Friday, 2 February 2024

Why is Christianity Better than Islam?

 I was asked this question recently by a young man, some of whose friends had decided that if they were going to follow a religion then Islam seemed a more attractive proposition than Christianity as it had a greater sense of where it stood on issues and didn't prevaricate or sentimentalise which Christianity in its official forms now does. On the face of it, it's hard to disagree with this view. Islam is fixed in its beliefs and doesn't seek to accommodate itself to the secular world which modern Christianity usually does as its leaders, seeing they are losing spiritual power, seek to justify their existence by pandering to social changes. Also, Islam has not become feminised which Christianity along with the whole Western world unfortunately has, and this appeals to younger men who see in feminism a civilisation destroying influence. Why do I say unfortunately? Because a feminised religion or culture prioritises feelings and being nice over truth, social concern over supernatural reality, equality over hierarchy and soft furnishings over the sword. That is to say, the energy that nurtures and comforts over the energy that builds and preserves. You need both but one must lead and it must be the latter.

However, whilst it is true that many Christian churches have succumbed to the world and lost touch with the spiritual, replacing it with the anodyne charms of secular humanism, Islam never had much connection with the spiritual to begin with. It has a fixed view of God based on a primitive conception of the deity and is unable to open itself up to higher dimensions of being*. Its virtue that it doesn't change is also a major weakness. It is stuck in the past, unable to evolve as consciousness does. This inflexibility might be regarded as a positive but the rights and wrongs of inflexibility depend on what refuses to change. Islam might have been a healthy corrective for polytheistic pagans in a 7th century of warring tribes (though Christianity would probably have done a better job even then), but it has nothing to say to a 21st century consciousness unless a person wants to throw away the positive evolutionary gains of the last thousand, and especially last 400, years.

But the best answer to this question is to rephrase it and ask why is Christ better than Muhammad? Even a casual look at the lives of these two teachers shows there is an enormous gulf between them in terms of spiritual understanding. They both spoke of the one God but for Jesus he was a loving father while for Muhammad he was more like the Old Testament Jehovah, an over-promoted tribal deity who demanded servile allegiance. Partly because of this, Christianity is based on love while Islam is based on law. Further, Christianity is grounded in freedom whereas Islam demands obedience. This is illustrated in the postures for prayer of the two religions. A Christian kneels in humility but his back is straight. The full prostration of a Muslim in prayer also shows humility but it is more that of a slave before its master than a free individual.

I have not even spoken of the fact that Jesus was the Son of God who healed the spiritual damage caused by the Fall while Muhammad, even in the eyes of his own followers, was no more than a prophet and one who basically just mixed and matched from Jewish and Christian sources. He brought nothing new while Jesus showed us the way to become sons of God ourselves - see John 14:12 "Whoever believes in me will do the works I have been doing, and they will do even greater things than these." At best, Muhammad was a messenger but Jesus in his person even more than in his teachings was a window into heaven. In fact, not just a window but a doorway.

Mentioning heaven brings us to another critical difference. Is the Muslim paradise the same as the Christian heaven? I don't see how anyone can seriously believe that since the one is the perfection of earthly existence while the other is the total transformation of being. When you understand that the next world has many planes of existence you see that the paradise of Islam is what is known as the wish fulfilment plane where all your desires are fulfilled but only to the extent that allows for the exteriorisation of your earthly wishes without the impediment of matter. So your mind can creates palaces and gardens insofar as you conceive of such things but this is still no more than this world brought to what you think of as an ideal state. You are still limited by the narrowness of your own vision whereas in the true heaven you are freed from the boundaries of your circumscribed self, and this is what Christ offers. The Islamic paradise gives the lower self what it wants but Heaven is entry into the glorified existence of higher being. There is no doubt that many Christians will go to a place that is a Christian version of paradise on the astral plane, as the psychic world is sometimes known, but that is due to their deficiencies not those of their religion. The fact is Jesus and Muhammed promised their followers entirely different destinations.

I freely admit there may be some bias here. I was born in a Christian country and culture not a Muslim one. But that doesn't mean any of the points here are incorrect. Moreover, the universalist humanitarian prejudices of contemporary Western culture incline many people to go the other way and hold Christianity to higher standards than other religions, seeing the former in the light of its negative aspects (which are all the fault of human beings not its own) and the latter more positively. Obviously, Islam has virtues but unless it has a radical reformation in line with the developments in consciousness over the last several hundred years I would say it is spiritually regressive. Christianity too needs to grow spiritually but it can grow from its roots and I don't believe Islam can.

