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Islam and the Political Unification
of Humanity
By: Glen
T. Martin
As
a scholar and philosopher of religion,
I have struggled to come to terms
with the essence of Islam as well
as the other main world religions.
I am interested particularly in
the unities between the religions
as well as the essential differences
of each. Although limited to reading
the Qur’an in English translation,
I have benefited greatly from conversations
with Moslem friends and scholars
in Bangladesh, Pakistan, India,
Turkey, Libya, and Togo and from
reading some of the many good books
available concerning Islam by Islamic
scholars.
In the light of this research, I
have come to agree most with the
great Islamist Frithjof Schuon
(in Understanding Islam ,1963)
regarding the essence of Islam.
(Schuon’s explanation is not significantly
different from many other scholars,
such as Seyyed Hossein Nasr in
Knowledge & the Sacred,
1981). If this understanding is
anywhere near correct, then there
is a wonderful future for Islam
in the 21st century and a key role
for Islam to play in the unification
and liberation of humankind.
Schuon states that Islam is the
“meeting between God as such and
man as such.” God is the Absolute
Reality, the Manifestation (Creator)
of the world, and Reintegration
(or the source of salvation). Humanity
is theomorphic (made in God’s image)
and has both transcendent intelligence
and free will. As such, humanity
is a “dual receptacle” made for
God. Islam was given to humanity
through the Prophet to fill that
receptacle with “the truth of the
Absolute” and “the law of the Absolute.”
The essence of Islam, then, is Truth
and Law. The Truth can fill the
receptacle of human intelligence.
Humans can recognize that God alone
is Absolute and to see the entire
world as a unity in diversity dependent
on God. The Testimony of Faith (Shahadah)
can inform the intelligence and
the Law can fill the receptacle
of the will. The Law (Shari’ah)
can determine the free will of human
beings. When this occurs, our gift
of speech becomes “sacred speech”
and speech becomes prayer. Humans
are lifted to their theomorphic
destiny and to salvation because
our human essence, which was made
as a receptacle for the Absolute,
is now filled, rather than emptied
or distorted, as is often the case
today and throughout history.
Schuon calls this “esoteric” rather
than “exoteric” Islam because it
expresses what he calls the essence
of God and Humanity to which the
revelation through the Prophet was
addressed. “Exoteric” Islam, if
I understand him correctly, would
be to confuse Islam with externals
like controversies over the succession
from the Prophet, the specific form
of practices, or other specific
historical or cultural forms.
Islam is unique and very different
from the other great world religions
I have studied (Buddhism, Hinduism,
Taoism, Judaism, and Christianity).
But I believe this distinction between
an esoteric and exoteric understanding
can be applied to them all with
great fruitfulness and import for
world peace and the future of humanity
on planet Earth. It means, for example,
that none of them have anything
to fear from the rise and development
of science in the modern world.
We know, of course, that during
the thousand years of the Golden
Age of Islamic Civilization that
science was very advanced among
Islamic scholars and thinkers. If
God is Truth, and science systematically
investigates the truth about our
universe, then clearly there can
be no conflict with the Truth of
the Absolute, since the entire world
and everything in it was created
by, and is a manifestation of, the
Absolute.
The great tide of secularism and
relativism that seem to have been
unleashed by the rise of science
is not the consequence of careful
scholarship and the great quest
for truth of the scientists. It
is the consequence of superficial
divisions, ideologies, dogmas, and
cliches (promoted, in part, by commercial
nightmare of exploitative capitalism).
It is not science per se that has
led to the great tide of confusion
in human life but the exoteric divisions
and distortions that human beings
have falsely worshiped (like the
nation-state or exploitative capitalism).
The essence of Islam, understood
esoterically, is magnified by the
developments in historical, scientific,
and scriptural scholarship. After
the discovery of the modern scientific
method in the 17th century by Galileo
and others, many Christian authorities
rejected the new science because
it seemed to remove human beings
from the center of creation. This
rejection continued right to the
present after Darwin published his
famous theory of evolution in 1859.
