Punishing Apostasy
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
"Then Moses
stood in the gate of the camp and said, Who is on the Lord's side?
Let him come unto me. And all the sons of Levi gathered themselves
together unto him.
"And he
said unto them, Thus sayeth the Lord God of Israel, Put every man
his sword by his side, and go in and out from gate to gate throughout
the camp, and slay every man his brother, and every man his companion,
and every man his neighbor.
"And the
children of Levi did according to the word of Moses: and there fell
of the people that day about three thousand men."
This was
the punishment the Lord commanded and Moses ordered for the Jews
who had fallen down and worshiped the golden calf while he was on
Sinai being given the Law, the First Commandment of which read:
"I am the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not have strange gods before
me."
The severity
of the punishments Jews and Christians have imposed upon apostates
comes to mind as one reads that Abdul Rahman, 41, is on trial in
Kabul for having converted, 16 years ago, to Christianity.
Rahman
was caught as he sought custody of two teenage daughters raised
by their grandparents. He was found to be in possession of a Bible.
Confessing
to being a Christian convert, Rahman has refused to recant and reconvert
to Islam, preferring to die a Christian.
Under Sharia,
strict Islamic law, a Muslim who rejects Islam is to be put to death.
Rahman's prosecutor, Abdul Wisi, declared: "He would have been forgiven
if he changed back. But he said he was a Christian and would always
remain one. We are Muslims, and becoming a Christian is against
our laws. He must get the death penalty."
Judge Ansarullah
Mawlavezada, who conducted the one-day hearing, explained: "We are
not against any particular religion. But in Afghanistan this sort
of thing is against the law. It is an attack on Islam."
Post-Taliban
Afghanistan remains 99 percent Muslim. The Christians are numbered
in the hundreds at most, and most remain secret Christians.
If Rahman
is put to death, he would be a martyr. And if there is a way we
Americans can spare this Christian, we should find it.
But the
story of Abdul Rahman raises anew this question: Are not free elections
in the Islamic world, where the masses are urged to vote, almost
certain to empower the faith of those masses, militant Islam?
Two thousand
years ago, Christians in Jerusalem, from Christ Himself to St. Stephen,
were declared apostates to Judaism and suffered the fate that Rahman
faces. For 300 years, Romans executed untold thousands of Christians,
among them Sts. Peter and Paul.
When papal
Catholicism became the faith of Europe, apostates and heretics were
burned at the stake. In the Protestant England of Henry VIII and
Elizabeth I, Catholics, such as Thomas More, Cardinal Pole and priests
like Edmund Campion, were martyred.
None of
this is to endorse killing in the name of God, but to suggest that
killing in the name of God, and, in our own time, in the name of
the State, the race, the ideology – be it Nazism, communism or Maoism,
or even democracy – has been the way of mankind.
Heretics
during the Spanish Inquisition were forced to make an auto-da-fé,
a confession of faith, not only because Spain and Catholicism were
one, but because heretics imperiled the faith that led to eternal
life. By undermining that faith, apostates and heretics were risking
the souls and salvation of the Spanish people. They were diverting
men from paradise. Whoever threatened the faith in that time of
belief would be like, in our time, the pimp who corrupts a young
girl with narcotics to put her into prostitution.
Devout
Muslims believe that apostates to Islam, the greatest gift they
have, should get the same treatment patriotic Americans in 1950
thought should be meted out to Soviet spies and communist traitors.
To devout
Muslims, Islam is worth dying for, and killing for. This is a belief
that the secularist mind, which regards religion as anything from
an addiction of the feeble-minded to a substitute for Valium, cannot
fathom. But that is a deficiency of modernity. For we all have,
or have had, causes for which we, too, would kill.
Lenin executed
more people in his first year than the Spanish Inquisition did in
300 years, said Solzhenitzyn. Mao's body lies in a crystal sarcophagus
in Tiananmen Square, though he killed many times more Chinese than
the Western and Japanese imperialists put together.
The
Christian West partook of two of the greatest mass slaughters of
human history, World Wars I and II, featuring poison gas and the
carpet bombing and atomic bombing of cities to advance the cause
of democracy – that same democracy Islamic peoples now use to advance
the cause of Islam and Islamism.
There is
nothing new under the sun.
March
22, 2006
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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