* I'm ignoring Sufism in this essay which is outside the mainstream of Islam and often regarded with suspicion by fellow Muslims who are not Sufis. Besides, Sufism is the product of Hindu metaphysics and Christian mysticism just as much as Islamic theology though I don't deny it has also fed back in to its parents.

5 comments:

johnson said...

Islam will brutalize you for nomal things like picking up a cup with your left hand. Its a psyopaths religion. All we need to do in Christianity is defrock and shun all who defend the pericope adulterae which has feminized Christianity and is a fake passage from hell. Even NIV based pastors still preach that Satanic passage despite the NIV footbote that its fake, and we need men to get up immediately and call them out during the sermon for it.

William Wildblood said...

Religions have to be seen in context. I'm sure Islam was a step up from what existed in the region it arose when it did but I wrote this post in response to the question I was asked because it seems to me that modern Christianity has been so weakened by external attack and internal decay that young men, especially young men, cannot see any interest in it and so they might turn to the only other religion they know of as a reaction to the nihilistic atheism they see all around them. This would be a mistake because Islam has nothing to teach or offer the West.

Also, the huge immigration of Muslims into Western Europe over the last two decades is going to cause, already is causing, big problems and we have to be able to stand up to this. Whether this was a deliberate destabilising tactic or not doesn't matter now. We have to recognise what we are up against.

Chent said...

Although I agree with you, I think your reasoning is founded in mid air. You say: "Christianity is worse because X and Y and Islam is no X and no Y". An example:

Partly because of this, Christianity is based on love while Islam is based on law. Further, Christianity is grounded in freedom whereas Islam demands obedience.

But the fact that we consider X and Y as desirable is because we belong to the Christian tradition. Love is only the highest value in the Christian tradition and this idea is completely weird in any other tradition.

A Muslim would see no X and no Y as preferable. A Muslim would say that obedience to God is the best and you have no freedom to do evil (let alone to do evil to other people) and to disobey God, who created you and is more important than you. The community should protect itself from evil people who do harm so it is better from everybody to obey God's law.

Why X and Y are preferable to no X and no Y? Simply because Christianity is true and Islam is false (or partially false: Islam says true things mixed with falsities). There are apologetics reasonings that show that but they are beyond this comment.

Trying to prove that Christianity is true because my values are better than your values won't convince anybody who is not already convinced or belongs to the Christian tradition, that is, anybody who is not a Westerner or a Westernized person by birth or inculturation. You are preaching to the choir.

William Wildblood said...

This is not just question of different values but of what belongs to a higher, more developed consciousness and what belongs to a lesser form of awareness and understanding. You wouldn't say that knowledge is no better than ignorance. Christianity is based on a greater knowledge of God and what he wants for his creation than Islam and for this reason it treats human beings as free adult individuals rather than as children to be collectivised and controlled.

I'm sure I am preaching to the choir but anyone who sincerely wishes to understand why one religion is superior to another and has no preconceived ideas might be persuaded as well.

And by the way, the Christian emphasis on love is recognised as important everywhere which is why all other religions have taken it on board. It is not completely weird in any tradition but it largely comes from Christianity. Not exclusively, of course, but that is where it takes its most developed form and from where it has spread out to the whole world.

Surely anyone can see that freedom is better than obedience if you wish to live in a universe of joy and creativity rather than a prison or kindergarten . It is not unlimited freedom because it includes a recognition of the need for a measure of obedience too, though an obedience that understands why it obeys rather than one of obligation, just as spiritual love includes a recognition of law. The point is Christianity has everything that Islam has but goes further in every case.

DiGi377 said...

Islam is works based religion & Christianity is based on grace, but you knew that. The worship of a black cube in Mecca as part of the Hajj pilgrimage is idolatrous & demonic. I don't believe Allah & Yahweh are the same God as much as it's claimed given Islam has the Abramic roots. I consider Islam a clever (ie successful to have continued over the centuries) inversion of Yahweh & His plan for humanity.