Crucifixion and mutilation in early Islam
June 19th, 2005
An analysis of Quran
5:33
Traditional Muslims who
understand the Quran and the hadith (reports of Muhammad’s
words and actions outside of the Quran) believe that
Islamic law or sharia expresses the highest and best goals
for all societies. It is the will of Allah.
In September 2003, Scotsman
Sandy Mitchell
faced crucifixion in
Saudi Arabia. He was beaten and tortured until he
confessed to a crime he did not commit: a bomb plot
masterminded by the British embassy. The article says of
his punishment that it is the worst kind of execution:
Public beheadings are
routine in Saudi Arabia, but crucifixion is reserved as
an exemplary punishment under sharia (Islamic) law for
crimes of the utmost severity. Two highway robbers have
been executed in this way in the past 20 years.
Of interest here is the
punishment of crucifixion for the crime of highway
robbery. Though this crime is not “of the utmost severity”
(the report is inaccurate on that one point), where do
Islamic judges get crucifixion for this crime?
However, Islamic law in
Saudi Arabia may also amputate an alternate hand or foot
for highway robbery. In 2000, Amnesty International
reports the
following about amputation for ordinary theft and “cross”
(alternate) amputation for severer crimes.
Amnesty International
recorded 90 judicial amputations between 1981 and
December 1999 in Saudi Arabia, including at least five
cases of cross amputation, but the true number is
probably much higher. It appears that in at least some
cases, executioners carry out amputations. Amnesty
International does not know if they receive medical
training, or whether anaesthetics are administered to
victims of judicial amputations, or if restraints are
used. After the amputation has been carried out, the
victim is taken away by ambulance to hospital for
treatment.
Amnesty International
explains in the paragraph before this one excerpted here
that “cross” amputation is meted out for highway robbery
and cites two cases in the year 1999 alone.
In the paragraph from the
same web page, an executioner is interviewed, and he says
he must use special knives and have great courage to cut
off a hand, for the condemned man is still alive—it does
not take as much courage if the condemned is beheaded
because he leaves this life.
According to Sa'id bin
'Abdullah bin Mabrouk al-Bishi, an experienced Saudi
Arabian executioner, ''purpose-made knives are used to
cut off the hands of those who commit theft''. He was
reported to have told a journalist:
''...for me it is more
difficult to cut off a hand than to carry out an
execution, because executions are done momentarily by
the sword and the person leaves this life. By contrast,
severing a hand demands more courage, especially because
you are cutting off the hand of someone who will remain
alive afterwards, and also you have to cut it off at a
specific joint and use your skill to make sure that
cutting implement stays in position. As I said, it is
much more difficult for me to cut off someone's hand
than to execute them, both in terms of carrying out the
penalty itself and in terms of my own feelings.''
Surely the same courage
must be applied to severing off a foot, as well.
In 2002 Amnesty
International
reports
that even though Saudi Arabia ratified the Convention
against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment (Convention against Torture) in
October 1997, amputation is prescribed under both Hudud
(punishments) and Qisas (law of retaliation).
Under Hudud it
is prescribed for theft (amputation of the right hand)
and for highway robbery (amputation of the right hand
and left foot). Amnesty International has recorded 33
amputations and nine cross-amputations since the
Convention came into force in Saudi Arabia.
Alternate amputation for
highway robbery? Again, where do these judges get this
gruesome punishment?
It is sad to report that
the judges get crucifixion and alternate amputation from
the Quran itself—the immutable, eternal word of Allah.
Sura 5:33—and Muhammad’s example—commands these
punishments.
To understand Sura 5:33,
three steps are used. First, we use a reputable Muslim
translation. Second, we explore the historical context of
the verse. Third, we examine its literary context. These
last two steps not only clarify the verse, they also
prevent the standard, reflexive “out of context” defense
of Muslim apologists (defenders of Islam).
After this three-step
process, we analyze classical legal interpretations of
Sura 5:33. Then we critique four modern interpretations or
defenses of the verse. Next, we contrast the Quran with
the Bible as they relate to the Western world. Finally, we
apply our findings to the world today.
A Translation of
Sura 5:33
Egyptian-born MAS Abdel
Haleem, educated at Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt,
and Cambridge University, now professor of Islamic Studies
at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University
of London, translates as follows:
5:33 Those who wage war
against God and His Messenger and strive to spread
corruption in the land should be punished by death,
crucifixion, the amputation of an alternate hand and
foot or banishment from the land: a disgrace for them in
this world, and then a terrible punishment in the
Hereafter, 34 unless they repent before you overpower
them: in that case bear in mind that God is forgiving
and merciful. (The Qur’an, Oxford UP, 2004)
Verse 34 has been included
because some Islamic legal scholars say that in some cases
the criminal does not undergo the punishments if he
repents before he is caught. Muhammad says that the
criminal can be (1) executed, (2) crucified, (3)
mutilated, or (4) expelled. As we will see, Muslim jurists
debate the circumstances that elicit these punishments.