Human beings were now demoted even
further, it seemed, to products
of an evolutionary process that
made us cousins to monkeys and distant
relatives of earthworms.
But if Islam is the meeting of God
as such and humanity as such, that
is, if Islam points directly to
the essential features of our humanity
in relation to the Absolute and
provides a dynamic by which the
human receptacle can be filled by
the Truth of the Absolute and the
Law of the Absolute, then science
as the quest for truth will never
challenge but can only elaborate
the truth about our theomorphic
situation. All forms of fundamentalism,
whether Hindu, Christian, or Islamic,
are mistaken reactions to the rise
of science. The love of truth, as
manifested in objective scholarship
and research, can only have God’s
blessing.
Islam promotes the unity of humankind
and of truth. All human beings share
the same theomorphic structure revealed
to us by the Qur’an and
the world is an integrated unity
as God’s creative manifestation.
Scholars such as Errol E. Harris
(Cosmos and Theos, 1992)
and Moazziz Ali Beg (The Ideological
Integration of East and West: An
Inquiry Concerning World Peace,
2004) have shown that the amazing
breakthroughs in 20th century physics
also reveal the unity of the world
and humankind. Professor Harris
relates these breakthroughs to Christianity
while Professor Ali Beg relates
them to the powerful tradition of
the Sufis, such as the thought of
the great Sufi thinker Ibn-al Arabi
(1165-1240). Professor Ali Beg eloquently
argues that the principle of the
unity of all being elaborated by
Ibn-al Arabi is the same principle
of fundamental unity in the universe
revealed by contemporary micro-physics
and Einsteinian relativity physics.
The world of the 21st century is
torn apart by ethnic, cultural,
religious, ideological, national,
racial, and economic divisions and
differences. This fragmentation
threatens the very future of humanity
in a world with an exploding population,
rampant militarism, a disintegrating
environment, and massive poverty.
This fragmentation is the result
of two gigantic failures on the
part of human beings (1) the failure
to go beyond the exoteric response
to existence (which takes superficial
aspects of the world as fundamental
realities) and (2) the failure to
challenge and move beyond the centuries
old fragmented institutions dominating
human existence – exploitative capitalism
and the “sovereign” nation-state.
To address the first of these failures
requires the education of humanity
to see what is essential about human
life and the universe. Treatises
like those of Schuon, Harris, Ali
Beg, and Ibn-Al Arabi address this
need. To address the second of these
failures requires that we understand
that it is an affront to reality
(to God’s world and God’s theomorphic
humanity) to divide the world into
some 190 competing “sovereign” political
entities, each with its own military,
self-interest, and self-promotion
as a focus. The result is the international
chaos we have seen throughout the
20th century that led to the deaths
of approximately 125 million people
during that period from wars and
the consequences of wars. The system
of sovereign nation-states promotes
division and falsehood among human
beings.
The political madness of dividing
humanity into 190 independent political
entities is compounded by the global
economic system of the past five
centuries that promotes private
greed and self-interest at the expense
of human cooperation for the welfare
and prosperity of everyone. Exploitative
capitalism divides people from one
another, destroys human mercy and
compassion, promotes lying and falsehood
in the service of private profit,
creates absolute winners and losers,
unsustainably exploits the natural
resources of the planet, and creates
ever greater poverty for the masses
of humanity. Today, two billion
human beings live on less than two
U.S. dollars per day while the wealthiest
250 people in the world have assets
equal to the combined wealth of
the bottom 50 percent of humanity.
While the education of humanity
beyond the exoteric relation to
existence may be a slow process,
the second failure of humanity (to
move beyond the nation-state system
and exploitative capitalism) can
be addressed more rapidly. There
are global organizations working
for democratic world government
and a concomitant transformation
of global economics to sustainable,
prosperity-based economies for all
peoples. The most perceptive as
well as practical of these organizations,
in my view, is the World Constitution
and Parliament Association that
sponsors democratic federal world
government under the Constitution
for the Federation of Earth
(
face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">www.wcpa.biz).
Islam can and should promote ratification
of the Constitution for the
Federation of Earth. Achieving
the political unity of humanity
under the Constitution
will simultaneously promote the
transition of people’s thinking
from the exoteric to the esoteric
understanding of human existence.
