy that he should "stop
drinking only water, and use a little wine because of your stomach and your frequent
illnesses" (1 Timothy 5:23), but he also says to the Romans that they should walk in
the light and not get drunk and commit other sins (Romans 13:13). Finally, Paul says that
Christians should "not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery [carousing].
Instead, be filled with the Spirit" (Ephesians 5:18). The connection between wine and
the Spirit is similar to what happened on the Day of Pentecost when Jesus sent his Spirit
to his disciples. They were so deeply filled with the Spirit that they appeared as if they
were drunk on wine (Acts 2:1-15). In these examples, drunkenness is denounced, but wine in
moderation is allowed, and this agrees not only with Jesus, but also with the Torah.
The connection between wine and the Spirit is a sound one, because Christianity offers
the unbeliever or the confused believer something better than natural chemicals: the Holy
Spirit. And this is what is precisely missing in Islam, which has reduced the Holy Spirit
to the archangel Gabriel, according to traditional Muslim theology. Thus, Muslims do not
receive the Spirit to help them with their problems and change them from the inside out.
Instead, Islam offers people a diluted old-new law and harsh punishments for stepping out
of line and for "curing" their problems.
Application
One of the core differences between Christianity and Islam in ethical matters is that
Christianity offers a spiritual transformation from the inside out, whereas Islam offers
an old-new law and punishes people with whips and stones. After publishing these harsh
rules for the general populace, it scares people into obedience once the sentence is
handed down to punish drinkers and gamblers.
The difference can be seen most clearly in this
recovery program
organized by Willow Creek Church near Chicago, Illinois. This church is one of the largest
in the US. Only three steps out of the twelve are listed here that help alcoholics recover
from their addiction.
STEP ONE is about recognizing our brokenness. We admitted we were powerless over the
effects of our separation from God that our lives had become unmanageable.
I know nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the desire
to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out (ROMANS 7:18)
STEP THREE involves a decision to let God be in charge of our lives. [We] made a
decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.
Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of Gods mercy, to offer your bodies
as living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God which is your spiritual worship.
(ROMANS 12:1)
STEP EIGHT involves examining our relationships and preparing ourselves to make amends.
[We] made a list of all persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all.
Do to others as you would have them do to you. (LUKE 6:31)
From these three out of twelve steps, the two inferences can be drawn. First,
Christianity does not prescribe physical punishments for sin, unlike Islam. Second, the
Biblical verses demonstrate an inner transformation by fellowship, love and the Spirit.
These two points stand in stark contrast to Islam, which flogs the alcoholic and does not
offer the Spirit.
Finally, the Bible guides the church today on dealing with gambling. The early church
needed guidance on specific issues that came up as the churches spread out over the
Greco-Roman world and even beyond. This is seen in the New Testaments clarity on
alcohol. There was a problem, so the leaders addressed it. But the New Testament authors
did not have to deal with gambling as such, so they do not go into detail as to how to
deal with it. (This is different from Muhammads case, who had to deal with it, but
he does so confusedly or sparsely.) However, Biblical principles can be gleaned from the
sacred text to decide on gambling. This
webpage has at least three principles that a believer must consider, as follows.
First, "God is the ultimate owner of all earthly possessions. The psalmist
observed that the Lord owns the cattle on a thousand hills (Psalm 50:10). The Apostle
James wrote that every good and perfect gift comes from God (James 1:17)." This means
that God controls our finances. He gives us the physical strength and intelligence to earn
our money. So gambling away his gifts is suspect. Second, Jesus said we should be good
stewards or managers of the resources he has entrusted to us (Luke 12:42; 16:10-11). Is
gambling the best way to be responsible with Gods money? Third, many worthwhile
charities need our help. In 2 Corinthians 8-9, Paul speaks of an offering for the poor
Christians in the Jerusalem church. He compliments the Corinthian church for excelling
in their "faith, in speech, in knowledge, in complete earnestness, and in [their]
love for [Paul and his team]see that you excel in this grace of giving"
(2 Corinthians 8:7). If the Corinthians had wasted their money on gambling, how would
they have enough to give to the needy?
This superb article
has a nuanced discussion on gambling. It defines compulsive gambling and asks twenty
questions to find out if anyone suffers in this way. It also answers the question: is
gambling a sin? It lays out criteria that a believer should ask himself and then answers
questions without being judgmental.
Conclusion
Many devout Christians, especially in the American South, believe that drinking and
gambling are sins, regardless of the context or the amount. They would have no problem
with the Quran in Sura 5:90-91. This is their prerogative. However, no Christian can claim
Biblical support for whipping and beating drinkers and gamblers. Instead, these Christians
seek to help the needy.
This is the core problem with the example of Muhammad in the hadith and often in the
Quran itself, the eternal word of Allah. He and his deity seem always to turn to physical
punishments to transform society, like chopping off a hand of a male and female thief or
cutting off a hand and a foot of a highway robber or flogging someone who even swallows a
small amount of alcohol or flogging fornicators and stoning adulterers. It is difficult to
find passages that demonstrate Muhammad healing and restoring the sinner without chopping
off his hand or bruising his back.
