In a column
for December 23, not yet online, about "the war we’re in,"
Joe Sobran makes a correct point with questionable evidence. Allow
me to preface my friendly criticism by noting the obvious. Whatever
critical observation I offer is intended to generate useful discussion.
My questions do not arise from any negative opinion about a courageous
and gifted essayist, who has suffered at least as much as I at
the hands of the same enemies. I would furthermore be flattered
if Joe chose to address my points in one of his commentaries for
the new year.
Having stated
my obvious good will, let me go on and raise my queries. Joe would
have us believe that is futile to try to convince Muslims or Jews
to become like Western Christians because their religious cultures
are fundamentally different. He therefore urges our government
to avoid political missionizing, or what Republicans used to dismiss
as "nation-building," before the neocons took over their
diminutive minds.
The problem
is, the evidence that Joe cites to underscore this difference
is for the most part not particularly cogent; nor does it seem
to have the significance that he attaches to it. Quoting a Muslim
who has converted to Catholicism, Daniel Ali, Joe explains that
Islam is hugely dissimilar from Western religion because it treats
the power of Allah as something unbounded: "Allah is not
only omnipotent but free even to contradict himself and the laws
of logic." Indeed the Muslim Deity can will that which pleases
Him, even if it contradicts what He had commanded as morally proper.
Moreover, although Muslims believe in Jesus as a prophet (and
incidentally in the Virgin Birth), they reject categorically the
divinity of Christ and the Trinity. Although these assertions
are true, much of the traditional Christian world, including non-Thomist
Catholics and many Protestant denominations, would agree with
the view of the divine will ascribed to Muslim theology. If Joe
were to read John Calvin or William of Ockham, neither of whom
would be his cup of tea but who clearly represented Western Christian
traditions, he would find some of the same tendencies that he
finds peculiar to Islam, e.g., the emphasis on a divine will that
bestows moral laws but is not unconditionally bound by the order
it establishes. Thus the Nominalists understood the combination
of revelation and moral reason with which men lived as simply
the "ordered power" that God had granted, without limiting
the fullness of His sovereignty. As for Mohammed’s unwillingness
to accept the Trinity, why blame Muslims for not believing in
what most nominal Christians in the US neither understand nor
even pretend to embrace? A look at the Gallup polls on American
religious beliefs would make Joe think with regard to the Trinity
that he is living in Mecca rather than in Washington.
What makes
Muslim communities hard for Western Christians to deal with is
not their rejection of the Trinity or their concept of divine
omnipotence but the fact that they behave unpleasantly. Thus in
the Italian town of Eboli Muslim residents are walking around
without hands because of the attempt of other Muslims to apply
Koranic punishments for theft. Even more ghastly incidents have
occurred when Muslims decided to punish women who were thought
to be unfaithful to their spouses. Moreover, Islamicists relate
to their Christian host countries in ways that are diametrically
opposed to the multicultural indulgence that they themselves receive.
While the California school system treats Judeo-Christian biblical
narratives as mere "myths," it presents the miracles
of Mohammed and the Koran as serious religious beliefs and showers
on Ramadan the attention it is now forbidden to devote to Christmas.
The response of Muslim preachers to sympathetic treatment, particularly
in Europe, has been to vent hostility on the Christian world and
to affirm the need to convert the infidel population. Meanwhile
in Africa and Asia, Christians are subject not to theological
disputes from Muslims but to enslavement or forced conversion.
Joe’s treatment
of Rabbinic beliefs and their impact on Israeli society are even
more open to question. Although Joe cites the well-established
arguments of Israel Shahak, that the Talmud makes invidious legal
and moral distinctions between Jews and non-Jews and heaps insults
on the person of Jesus, he goes too far in treating Israeli society
as being captive to such attitudes. Do most Israelis, as Joe suggests,
take anti-Christian Talmudic teachings as their guideline for
dealing with other people? Again no one but a liberal or neocon
would deny that Jews, like Japanese or Armenians, are more ethnocentric
than white bread WASPs. Nor would I question that among the very
Orthodox the unpalatable double standard and contempt for Jesus
that Joe highlights may continue to prevail. But what he never
demonstrates is that these values are now the dominant Israeli
ones.
By the way,
the tasteless remarks about Jesus that Shahak cites (in Jewish
History, Jewish Religion) were produced by Babylonian
Jews many centuries after Jesus’ death and never had for Jews
the binding character of dogma or law. In all likelihood these
slurs reflected and strengthened an already ingrained dislike
for what Rabbinic Jews saw as a successful Jewish heresy. Nonetheless,
one should not exaggerate the effect of these outbursts in shaping
Jewish thinking through the ages. If Christians were not persecuting
them, Jewish communities did not dwell on these isolated Rabbinic
mutterings about the Christian savior. In Muslim countries, Christophobia
was not an issue, and I have yet to meet an Asian or North African
Jew who holds a negative opinion about Jesus. To believe that
most Israeli Jews, who are Sephardim and who in any case are not
likely to study the criticized Talmudic passages, are nonetheless
fixated on them may be a bit of a stretch.
Such
views undoubtedly influenced ghettoized Jews who studied Rabbinic
texts and despised their Christian persecutors, but it is hard
to imagine that Israelis formulate their foreign policy on the
basis of such considerations. What may be more important is that
neither Jews nor Muslims feel any religious compunctions about
hating their perceived enemies. But then those compunctions were
less in evidence in the Christian past, when Christians were happy
to express "sectarian" beliefs.
The point
Joe has made in the past that continues to be true is that American
and European Zionists insist on a double standard with regard
to national identities. Thus Jews are imagined to have a special
inviolable right to an ethnic state, while Euro-American gentiles
are expected to practice multiculturalism. One encounters this
double standard so often that by now it has become like unpleasant
noise that one tries to tune out. But this self-righteous noise,
as I have argued elsewhere, prevails because Western Christians
are cultural masochists. It is they who are the enablers of raging
minorities who play the victim game. One problem with exporting
"Western democracy" may be the tendency of those who
engage in this activity to obliterate their own moral and religious
past. As Jesus properly taught, "Physician, heal thyself!"
December
16, 2003