The Preamble to the Constitution
reads, in part, “conscious that
Humanity is One despite the existence
of diverse nations, races, creeds,
ideologies and cultures and that
the principle of unity in diversity
is the basis for a new age when
war shall be outlawed and peace
prevail.” If we can unify humanity
politically, then human thinking
will be rapidly transformed to the
esoteric principle of “unity in
diversity” in which falsehood is
abjured and truth is promoted.
Under the present world chaos of
absolute fragmentation or diversity,
falsehood is promoted because people
do not see the basic unities of
existence, humanity, and the world.
The wonderful diversity of the world,
including the variety of Islamic
cultural forms and the teaching
of the beautiful Arabic language,
need to be protected by the collective
political force of a united humanity.
The freedom engendered by this protection
needs to be extended to all peoples
and religions creating a unity in
diversity which is the expression
of the peaceful world that is God’s
will for humanity.
Islam at its best understands the
unity of humanity and existence
and can take steps to promote this
unity in intellectual, political,
and economic forms. The first and
most important step, in my view,
is to promote the ratification of
the Constitution for the Federation
of Earth among the peoples
and nations of Earth. Of course,
the political unity of humankind
cannot force people to accept the
highest truth: the Absoluteness
of God and the dependence of all
things upon God. The political unity
under the Constitution
must give all people “freedom of
religion or no religion” (Article
12).
But the revelation through the Prophet
illuminated the truth of human free
will. We must freely see the truth
and freely conform our free will
to that truth (through the Shari’ah).
People must allow the Truth to fill
their intelligence and must freely
choose to live a life of submission
(the Law of God) and prayer. They
cannot be forced in this respect,
but conditions can be created that
make this more likely. Under the
present world chaos, seeing the
unity of existence and submitting
to this in virtue (el-ihsan)
is not encouraged by the dominant
world institutions (the nation-state
and global capitalism).
The unity of humankind asserted
in God’s revelation to the Prophet
is reflected, at the political level,
in political unity of humankind
provided by democratic world federation
under the Constitution.
Seeing Truth, and submitting to
it, then becomes a possibility for
humanity. People are enabled to
freely see the Absolute and the
dependence of all things upon the
Absolute. In the present system
of unlimited destructive diversity
(including the system of “sovereign”
nation-states and exploitative capitalism),
the likelihood of this is severely
diminished.
The essence of Islam is illuminated
by the advances in science and scholarship.
Islamic fundamentalism claims a
“literal” interpretation of the
Qur’an and claims the medieval
laws to be unchangeable regardless
of historical developments. This
can and should be transformed into
Islamic esoterism that recognizes
the essence of God and humanity,
beyond history, can be creatively
adapted to each new historical era.
What does submission to God mean
today? What is sacred speech today?
What almsgiving today? What is pilgrimage
today?
There may well be great virtue and
submission in embarking on the journey
to Mecca at least once in one’s
lifetime. But is there an additional
meaning to “pilgrimage,” a surplus
of meaning? Could it be that our
submission to God’s law would require
something more of us with regard
to “pilgrimage” or “almsgiving”?
Perhaps recognizing a surplus of
meaning to “almsgiving” could lead
us to change the global economic
system that creates so much poverty
and misery in the world that simple
giving to the poor cannot possibly
address the need? Perhaps we should
be embarking with our entire lives
on a pilgrimage toward the political
unification of humanity under the
Constitution for the Federation
of Earth?
Under the Constitution for the Federation
of Earth, not only will
the diversity of religions, cultures,
nations, and peoples be protected
(through the collective force of
the united whole), but an environment
of unity, integrity, equality, and
freedom will allow the Truth to
appeal to man’s intelligence more
readily. In a world of peace and
prosperity (with an economic and
political system that unites rather
than divides humanity), the possibility
of the deeper meaning of God’s revelation
becomes available to human beings.
Today’s Islam, as the religion of
truth, law, unity, and virtue, can
play a major role in the political
unification of humanity.
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