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Friday, 06-Aug-2004 11:33 AM
Different set of rules for
Muslims and Christians
I prayed to Jesus Christ years
before I prayed to Allah. Every morning during assembly we recited
the Lord’s Prayer and during the end of year concert we played in
pantomimes about Christ. Why, in one of the concerts I even played
one of the Three Wise Men from the East who visited Christ in the
manger. This was around 1956 when I enrolled in the Alice Smith
School in Kuala Lumpur, a year before Malaya gained Independence
or Merdeka from Britain. In that sense, I was a ‘practicing’
Christian long before I ‘became’ a Muslim, which was not until the
1970s when by then I had married, had kids, and had migrated to
Terengganu where I first met Tok Guru Abdul Hadi Awang, one of those
who taught me all I know about Islam.
Now don’t get me wrong, though
I am proud of the fact Hadi is one of my religious teachers, I still
wear jeans, listen to Bruce Springsteen and The Rolling Stones,
and drink alcohol-free Lager. But this is not the point of my piece
today. What I want to say today is, not many Malays have the advantage
of better-understanding the other major religions and they are ‘blur’
as to what these religions are all about. That makes them pass misguided
judgement on anything non-Islam or non-Muslim.
On 4 August 2004, Malaysian
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi opened the World Council of
Churches meeting in Kuala Lumpur. Many Malays are yet to form an
opinion of this and unlike in the past where such an act by a Muslim,
in particular by the Prime Minister, would have attracted a heated
debate, the response this time around has been very slow. This is
because the majority of Malays do not even know what is the World
Council of Churches. There have, of course, been some meek talk
of whether what Abdullah did; officiating the opening of a Church
meeting; can be considered unIslamic. Some defend Abdullah’s act
as acceptable while others feel it is wrong. But no one has come
forward to strongly argue their case one way or another.
Anyway, while Malaysians, in
particular Malay-Muslims, gather their thoughts on this matter,
maybe I can in the meantime enlighten them on what is the World
Council of Churches.
According to their official
website (http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/who/index-e.html)
‘the World Council of Churches is a fellowship of churches which
confess the Lord Jesus Christ as God and Saviour according to the
scriptures, and therefore seek to fulfil together their common calling
to the glory of the one God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.’ This,
basically, is the Trinity.
The Trinity is the term employed
to signify the central doctrine of the Christian religion -- the
truth that in the unity of the Godhead there are Three Persons;
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit; these Three Persons being
truly distinct one from another. Thus, in the words of the Athanasian
Creed: "the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit
is God, and yet there are not three Gods but one God." In this
Trinity of Persons, the Son is begotten of the Father by an eternal
generation, and the Holy Spirit proceeds by an eternal procession
from the Father and the Son. Yet, notwithstanding this difference
as to origin, the Persons are co-eternal and co-equal: all alike
are uncreated and omnipotent. This, the Church teaches, is the revelation
regarding God's nature which Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came
upon earth to deliver to the world: and which she proposes to man
as the foundation of her whole dogmatic system.
And this is where Islam disagrees
with the Trinity, for Islam regards Jesus as just a Prophet, just
like all the Prophets beginning with Adam and ending with Muhammad,
the last Prophet and one who came after Christ.
The World Council of Churches
is an association of more than 340 churches in over 100 countries
and territories throughout the world, representing some 400 million
Christians from the world's Orthodox churches from the Protestant
Reformation such as Anglican, Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist and Reformed.
However, its ‘rival’, the Roman
Catholics, the ‘original’ Christian faith, is bigger with one billion
followers. And the Catholic Bible differs from that of the Protestant
Bible. The Catholic Church became the Roman Empire's official religion
in 380, before the coming of Muhammad. In 1054, the Eastern Orthodox
Church separated from the Roman Catholic Church, which from that
point on would be identified as the Western Church. In a sense,
the Reformers set up the Western Church in direct opposition to
the Catholic Church -- the term 'Protestant' stressing on antagonism
to Rome.
Another difference is, the
Protestant prays directly to God while the Roman Catholic offer
his prayers through the medium of the Virgin Mary and the saints.
The Christians believe that
Jesus Christ is the only Son of God who was born of the Virgin Mary
and became a man. According to Christian belief, Pontius Pilate
then crucified Christ where he died and was buried. On the third
day he rose again and ascended into heaven.
And this is where Islam, again,
disagrees with the Christians as Islam says Jesus never died and
will one day come back to earth. If he had died he would not be
able to return to earth.
Anyway, back to Abdullah. This
is the first time in history the World Council of Churches’ meeting
has been opened by a Muslim, and a Malaysian Muslim at that. I am
not going to debate whether this is right or wrong for a Muslim
to do, as I am not an ulamak (religious scholar) and only
people better schooled in Islam can pass a fatwa (decree)
on this. But what I would like to question is, by officiating the
meeting, is Abdullah indicating he is recognising the ‘minority’
and ‘breakaway’ Protestants over the ‘majority’ and ‘original’ Christians,
the Catholics?
Now, this is a very sensitive
issue. The Catholics and Protestants have been ‘at war’ for a thousand
years and both regard each other as the ‘deviant’ group. In fact,
in Ireland they are literally at war. Should Abdullah be seen as
taking sides?
Further to that, Malaysia allows
only one branch of the Islamic faith. If I were to profess my belief
in or practice any other branch of ‘unrecognised’ Islam I would
suffer arrest and detention without trial under the Internal Security
Act (ISA). Many a Malaysian Muslim over the ages has seen his freedom
wrenched from him for practicing what the Malaysian government views
as ‘deviant’ Islamic teachings. In this same spirit, which of the
two Christian faiths can be considered as ‘deviant’?
I suppose, now that Abdullah
has officially recognised the Protestants, then the Catholic Church
in Malaysia should be banned, its churches closed down, and its
followers detained under the ISA. If this is what Malaysian Muslims
are subjected to why should the Christians too not suffer the same
consequences? Why are Malaysian Christians free to practice different
brands of Christianity while Malaysian Muslims must only practice
the ‘approved’ brand of Islam? In fact, even the Saudi Arabian brand
of Islam is banned in Malaysia though Saudi Arabia is regarded as
the Hold Land. Is this not a contradiction of sorts? And why does
Malaysia ban the Saudi Arabian brand of Islam and arrest its followers?
And now that Abdullah has called
for better understanding and tolerance between the different faiths
in his speech at the World Council of Churches meeting, should not
the Jews too be given their rightful place in Malaysia? After all,
Jesus and all the Prophets before him, except for four, were Jews.
So what is wrong about recognising the Jews? And should not Abdullah
then also officiate an International Judaism meeting in Kuala Lumpur
just to show fairness and demonstrate he really does want better
interfaith understanding and tolerance?
Yes, certainly food for thought,
is it not? I am not anti-Jew or anti-Christian, but I would like
the same ‘rules’ applied for Muslims, Christians and Jews alike
in the spirit of Abdullah’s better understanding and tolerance,
not one rule for one faith and another for the rest.
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