This is not the case with Jesus. In his life he showed his followers how to help the
sinner from the inside out. He sends the Spirit into his life to help and restore him. He
also provides many Biblical principles in his inspired Word to show his followers how to
help someone, not drag him before a court to see him flogged.
But does this mean that society should have no laws governing inebriated persons in
public? Of course not. Laws should punish, for example, drunk driversbut not with
flogging. They should pay off their debt to society, for instance, by working alongside
the freeway picking up trash, getting their drivers license revoked, or spending
time in rehabilitation programs (or all three).
Whatever the case, Jesus sends his followers into prisons and elsewhere to help them
(Matthew 25:31-46).
Jesus saves. Muhammad flogged.
Supplemental material
In private emails to me or on websites, Muslim polemicists claim that the Islamic way
of dealing with vices is superior to the western way, even in Islams punishments
like flogging and stoning. Some of these apologists go so far as to assert that the
mission of Jesus failed, so Muhammad and his mission must take over. It is true that the
West is filled with sin because many have rejected the way of Jesus. But are Islamic
countries pure and pristine through and through, as these Muslim apologists imply? To
anyone who understands human nature, the answer to this rhetorical question is obvious.
As noted in the introduction, in 2003 a man was accused
in Saudi Arabia for smuggling alcohol. Assuming the accusation is true (and that is a big
assumption in Saudi Arabia), does anyone of a sound and sober mind believe that he is
the only one to do this? Surely other smugglers are at work, but they have not yet been
caught and their stories have not made it into the press.
In case the readers missed the following links in the section "the Quran," above,
here they are again. This
webpage advertises an Egyptian casino in Cairo.
This page advertises
one too, with a fully stocked bar. This
page also tells foreigners where to go for bars and pubs. Though these places are designed
for foreigners, do all Egyptian Muslims avoid these establishments? What about the owners
and those who work there? As we saw in the section "Classical legal rulings,"
drinking alcohol during Umars reign (a companion of Muhammad) became "excessive."
This was an ongoing problem in Islam; otherwise, the later judges would not have been forced
to rule on the problem or "crime."
This analysis
(scroll down to section 2.5) reports: Three Muslims . . . "were sentenced in June
2001 to 1,500 lashes each in addition to 15 years imprisonment. All were convicted
on drug charges. The floggings are carried out at a rate of 50 lashes every six months for
the whole duration of 15 years." Are these the only three men in Saudi Arabia to use
drugs?
The links in the introduction to this present article demonstrate that surely other
drinkers and gamblers exist in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Nigeria, and Indonesia. These countries
have millions of citizens. So who can reasonably conclude that the offenders reported in
the linked articles are the only ones? They are the only ones to get caught and to have
their stories make it into the press.
This article
says that Bahrain, an island and independent state that is connected to Saudi Arabia by
a bridge, provides a "breathing lung" for Saudis because this Islamic island
allows the free flow of alcohol and a night life. The words "breathing lung" in
Bahrain mean that Saudi Arabia suffocates people. On the weekends an average of 40,000
cars line up to cross the bridge.
This article
discusses the smuggling of alcohol in Saudi Arabia and says: "Western analysts note
that alcohol smuggling of the magnitude underway in Saudi Arabia -- perhaps tens of
millions of dollars' worth of illegal merchandise annually -- would likely involve
the complicity of Saudi customs agents and perhaps a higher-level patron."
This article
reveals how Iranians get around the official ban on alcohol, like beer and vodka and other
intoxicants, like opium. A black market has sprung upjust like the one in America
during Prohibition.
This article
says that even though the Taliban, the former tyrants who ruled Afghanistan, outlawed the
growth of poppies, which are the source opium, the leaders of the Taliban may have
profited from the drug trade. The new and democratic government has a hard time keeping
this drug under control.
This
article says that authorities in Turkey threaten to imprison online gamblers,
and this page links to
a report (scroll to the second one) that discusses how Turkey must deal with
the problem of monetary interest, alcohol, and gambling. It is revealing to see
how Muslim religious leaders try to squirm out of Quranic laws against interest,
in order to help Islamic financial institutions make money.
The purpose of these links is not to condemn Islamic countries or to assert that
the West is better than they are. Facts say that the West has many problems. Rather,
the purpose is to demonstrate that Islamic countries have their share of problems,
as well. This means that Islamic societies have sinners in them. This means that
Islamic countries are not pure and pristine. This means that Islamic societies have
black markets, just as the US did during Prohibition (and still does with drug smuggling).
This means that Islamic punishments do not work entirely (except by scare tactics),
but they can drive the sin or crime underground.
This is why the ultimate solution to these vices is to change the heart, one soul
at a time, not beat or stone the addicts or sinners. The mission of Muhammad fails
because as a human messenger (Sura 3:144), he could not send the Holy Spirit into
the hearts of people to change them. As the eternal Son of God, Jesus can send
the Spirit into the hearts of all who ask for his help to overcome their sins.
Copyright by James Malcolm Arlandson. Originally published at
americanthinker.com,
this article was revised for Answering Islam.
Articles by James Arlandson
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