Do Muslims and Christians Worship the Same God: What do we
Mean by “Same God” and why we should Consider where that position points us.
There has been a lot of blog posts and Facebook posts going
around in recent days about the dismissal of a Wheaton College professor who
wore a hijab. It has ignited a debate about whether Christians and Muslims
worship the same god.
While well-intentioned evangelicals have attempted to come
to the aid of professor Larycia Hawkins, there is
still a notable problem with many of the responses I’ve seen, the primary error
being that these Christian intellectuals cannot move into the bigger picture of how
communities shape personal identity and what it means for an outsider to accept
the grace and honor of upholding their identity through another community.
A few blogs have compared the situation to Paul’s speech on
Mars Hill and in which he grants some semblance of knowledge of God to the
Greeks but ultimately reproves them for their insufficient understanding of
God.
Another blog brings up a similar story in Jesus’ meeting of
the woman at well who is a Samaritan. Here Jesus has no quarrel with telling
her that the Jews, and not the Samaritans, also know who their God is because
they are the chosen. Though he ends the conversation saying that one day nobody
will worship from either mountain but in spirit and truth, this has served some
to make a point about relations between Christians and Muslims, who while
having different customs and practices, serve the same God.
Of course the problem is that systematic theology has cast
an ominous shadow over both traditions, and more conservative pundits find that
the essential meaning of God in Jesus cannot be given up for a more “watered
down” view of God’s essence.
I think what is more important is that John Hick answered a
similar objection against Karl Rahner who labeled all those who seek after
certain “positive” core values in their religious traditions to be anonymous Christians, given the
realization that the God of Jesus simply doesn’t reach everyone in every place and at every point in history. While Rahner’s argument
was an honest attempt to bring everyone into the sphere of Christian salvation for lack
of its genuine geographical reach, Hick moved that this was an insult to all those who
were well-embedded into their own religion, and a meaningless gesture. Consider this: How many Christians think of themselves as gar
toshav or of Noahide righteousness? There is an entire strain of Jewish
thought set aside for righteous gentiles that we have no interest in learning.
In fact, we would much rather be validated by the means of our own religious
rituals and practices and beliefs, then by the gestures of another community. A Christian would say I am saved by Christ, not I am a gar toshav! He would say, "I am sufficient in my salvation, and nothing lacks!"
Why? This is because gestures meant to say Muslims and Christians and Jews are all alike are meant for those who manufacture them. When they originate in the faith community to validate another faith community, they are self-reflexive in nature, and are not intended for the Other for whom this grace appears to be extended. They continue to treat the Other as a thing to be honored because it is structured within their religious compass of righteous activity, not as someone who is honored for their own sake. And perhaps this is the problem of my tradition. Christianity can only go so far in saying Muslims worship the same God without giving something up of their position. Thus, this gesture to reach out to the Other proves only to turn the Other into an object of curiosity that must be met with pedantic moralism rather than true genuine immersion.
Perhaps it would be better to say we are different, not just in practical matters but epistemological-ontological-theological understanding and we must find a way to avoid mutual destruction.
Why? This is because gestures meant to say Muslims and Christians and Jews are all alike are meant for those who manufacture them. When they originate in the faith community to validate another faith community, they are self-reflexive in nature, and are not intended for the Other for whom this grace appears to be extended. They continue to treat the Other as a thing to be honored because it is structured within their religious compass of righteous activity, not as someone who is honored for their own sake. And perhaps this is the problem of my tradition. Christianity can only go so far in saying Muslims worship the same God without giving something up of their position. Thus, this gesture to reach out to the Other proves only to turn the Other into an object of curiosity that must be met with pedantic moralism rather than true genuine immersion.
Perhaps it would be better to say we are different, not just in practical matters but epistemological-ontological-theological understanding and we must find a way to avoid mutual destruction.
But there is another way I want to offer...
Perhaps it’s time to get back to the ineffability of God and
stop fighting so hard for theological and metaphysical truth. We probably don’t
worship the same God, but each according to his own expression. Of course, any
concept brings up the problem of meaning. What do we mean by “same God”?
If we are speaking
according to God’s actions, we know that everyone from Aquinas (Christian) to
Maimonides (Jewish) to Averroes (Muslim) understood that God’s essential nature
was unknowable. These thinkers therefore appealed to analogy to understand his
action on earth extracted from his nature on high. There was a tacit
understanding that language was an insufficient tool to completely decode
revelation.
Ineffability, while it fits in some contexts, certain runs counters to the kinds of biblical passages being thrown around on the internet these past number of days. Like the story of Paul on Mars Hill and the Samaritan at the Well, Paul and Jesus take comfort in knowing that they are the bearers of a revelation that lacks no deficiency.
Returning to a language of ineffability means that we allow
some doubt, some room for expansion or contraction in our understanding, primarily
because we understanding the ineffable nature of God, not because we claim to
know of an irreducible core to God’s being that all of us share in common. That
is our commonality.
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