Also, these are commands in a legal context, so Haleem’s
words “should be” is too soft. The readers should take in
these two verses carefully, for they set the stage for
various interpretations and legal opinions. For more
translations of this verse, visit
this website and
type in 5:33. 5 is the sura or chapter and 33 is the
verse.
The historical
context of Sura 5:33
The second step in our
exegetical method is to explore the historical context of
Sura 5:33.
The following event
supposedly provides the historical context of 5:33-34.
Some Arab tribesmen visited the prophet, but fell sick in
the uncongenial climate of Medina, so Muhammad told them
to follow a shepherd outside of the city, recommending to
them an old folk belief: drinking the milk and urine of a
camel. Subsequently, they are reported to have felt
better. However, for some reason, they killed the shepherd
(another version says shepherds), turned apostate, and
drove off the camels for themselves. This news reached
Muhammad, and he ordered them to be hunted down and
brought before him. He decreed that their hands and feet
should be cut off. Then he committed these excesses:
Then he ordered for [sic]
nails which were heated and were branded with those
nails, their eyes, and they were left in the Harra (i.e.
rocky land in Al-Madina). And when they asked for water,
no water was given them till they died . . . . (Bukhari
vol. 4, no. 3018)
Though this passage is
awkwardly translated, it is one of many that should shock
Westerners and everyone of a sound mind. Muhammad actually
pierced their eyes with nails (one version says with
needles). Then their bodies were thrown on stony ground,
dying of dehydration. One version says they died from the
battering they suffered from being thrown on rocky ground;
another says they died from loss of blood, for Muhammad
did not cauterize their amputated limbs. Regardless, it is
one thing to execute first-degree murderers, but torturing
them like this is excessive, and excess is never just.
Once again, Muhammad takes things to extremes.
Sources: Bukhari vol. 4,
no. 3018, vol. 6, no. 4619, and vol. 8, no. 6802; Muslim
vol. 3, nos. 4130-4137; Sunan Abu Dawud vol. 3,
nos. 4351-4359; Ibn Ishaq, The Life of Muhammad,
trans. Guillaume, pp. 677-78. For more information on
this gruesome torture meted out by the Allah-inspired
prophet, please see
this article.
For a look at the
historical context of the entire Fifth Sura, please see
this article,
and scroll down to the section “Historical and literary
contexts.”
The literary
context of Sura 5:33
The third step is the
literary context—the verses surrounding Sura 5:33. This
has been examined thoroughly in
this article,
(scroll down to the section “Historical and literary
contexts”), but we should note here that Muhammad has
grown in military power, so he is able to inflict terrible
punishments on the disobedient. For example, in v. 38 he
commands that the hands of male and female thieves must be
cut off. Also, he condemns the non-Muslims to an eternally
painful torment, even if they were to gather up all the
riches of the world and offer them to Allah in order to
ransom or redeem themselves out of hell. Ransoming
prisoners of war and victims of kidnapping was a hard
custom in seventh-century Arabia, and Muhammad uses the
practice to illustrate the inescapability of non-Muslims
from Allah and his eternal flames—not an odd metaphor
since Allah enriched Muhammad and his Muslims with their
prisoners of war in real life (vv. 35-37). All in all,
Muhammad is on a literary warpath in this section of Sura
5, which reflects historical reality.
Classical
interpretations and applications of Sura 5:33
Sharia means the body of
Islamic law; fiqh means the science of interpreting and
applying this law, done by qualified Islamic judges and
legal scholars. Over the first two centuries after
Muhammad’s 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 Hanbal (d.
855) who lived in Baghdad, Iraq.
We examine the opinions of
some of these schools, using the question and answer
format.
1. How do these
legal scholars define the crime in Sura 5:33?
Even though the supposed
historical context of Sura 5:33 deals with renegade
tribesmen, during a raid, which happened often enough in
Arabia at the time, some scholars interpret the clause
“wage war against God and His messenger” as an armed
rebellion against an Islamic ruler. However, most jurists
agree that the tribesmen’s crime comes under the category
of highway robbery or brigandage. This crime is committed
outside of the city along the trade routes or highways,
not in a city by an ordinary thief. The Quran has another
verse to deal with the ordinary thief, male or female:
Sura 5:38, which
commands
that his or her hand should be cut off.
2. When and how are
the punishments of execution, crucifixion, mutilation, or
banishment applied?
