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Secularism and not Islam is the real enemy of the Vatican
By Abid Mustafa
The inauguration of Cardinal
Ratzinger as Pope Benedict XVI
has brought to the fore a host
of issues, which threaten to
undermine his papacy. Chief
amongst them is the competition
from Islam and the
secularisation of Christians in
Europe.
The Vatican is somewhat divided
on how to tackle Islam. Some
cardinals are in the favour of
reaching out to moderate Muslims
and tapering the Vatican’s
attitudes towards Islam. “The
next pope will need to be
someone capable of dialoguing
with the different religions of
the world, and particularly
Islam… Islam is on the rise, and
Christianity, at least in the
developed world, is in decline
”, said the Rev. Keith F.
Pecklers, a Jesuit professor of
theology at the Pontifical
Gregorian University. This
approach is reminiscent of the
one articulated by pope John
Paul II who in 1986 became the
first pope to visit a Muslim
country. During the visit to
Morocco he said, “We believe in
the same God, the one and the
only God, who created the world
and brought its creatures to
perfection.” Hence the doctrine
of inter-faith dialogue with
Islam was born. For the next
twenty years this doctrine
defined the relations between
the Vatican and the Islamic
world.
Other cardinals prefer a much
tougher stance towards Islam.
John Allen, the Vatican
correspondent of the National
Catholic Reporter, is sceptical
that there is such a thing as
moderate Islam. “They
[cardinals] think what is needed
is tough love. The nightmare
scenario is that one day we'll
wake up and the Holy Land will
be empty of Christians”, Allen
said. The views expressed by
this group appear to be in
unison with Pope Benedict XVI,
who not so long ago scoffed at
the idea of Turkey joining
Christian Europe. Last August,
Ratzinger said, “In the course
of history, Turkey has always
represented a different
continent, in permanent contrast
to Europe. Making the two
continents identical would be a
mistake.” Back in November 2004,
Ratzinger criticised Muslims for
politicising Islam and stressed
that Muslims had a great deal to
learn from Christianity.
Ratzinger said, “Muslims should
learn from the Christian culture
the importance of religious
freedom, and the separation
between church and state.”
In the real world, the
challenges posed by Islam are
not only overstated by the
Vatican, but are miniscule in
comparison to the influence of
secularism on the world’s
billion or so Catholics. A far
greater threat is the
secularisation of Catholics in
Europe, which is significantly
higher than any other continent.
Only 21 percent of Europeans say
that religion is "very
important" to them, according to
the European Values Study,
conducted in
1999 and 2000 and published two
years ago. A similar survey in
the United States by the Pew
Forum on Religion and Public
Life put the number at nearly 60
percent. Beyond that, attendance
at Mass has significantly
declined throughout Europe.
Among Catholics, only 10 percent
in the Netherlands, 12 percent
in France, 15 percent in Germany
and Austria, 18 percent in Spain
and 25 percent in Italy attend
Mass weekly. Therefore it is not
surprising to find some
Catholics voicing extreme
concerns for the future of
Christianity in a secular
Europe. “Some people look at
Europe and see it spiritually
tired, if not dead,” said the
Rev. John Wauck, who teaches at
the Pontifical University of the
Holy Cross in Rome.
Apart from the dwindling
Christian population in Europe,
the principal threat to the
Vatican comes from the direction
of secular fundamentalists who
are adamant in recasting
catholic truths as falsehoods.
Catholic teachings regarding the
inauguration of women priests,
birth control, abortion, gay
marriages, adoption by same-sex
couples, euthanasia and the
commercialisation of Christmas
bear the brunt of this
onslaught. Commenting on this
trend, Wauck said that the union
(European Union) seems to be
“infected” with a “radically
secular culture”. Ratzinger
delivered similar assessment
hours before the conclave got
underway to elect the new pope.
He said, ”We are moving toward a
dictatorship of relativism . . .
that recognizes nothing definite
and leaves only one's own ego
and one's own desires as the
final measure.”
Now that Ratzinger has been
officially installed as the new
pope he must decide on how best
to protect Catholicism and its
values. His immediate concern
and those of the cardinals who
elected him is to win over those
who have shunned Catholicism in
preference for an agnostic
life-style. To accomplish this
feat, Pope Benedict XVI cannot
ally himself with the secular
powers of the world or rely on
any of the world’s secular
institutions to defend the
Christian faith.
