FAQ: UNIFICATIONISM AND ISLAM:
MUTUAL RESPECT AND JOINT EFFORTS TO BENEFIT THE WORLD
MUTUAL RESPECT AND JOINT EFFORTS TO BENEFIT THE WORLD
Overview of Unificationism and Islam:
Unification teaching recognizes the Prophet Mohammed and the religion of Islam that is based on the truths revealed through him, as pivotal in God’s providence of restoration. That is, Unificationism believes that, as with other major faiths of the world, Islam plays a particular role in guiding the human family into a relationship of unity with God and harmony among races, nations and peoples.
Because Islam is the newest major faith on earth, older religions say nothing about it and offer no guidance to their followers regarding how they should view Muslims and Islam. This is one of the root causes of the great misunderstanding between Islam and other faiths, especially Christianity, and the conflicts that characterize many of the relations Islam has with other religions. Unificationism, however, looks at the full landscape of God’s work to uplift and save people everywhere, over the centuries of human history, from the perspective of the world today.
This means that Unificationists are taught the value of Islam and Muslims, and seek to actively work with them to achieve inter-religious harmony, world peace and a better life for all. A good number of Muslims are active in Unification projects, and a good number of Unificationists are active in supporting Muslim projects. And Unification organizations and individuals have initiated and participated in a wide range of inter-faith initiatives with Muslim scholars and leaders.
UNIFICATIONIST POSITIONS ON KEY MUSLIM ISSUES
Unificationism is based on a comprehensive theology. Below is a summary of Unificationist positions on key Muslim Issues
The Prophet Mohammed
The core story of human history is God’s work to restore his
beloved human creations to a state of oneness with Him. To do this,
God has raised up many prophets, whom He has inspired with truth and
wisdom, and the courage to share their understanding with others. This
is an evolving process: as human beings grow in understanding, God
is able to reveal more and more of His will and truth to them. Thus
Mohammed was sent by God as a prophet to shed light on areas of human
ignorance and to build on the contributions of earlier religions in
moving humanity towards a world of love, justice and goodness.
The Koran
The Prophet Mohammed received revelations from the angel Gabriel which
were assembled into the suras, or chapters, of the Koran
(or Qur’an). Some of these addressed issues of the moment,
especially in Mecca and Medina. Others addressed the eternal questions
of existence, providing a theological framework for understanding
the universe and life and a system of religion-based laws, called sharia.
Sharia
Religious teaching is always translated into a set of guidelines and
laws for a moral life that aims to lead to oneness with God’s
will and laws. In Islam, these guidelines and laws, or sharia,
are based on the revelations contained in the Koran, as well as the hadith,
or traditions, of the life of the Prophet Mohammed as described by
his early disciples. The four main schools of sharia in
the majority sunni tradition are all fundamentally important
in the lives of hundreds of millions of Muslims. Other schools of sharia,
including those of the minority shia sects, have had similarly
beneficial effects in the lives of those believers. Unificationism
agrees with Islam that because people live in the darkness of ignorance
about God, they need laws to guide them towards maturity and enlightenment.
The Role of Islam
Islam has provided an understanding of God and a guide for a moral
life to over one billion people around the world. In some cases,
Islam has been successful where other religions have not done well.
Unificationism believes that the value of religion can only be measured
correctly in terms of the virtues it implants and fosters in individuals,
families, societies and nations. Islam has provided the religious
base for the virtuous lives of countless people and social structures.
Islam’s Contribution to the World
A millennium ago, when Europe was plunged in the ‘Dark Ages’,
Islam flourished and made significant contributions to science, philosophy,
mathematics and medicine. There were Muslim philosophers and physicians
like Al Farabi, Ibn Sina (Avicenna to the West) and Ibn Rushd (Averroes);
there were mathematicians like Al Khawarizmi, considered the father
of Algebra; historians like Ibn Khaldoun; and great mystical writers
and poets like Rumi and Al Ghazali. Cities like Isfahan and Bukhara,
and later Cairo and Cordoba, were centers of scholarship and learning.
None was more outstanding than Baghdad, which at the time of the Caliph
Harun Al Rashid, in the 9th Century CE, was more advanced than any
European city. Many Muslim men of letters wrote impressive commentaries
on the works of Aristotle, and sought to reconcile Islam with logic
and philosophy. Ibn Rushd insisted that the Koran should be studied
on the basis of rational thought. Ibn Sina is said to have memorized
the Koran by the age of seven, but also to have read Aristotle’s
Metaphysics 40 times as a teen. Islam continues to make contributions
to the world through the men and women it inspires, in all walks of
life.
God’s Creation
The ideal of God’s creation, a world of God-centered men and
women living in love and peace with one another, is an ideal that Unificationism
shares with Islam. In this world, the love of God will be reflected
in the God-centered love among people, and the laws of God will be
the basis for the laws of society.
The Fall of Man and Original Sin
The Koran describes the disobedience of the first man and woman, Adam
and Eve, in literal terms. Unificationism understands this disobedience
to mean specifically that Adam and Eve failed to obey God’s
instructions for them to establish pure and moral lives as a man
and woman separately, before being joined together by God as a married
couple blessed with the fullest endowment of God’s love. As
a blessed couple they would have been the parents of a sinless human
race. Their disobedience, or sin, was the original sin, which resulted
in their descendants being born distant from God and sinful, a state
of separation from God clearly demonstrated when Cain, their first
son, killed his own younger brother, Abel.
Islam’s View of Jesus
Jesus came as the second Adam with the mission to restore the original
family and a pure lineage. Unificationism agrees with Islam that
Jesus was a sinless man, and not God. It also agrees with Islam that
Jesus came as the prophesized Messiah. Jesus was sent to the people
whom God had, for some two millennia, since the time of Abraham,
prepared to receive the Messiah. Unfortunately, Jesus was not widely
accepted by the Jewish people as the long-awaited Messiah, and as
a result was put to death by the Romans, following his indictment
by some Jewish leaders. The death of Jesus meant that the providence
of salvation, or restoration, was prolonged. It also meant that a
place was created for the arrival of a new prophet and religion,
Mohammed and Islam.
Abraham, Isaac and Ishmael
If Abraham had not made an error in his sacrifice of animals, he would
not have been called upon by God to sacrifice a son. Isaac and Ishmael,
as the sons of a victorious Abraham, would have been in a position
to build together the foundations for the nation and world God has
always wanted and had promised Abraham. Instead, the brothers were
alienated. Isaac fathered Jacob, who became the father of the 12
tribes of Israel, and Ishmael fathered the 12 tribes of the Arabs.
Resentments between the two estranged brothers became the seeds of
historical resentment between the Ishmaelites and Israelites, the
Jews and the Arabs.
Reconciliation Among Jews, Christians, Arabs and Muslims
God
has worked with all the descendants of Abraham to raise them up in
His image, to make them mature, loving men and women capable of fulfilling
the original ideal of creation. But despite all God’s efforts,
all too often the people He has loved and blessed have not fulfilled
their portion of responsibility and have gone against God’s will.
As a result, the history of relations between the Jews, and later their
spiritual offspring, the Christians, on the one hand, and the Arabs and
their spiritual offspring, the Muslims, on the other, has been full of
resentment, anger and conflict, with all too rare episodes of amity.
Unificationism sees Jews, Christians, Arabs and Muslims as descendants
of a single ancestor, Abraham, and a single spiritual parent, God. As
such, they should seek reconciliation through mutual respect and love.
This reconciliation is the key to resolving the religion-related conflicts
of the world today.