The Shafi School has
several applications. (1) If the robbers kill someone, but
do not take his property, then they are executed
(presumably beheaded). (2) If the robbers kill someone and
steal his property, then they should be hanged (presumably
crucified) after being given a bath, burial and funeral
prayer. (3) If they robbed property, but did not kill
anyone, then their right hand and left foot are to be
amputated. (4) If they only threaten, but do not kill or
rob, then they are to be punished by imprisonment
(substitute for banishment) and according to the judge’s
discretion (A Sunni Shafi Law Code, trans. Anwar
Ahmed Qadri, Lahore, Pakistan: Sh. Muhammad Ashraf
Publishers, translated in 1984, p. 121).
As for the other schools of
law, we use the compendium of Ibn Rushd, known in the West
as Averroës (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 book, The Distinguished Jurist’s Primer,
(trans. Imran Ahsan Khan Nyazee, Center for Muslim
Contribution to Civilization, Reading, UK: Garnet,
1994-1996, vol. 2, pp. 547-52), 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 records that
Malik says that the punishments are applied as follows:
(1) if the robbers commit murder, they are to be put to
death, either by execution or crucifixion. (2) If they
stole property, but did not murder, then the penalty is
exile, but the judge has discretionary authority to
execute, crucify, or amputate the alternative hand and
foot. (3) The least punishment is flogging and exile,
depending on the circumstances. Sometimes exile can be
replaced with imprisonment. Ibn Rushd also says that the
Hanafi School agrees with the Shafi School, which was
noted above.
3. Do the criminals
go free if they repent before getting caught (Sura 5:34)?
This is the confusing part
of Islamic law in the matter of brigandage, especially
when we compare the excessive punishment for theft:
chopping off the hand of a male or female thief (See
this article,
and scroll down to the section “Early interpretations of
Sura 5:38”). The hadith (Muhammad’s words and actions
outside of the Quran) states that the repentance of the
thief is acceptable only after his or her hand has been
chopped off and cauterized. Per contra, Islamic law, for
the crime of highway robbery, according to some scholars,
allows the criminals to go free without suffering death or
mutilation. This is odd, because highway robbery sometimes
involves murder and always involves a danger to trade.
This means that the crime of the highway robber “is far
the greater because he menaces the lifeline of the
community, its trade routes” (The Reliance of the
Traveller: a Classic Manual of Islamic Sacred Law,
rev. ed. trans. Nuh Ha Mim Keller, Bethany, Maryland:
Amana Publications, 1991, 1994, p. 616).
It is true that some
scholars, for example, Shafi, say that the robber must
give himself up and show signs of repentance (e.g. desist
from his crimes), but he is still liable to retaliation
(restitution or bodily injury or death), if the robber
stole, injured, or killed, and if the victims’ families
demand it (Reliance of the Traveller, p. 616).
However, Ibn Rushd, after
summarizing three various degrees of punishment for a
repentant highway robber, notes a fourth opinion:
The fourth opinion is
that repentance absolves him [the highway robber] from
all claims based on the right of Allah [divine
punishment in Sura 5:33] or on the rights of human
beings pertaining to wealth or killing, except for the
property still existing in their possession. (vol. 2, p.
551)
In other words, the highway
robber’s repentance absolves him of all other
punishment—execution, crucifixion, amputation of his hands
and feet, and expulsion. Jurists are allowed to disagree
with each other, but this fourth opinion interprets v. 34
accurately, for the verse does say that the punishment is
annulled if he repents before he is overtaken. In
contrast, the ordinary thief gets his or hand chopped off
(provided he or she steals more than a certain monetary
amount). Allah sent down 5:34, which allows repentance
before getting caught, as a way for the highway robber to
possibly escape punishment, but Allah also sent down 5:39,
which seems to block repentance before the ordinary thief
is caught and punished—as the hadith tells us. How is this
justice?
However, whether or not the
brigands should suffer some kind of punishment with or
without their repentance, we must step back and look at
the big picture. Islamic law on the crime of highway
robbery is excessive, when it orders the amputation of
hands and feet merely for stealing property. To execute a
first-degree murderer is a viable penalty, though many
oppose it in the West; the law in many states in the US
allows this punishment, but European nations forbid it.
Either way, western law does not permit the amputation of
hands and feet for stealing goods along the trade routes.
(For more on this, see “The Quran, the Bible and western
law,” below.)
In contrast, traditional
Islam would still like to follow the universal will of
Allah in Sura 5:33 and impose the mutilation of hands and
feet for stealing property along the roads, and even
impose crucifixion if the robber killed anyone during his
crime—and possibly impose crucifixion if the robber did
not kill anyone, according to the judges’ discretion. If
traditionalists would like to chop off hands for theft,
then why would they not chop off hands and feet for
highway robbery? But anyone whose mind has not been
clouded by a lifetime of devotion to Islam and who uses
sound reasoning must conclude that cutting off the
alternate hand or foot only for stealing goods from a
caravan journeying down a trade route is extreme, and the
same is true of crucifixion for murder and chopping off a
hand for ordinary theft.