Secularism and its practitioners
despite being a by-product of
Judaeo-Christian history are not
interested in defending
Christianity or for that matter
any faith. For instance, in May
2002 President Bush did nothing
to prevent Israel from shelling
the Church of Nativity, despite
strong appeals from Pope John
Paul II and leaders of other
Christian sects.
Similarly, before the American
invasion of Iraq in 2003,
President Bush
refused to meet evangelical
Christians who were opposed to
the war, but continued to
entertain lobbyist from oil
companies.
Religion and people who profess
religious beliefs is an anathema
to secularist fundamentalists
and are barely tolerated. The
people of faith who wish to
retain their religious identity
become the object of abuse
within secular societies.
Secular authorities utilise
instruments such as the media
and the political medium to
constantly hound those that
resist secular values. This
continues until they capitulate
or change their beliefs to
conform to the materialistic
worldview of the secularists.
Catholicism as well as other
Christian faiths has suffered
immensely under the patronage of
secular western states,
particularly European states.
Retreating behind the veil of
‘freedom of speech’, and
‘freedom of religion’,
secularists have relentlessly
abused Catholicism and forced
the Roman Church to adapt its
views and practices. Today,
Catholic teachings and truths
are scarcely recognisable and
face imminent extinction, unless
the Vatican takes a firm stand
against the secular powers.
Forming an alliance with other
world faiths such as Judaism,
Hinduism, Sikhism and other
Christian denominations will not
alter the fate of the Roman
Church. These religions are
unable to stand up to the
menacing ideology of secularism
and they too have fallen prey to
the secular powers.
This is because of two reasons.
First, they are all founded on
an emotional creed that does not
possess the intellectual
dynamism to challenge the
ideology of secularism. Second,
they are based on creeds that
only offer a spiritual
perspective on human existence
and are unable to present a
social-political system of life
that is a real alternative to
secularism.
Islam is the sole ideology in
the world that is able to
counter secularism and offer
genuine protection to people
belonging to different faiths.
Islam is able to achieve this,
because at its heart is a
spiritual and political creed
that provides spiritual
nourishment to its adherents and
offers a comprehensive
social-political system, where
Muslims and non-Muslims are
treated equally before the law.
In the past, when Islam was
implemented practically -for
instance in Islamic Spain- Jews,
Christians and Muslims living in
the Spanish cities of Toledo,
Cordoba and Granada, enjoyed
unrivalled tolerance and
prosperity.
Martin Hume wrote in his book
“Spanish People”: “Side by side
with the new rulers lived the
Christians and Jews in peace.
The latter rich with commerce
and industry were content to let
the memory of their oppression
by the priest-ridden Goths
sleep”. However, when the
Catholic monarchs Isabella and
Ferdinand took charge of Spain
in 1492, they did not
reciprocate tolerance but
proceeded to expunge Spain of
its Jewish and Muslim populace.
Similar acts of cruelty with the
blessing of the Pope were
carried out in other lands
controlled by Muslims such as
the island of Sicily and
Jerusalem.
Today the Islamic world is
experiencing a radical
transformation from secularism
to Islam. Muslims across the
Islamic world are rebelling
against the secular order that
has been forcibly imposed upon
them by western powers and their
surrogates. Muslims are working
day and night to overthrow these
secular autocracies and to
re-establish the Caliphate on
their ruins. With the
establishment of the Caliphate,
millions of Christians who were
previously denied their rights
under the secular regimes will
have their rights restated in
full. And like in the Caliphates
of the past, Christian beliefs
and teaching will be protected.
History bears witness that
unlike the Roman Empire and the
secular order of today,
Christian doctrines and
teachings were not changed under
the Caliphate to agree with
Islamic values.
Against this background it would
be wise for Pope Benedict XVI to
reconsider his position towards
Islam and the Muslim world.
Instead of opting for a harsh
stance against Islam and
Muslims, the new pope should
support the right of Muslims
across the Islamic world to
overthrow their secular regimes
and re-establish the Caliphate.
In this way, the pope will be
saving Catholicism, protecting
the rights of his flock in the
Muslim world and sending a good
omen for future relations with
the Caliphate. |