This extreme becomes
crystal clear when we remember that Muhammad himself
attacked and robbed Meccan caravans without direct
provocation—including killing people. (For more
information, go to
this article,
and to
this one,
and scroll down to point no. 4). During the ten years that
he lived in Medina (AD 622-632), he either sent out or
went out on seventy-four raids, expeditions, or full-scale
wars. A few times the raids did not end in violence, but
most of the time people were killed and their property
stolen. However, by the time Sura 5 was revealed late in
Medina, he was too powerful militarily and politically
throughout much of the Arabian Peninsula for anyone to
stop him. Only he gets to lay down the law—and
excessively, too.
To conclude this section,
the legal opinions uphold the brutality of Sura 5:33,
though an Islamic judge has a little leeway to impose
certain penalties on certain crimes, such as beheading or
crucifying, if the highway robber kills someone (or merely
robs, according to the judges’ discretion), or amputating
or executing if the highway robber only steals property.
Once again, Islamic law takes things too far because it is
rooted in the Quran, the eternal word of Allah, which is
often excessive.
Modern explanations
of Sura 5:33
We analyze the comments of
four Muslim thinkers whose translations and commentaries
on the Quran or hadith are very influential in the
English-speaking world. Are these scholars completely
forthright about their religion, particularly about Sura
5:33?
First, Abdullah Yusuf Ali
(d. 1953) translated the Quran and wrote a commentary on
key verses, all in one volume (The Meaning of the Holy
Qur’an, 1934). After multiple revisions, it has
subsequently been revised by a team of scholars, who
finished their work in 2004. His comment on this verse is
short, and we zero in on this confusing assertion about
the torture of victims:
These [execution,
crucifixion, maiming, or exile] were features of the
Criminal Law then and for centuries afterwards, except
that tortures such as ‘hanging, drawing, and quartering’
in English Law, and piercing of eyes and leaving the
unfortunate victim exposed to a tropical sun, which was
practiced in Arabia, and all such tortures were
abolished. (note 738)
His comment is misleading
in three ways. First, he seems to imply that the pagans
alone pierced eyes and left people exposed to the sun.
However, as we saw in the hadith passages (see “Historical
context,” above), Muhammad is the one who did them. He is
the one who pierced the eyes of the tribesmen. He is the
one who left them exposed to the tropical sun without
giving them water. He is the one who threw them off high
points on to rocks. Why would Yusuf Ali omit these facts?
Apparently, his agenda was to present a purified Islam to
unsuspecting and uniformed readers in the English-speaking
world and to make the harsh religion more palatable to the
western world and beyond. This is why Islamic scholars and
apologists (defenders of Islam) must be challenged and
exposed constantly.
Next, Yusuf Ali says that
the tortures of piercing eyes and leaving victims exposed
to the tropical sun were abolished. But who abolished
them? Did Muhammad later on? Then this is an admission
that he was excessive and therefore unjust in his
torturing of the tribesmen. Did later jurists abolish
these tortures? Then Muslims should follow them, because
they are more just than Muhammad and therefore superior
lawgivers—see the analysis of Siddiqi, next.
Finally, Yusuf Ali compares
Quranic law, which was revealed by Allah himself, with old
laws in England, which was not revealed by God himself
through the archangel Gabriel, as traditional Islamic
theology claims for the Quran. This comparison is unfair
and uneven, as we will see in our analysis of Siddiqi,
which follows.
Thus, Yusuf Ali’s ambiguous
comment indicates that he believes that the Quran in Sura
5:33 is excessive and that he is embarrassed by the verse
and the hadith. But he cannot bring himself to say
outright that the verse did not come down from God. But it
is clear to reasonable people, and especially to
reasonable and Bible-educated Christians, that God did not
send down this verse—not to mention the entire Quran
itself.
The second scholar we
analyze is Abul Hamid Siddiqi, who translated the hadith
collection Sahih Muslim and provided some
commentary. After describing the renegade tribesmen in the
worst way possible so that the Quranic punishments seem to
fit the crime, and after reviewing the opinions of legal
scholars, Siddiqi writes this about western law:
Lest some of these
penalties may appear barbarous to some hypersensitive
Western reader, let him cast a glance on drawing and
quartering: a penalty of the English criminal code
maintained as late as the eighteenth century, inflicted
on those found guilty of high treason against the King
or government. The person committed was usually drawn on
a sledge to the place of execution; there he was hung by
the neck from a scaffold, being cut down and
disemboweled, while still alive; his head was cut from
the body and his corpse divided into four quarters . . .
. (vol. 3, p. 894, note 2121)
Siddiqi makes two familiar
missteps. First, he, like many Muslims, deflects the
brutality in the origins of his own religion by
criticizing later Western civilization. He seems to say,
“Who are you ‘hypersensitive Western’ readers to complain?
You have your own excessive punishments.” But this is a
tacit admission that the Quranic verse is in fact cruel
and brutal; however, since it came down from Allah,
Siddiqi and many others are not allowed to deny its
validity. In fact, they have to deny or explain away its
barbarity. This first misstep is like a husband deflecting
his wife’s accurate observations of his cruel flaws with
the retort that she is not perfect, either. With that
attitude, the husband will never reform. Can or will Islam
rewrite classical fiqh and reform? How can they when their
sacred book, brought down by Gabriel from Allah (so says
traditional Islamic theology), endorses these atrocities?
The second misstep is that
Siddiqi, like many Muslims, compares the founding
documents of Islam with much later, but now outdated
Western laws, but this comparison is asymmetrical. It is
always better to compare the founder and the source
documents of a religion (Islam) with the founder and the
source documents of another religion (Christianity). This
comparison will developed in the next section, but suffice
it to say here that never did Jesus endorse such brutality
in a penal code or as an example for society in order to
impose external righteousness, even if people were highway
robbers and apostates. He sought to change people, even
criminals from the inside out, so that they can lead moral
lives. He did not come to physically maim and physically
torture people, as Muhammad did.
Siddiqi also informs us
that later jurists decreed that if a criminal is being
killed in retaliation or for committing a grave crime, he
should be supplied with water, if he asks for it.
“Callousness should not be shown even to a person who is
undergoing capital punishment. The criminal must receive
punishment according to the law of the Shariah, but he
should not in any way be treated brutally” (vol. 3, p.
894, 2123). This is a remarkable observation, even though
Siddiqi does not mention Muhammad by name, the one who
committed these atrocities. These later jurists correct
and improve on Muhammad’s “callousness” and “brutality.”
These are the lawgivers whom Muslims should be following,
for these jurists follow after justice more closely than
their prophet did.
The third scholar is Sayyid
A’La Abul Maududi (d. 1979), an Indo-Pakistani who tried
to set up a theocracy in Pakistan through the
Jamaat-i-Islami party and who wrote a six-volume, highly
regarded commentary on the Quran. From the verbiage about
Sura 5:33 emerges a brief comment that does not miss the
chance to boast about the ideals of Islam: [it] sets up
“an equitable system of government, which should guarantee
peace and justice to human beings, animals, trees,
vegetation, and everything in the earth, which may enable
human beings to develop to the fullest their natural
capabilities” . . . . Therefore, these criminals in Sura
5:33 who would destroy this utopia get what they deserve (The
Meaning of the Qur’an, Lahore, Pakistan: Islamic
Publications, vol. 1, p. 447, note 55).
In reply, however, it is
impossible to imagine a religious system that does the
exact opposite of these ideals. In fact, it is not
farfetched to believe, given the evidence, that Islam came
on this earth in the seventh century in Arabia, only to
restrict and control people excessively—and to kill them
if they do not submit. Humans are not able to develop
their capabilities to the fullest. Rather, people are
hemmed in by a religion that imposes its own brand of
holiness on them—by gruesome punishments if they do not
submit. In the last 150 years, the western world has
advanced by leaps and bounds past the Islamic world, just
in the area of technology, not to mention human rights.
Where in the most devout Islamic country does equity
abound? Turkey may come close, but they have separated
mosque from state. Perhaps Afghanistan and Iraq will
prosper and allow humans to flourish, if they too keep the
mosque far away from the state, and allow simple, plain,
and clear reason guide them—not Islam as an
all-encompassing system. Sharia degrades people. Thus, for
the following reason (and others) violent thugs detonate
roadside bombs and car bombs in Iraq: they
oppose democracy and
the true freedom it brings.
The fourth and final
scholar we critique is Muhammad Asad (d. 1992), who was an
Austrian Jew who converted to Islam. His one-volume
translation and commentary, The Message of the Quran
(1980, 2003), also carries some weight in the
English-speaking world, but his comment on Sura 5:33 is
the most convoluted and confusing of the comments analyzed
in this section.
First, Asad says that
cutting off hands and feet should not be taken literally,
for these two bodily members may metaphorically represent
a person’s “power” (note 44). However, he interprets Sura
5:38 literally, which says that a thief’s hand should be
cut off. He should interpret Sura 5:33 literally, as well.
He provides no explanation for this interpretive change,
other than finding meanings in an Arabic dictionary that
suit his agenda. The plain and simple meaning of
mutilating and crucifying and killing is just
that—literally doing these three brutal acts. Ockham’s
razor, which says that the plainest and clearest
explanation is to be preferred, eliminates Asad’s
convoluted one.
Second, Asad uses Arabic
verb tenses and moods to assert that criminals habitually
kill each other and crucify (metaphor for torture) each
other, and so on—Sura 5:33 is a statement of fact, not a
legal punishment (note 45). He admits that his
interpretation flies in the face of the majority of
commentators and legal scholars, but so be it. His agenda
is to clear Allah and Muhammad of any blame for imposing
brutal punishments in the verse; rather, the brutalities
just happen naturally in criminal societies. However, the
majority of commentators and legal scholars has more
insight, for the literary context of the verse is in fact
legal (see Sura 5:38), not a mere description of what was
actually happening in seventh-century Arabia.
Historically, no large number of criminal Arabs or tribes
of Arabs was crucifying (torturing) each other, or killing
each other “in great numbers” (Asad’s words). Asad lifts
the verse out of the broader historical context, an
interpretive step that is always dubious, especially in
this verse. He must provide evidence for such self-killing
and self-torture en masse, done out a loss of morality and
ethics. And this he cannot do.
Therefore, Ockham’s razor
once again cuts out Asad’s convoluted explanation and
prefers the clearest and most straightforward one. In Sura
5:33 Muhammad is simply and clearly laying down four legal
punishments in a legal context for “those who wage war
against Allah and his messenger.” The majority of
commentators and legal scholars is right; Asad is wrong.
To conclude this section,
these four Muslim scholars twist, omit, and misinterpret
some basic facts that make Muhammad seem a less-than-ideal
lawgiver. Those seekers today who are curious about Islam
must be forewarned that what the representatives of this
religion tell the seekers may not be the whole truth.
Also, any comparison between Islamic law, which Muslims
would like to impose on the world today, and extreme,
archaic civil law in the West only demonstrates that
Islamic law is also outdated and extreme—but too many
Muslims do not seem to realize this and instead believe
that Allah wills to implement this law around the world.
The Quran, the
Bible, and the western world
In the previous section,
two Muslim scholars, Yusuf Ali and Siddiqi, implied that
Westerners should look first at archaic western law before
they criticize Islamic law. Also, either in private emails
to me or throughout the worldwide web, Muslims quote the
Torah to show that the Bible is harsh in its punishments,
so who are Westerners to complain about the Quran? This
section addresses these charges by asking and answering
four questions.
1. What is the
relationship between the Torah and Christ’s new law of the
Spirit?
First, Christians honor the
Old Testament, but they also take this multifaceted
document in its historical context. The Torah was part and
parcel of its culture. It either reflects its culture
(like some architectural features of the tabernacle), or
it improves on its culture (ethical monotheism). Not all
of the old law applies to today’s world.
Second, Christians look
back at the Old Testament through the vision of Jesus. It
is true that the Old Testament endorses the stoning of
adulterers (Lev. 20:10; Deut. 22:22), for example.
However, for Christians, Jesus’ interpretation of these
laws is final. He takes away their sharp sting with his
death on the cross and by his sinless life and divine
love.
Third, Jesus came to
fulfill the law or Torah, not to abolish it (Matthew
5:17). He fulfills it in at least three ways, but the one
we look at here takes away the law’s severe punishments.
Jesus fulfills the law by
taking on himself the penalty for our sins. The Torah is
filled with specific punishments for specific sins, but
his death on the cross satisfies and propitiates divine
wrath that is directed at our sins—this is the Christian
doctrine of the atonement. It is for this reason that a
Christian could never give up this doctrine and must
totally reject Muhammad’s odd view that Christ never died
on the cross, but a man took his place (Sura 4:157).
Muhammad’s belief is completely misguided. Christ’s death
is God’s gift to us. We are saved and on our way to
heaven, not based on our own works, but on Christ’s good
work on the cross. Therefore, those who trust in Christ do
not have to pay the penalty for their sins. The effects of
this doctrine benefit all of society, especially today.
2. How does the New
Covenant established by Jesus contrast with the law of
Muhammad?
One of the problems with
the law of Muhammad is that he seeks to revive a diluted
and distorted version of the old law of Moses. Muhammad
haphazardly reinstitutes harsh punishments, for example,
flogging fornicators (Sura 24:2) and
stoning adulterers (Bukhari
8:6815, 6825; Muslim no. 4206). For Christians, the way of
Muhammad is deficient and incomplete at best, and at worst
it drags them backwards into legalistic bondage. The
inspired Gospel of John says: “For the law was given to
Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ” (John
1:17). Hence, Christians do not need a recycled and
inferior old-new Moses in Muhammad. They have grace and
truth through Jesus Christ.
Another problem with the
law of Muhammad is the doctrine of the Holy Spirit, who
has been reduced to the archangel Gabriel in Islamic
theology. According to this doctrine, Muslims do not enjoy
the Holy Spirit living in them in the way described by
Jesus Christ and the New Testament, so they have to
fulfill the old-new law of Muhammad by their own efforts.
For Christians, this too is inadequate and incomplete.
They have been promised the indwelling power of the Holy
Spirit (Matt. 1:18; 3:11; Luke 11:13; John 20:22), and he
lives in them to enable and empower them to walk in love,
which fulfills the law (Matt. 23:37-40; Rom. 13:10).
3. But does the
Bible, specifically the New Testament, contribute anything
to the law in western societies?
One of the many charges
that Muslims throw at Christianity is that it does not
provide enough specific guidance in legal affairs. This
criticism is right in one way, but wrong in another.
As noted
here (scroll
down to “How Christianity changes society”), the criticism
is right because Jesus’ mission was to look beyond
establishing a worldly government, but to provide the true
path of salvation by his atoning death on the cross. He
knew that wandering messiahs and prophets tried to
establish their credentials by military and political
means around the greater Middle East, before and during
his time, so he avoided a military and political
messiahship. Besides, he was destined to fulfill Old
Testament passages that describe a spiritual Messiah, such
as Isaiah 53. When he comes back a second time, he will
fulfill the role of a Messiah that is both military (one
word will eliminate all enemies) and political (he will
rule on earth peacefully and without opposition).
The criticism is wrong
because western legal scholars over the centuries have
used the Bible to enact laws, but their application or
ignorance of these laws has produced mixed results. As
Siddiqi noted in the previous section, western law went to
extremes by torturing a man as he was being put to death,
disemboweling and drawing and quartering him. But the
Bible does not command this, though stoning a man to
death, which the Torah does command, is hard enough on the
human body. Other times western law demanded stoning for
adultery, following the old Torah. In the Medieval Age a
peasant could be executed for defying a feudal lord or
severely punished for not paying proper respect to him.
This is wrong, for it does not honor the peasant who is
loved by God equally. The western world is gradually
learning a lesson by following the principles of mercy and
dignity, found in the New Testament and the life of Jesus,
when the West must punish a criminal.
For example, if states in
the US insist on imposing the death penalty (and this is a
debated topic), then the US Constitution forbids “cruel
and unusual” punishment. It is true that various states
over the past two hundred or more years have carried out
the death penalty by less-than-ideal methods, for example,
hanging, a firing squad, or an electric chair. But now
lethal injection is being used, and that is a much more
merciful and dignified way to die, and it is certainly
more humane than how the murder victim died—assuming of
course that the death penalty is a viable punishment for
first degree murders with special circumstances. This
shows that the US is learning from the past and is
progressing.
Moreover, this much is
certain: in no way does any state in the US (nor the
entire European Union) endorse or carry out cutting off
the hands and feet or searing the eyes of any highway
robber who stole material goods along a trade route, as we
find in the Quran and the example of Muhammad. To repeat,
this is “cruel and unusual punishment,” and this phrase
was added to the Constitution precisely because Europe in
the eighteenth century and before used cruel and unusual
methods of punishing criminals. But the West has improved
since then—and is still improving. It is following the
principle of the dignity of humans, even when they have to
be punished.
One of the major flaws in
Islamic law or sharia is that it applies specific
punishments that are brutal and excessive, such as cutting
off a hand of a thief or flogging a sexual sinner or
cutting off an alternate hand and foot of a highway
robber, perhaps even crucifying him to make an example of
him. These laws are simply wrong, ipso facto, by their
very nature, six hundred years after Jesus showed us a
better way. If Muslims were to rewrite these brutal laws,
then this would be a limping step in the right direction.
But they are embedded in the Quran, which allegedly
expresses the universal and eternal truths of Allah. So
how can legal scholars even rewrite classical fiqh or the
science of applying sharia, which is based on their sacred
book and on the example of Muhammad seen in the hadith?
4. What is the major
difference between western law and Islamic law?
Islamic law is based on the
Quran and the example of Muhammad in the hadith. Muslims
assert that Allah inspired his book and guided his prophet
in the clearest and most direct way possible. Logically,
this means that Islam loathes change and innovation. If
sharia followed common sense, reason, and the dignity of
humans more fully, then this would not be a problem in
human affairs (theologically, though, many problems
emerge). However, this article and the linked articles
demonstrate that Islam law does not follow these three
virtues. But how can they, when the Quran and hadith are
harsh and excessive? Excess is never just. But Allah wills
it nonetheless.
Western law, on the other
hand, does not claim direct inspiration from God, even
though Biblical principles lay at its foundation. Also,
since the Enlightenment (c. 1600-1800), a strong dose of
reason has been injected into the legal process, as well.
(The Islamic world has not yet undergone this kind of
Enlightenment, but it needs to.) If western law became
harsh and oppressive, for example, in the Medieval Age,
then it could be changed for the better. Reason and the
Biblical principle of dignity, for example, allow for
improvement more readily. This is why reform is much
easier to enact here in the West than in societies that
are drenched in religious law.
To conclude this section,
the West is progressing in applying its punishments,
absorbing the dignity and mercy that Jesus and the New
Testament authors showed everyone, even criminals, in his
words and life and in their writings. Hence, the Western
world, with all of its flaws, does not impose the gruesome
penalties that the Quran commands and that too many
Islamic societies impose, such as the long, painful death
of crucifixion or the mutilation of hands and feet. But
when the West is excessive in its punishments, it can
reform more easily, since its law is also based on reason
and is not saturated with religious law.
On the other hand, Muslim
scholars may talk about dignity and mercy in their books
or on their websites, but Muhammad too often did not
demonstrate these virtues to people. After all, he is the
one who left the tribesmen in the hot sun, dying of
thirst, but not before piercing their eyes and throwing
them off high points on to rocks. It seems, then, that in
order to reform, traditional Muslims must reject many
verses in the Quran and many, many passages in the hadith.
But this is blasphemous, especially rejecting the Quran,
so onward the traditionalists go, blithely and
matter-of-factly mutilating and stoning and flogging
people.
Application to
today
An
article published
by the journal al-Tawhid (Oneness or Unity) in
Qum, Iran, the seat of learning for Shi’ites, uses Sura
5:33 and defines the crimes broadly, as follows:
*prostitution and the disintegration of family
relationships;
*narcotics and the disintegration of individual's rational
personality;
*colonialism and the undermining of peoples' dignity and
plundering of their resources;
*racism and the disintegration of human brotherhood;
*violation of all recognized rights and the breaking of
covenants:
*bombardment of populated areas, use of chemical weapons.
attacks on civil aviation, national railways, commercial
and tourist vessels, and similar methods which are
universally condemned in war.
This broad description of crimes opens the door to all
manner of justifications of applying the punishments in
Sura 5:33. Should such a criminal have his alternate hand
and foot cut off for selling drugs or pimping or racism?
Should he be crucified? Rather than questioning this
verse, the author of the article and many in the Islamic
world seem to accept it as coming from Allah and
matter-of-factly interpret it for society today.
However, sharia is not a
benefit to society, for it contains too many harsh rules
and punishments. One of the most tragic and under-reported
occurrences in the West in recent years is the existence
of a
sharia court in Canada.
Muslims are pushing for a
sharia divorce court
in Australia, as well. Having a court of arbitration if it
is based on western law and legal theory is legitimate,
but sharia does not hold to this standard. So Canada
should promptly shut down any sharia court, and Australia
should never allow one. Fortunately, the province of
Quebec, Canada,
rejected
a sharia court. This is the right policy and direction.
Such a court should never be permitted in the US, Europe,
and elsewhere around the world. Sharia ultimately degrades
society and diminishes freedom.
The violent radicals who
are now slithering around the world would gladly impose
their Quran’s and the hadith’s severe law on non-Muslim
nations, if the radicals could ever conquer them by force
or by
gradual means.
If the terrorists do not hesitate to
cut off heads, why
would they not mutilate the hands and feet of highway
robbers in order to make society pure and holy before
Allah, who gave this rule in the first place? The war on
terror must continue, in order to preserve western
civilization and an assortment of nonwestern nations
struggling with Islam.
We on the outside of Islam
are allowed to ask: Does the Quran offer better guidance
for society than the New Testament does? Does Muhammad
improve on the teaching and deeds of Jesus? Indeed, would
God send Gabriel down to inspire Sura 5:33?
Given the hard evidence,
Bible-educated Christians realize that the true God would
not send down such an extreme verse in the new era of
salvation which Jesus ushered in. They realize that the
Quran is empirically and factually worse than the New
Testament.
Jesus Christ came with good
news and the love of God. As the eternal Son of God, he
sent the Holy Spirit to transform people from the inside
out. Being only a human messenger (Sura 3:144), Muhammad
came with crucifixion and mutilation. Christianity
advances society forward. Islam drags society backwards.
Jesus saves sinners and
criminals by his own crucifixion. Muhammad killed sinners
and criminals by his legalized, punitive crucifixion.
Jesus saves. Muhammad
killed. |