Islam Questions Monopoly on Salvation
Is heaven like a modern nation state that has restricted entry on the
basis of birth in particular region/religion? Who says God has no reward
for other faith communities? None of the towering scholars holds
historical Islam has monopoly on salvation. Islam that alone is
acceptable to God according to the Holy Qur’an embraces, as metaphysic,
all revealed traditions and can’t be identified with Sharia tagged
historical Islam given Sharia has kept changing previously but salvific
efficacy hasn’t from Adam/Noah to Muhammad. The logic of salvation
couldn’t change on any arbitrary date and none has so far fixed that
date either. Islam questions those who maintain Judaic or Christian
monopoly on salvation and can’t contradict itself by asserting its own
monopoly. Salvation is primarily a function of metaphysical/esoteric
core that stays/stayed unchanged across scriptures. Even if salvation of
believers in other religions is theoretically not conceded, in practice
when it comes to pronouncing judgement on the fate of others, many
considerations come into play and somehow salvation is conceded for
religious other and even non-religious other to various degrees by
various influential contributors to the debate in Islamic tradition. The
following points may be noted in understanding the complex issue of
salvation of non-Muslims.
Our religion provides privileged (though
not necessarily exclusive) access to salvation. We are not committed to
denial of salvation of believers of other traditions in principle as we
can’t determine, in a given concrete situation, whether a particular
person or faith community is properly exposed to truth of our salvific
scheme. Salvation can be offered in its pristine sense on the terms
specified in our tradition. If it could be shown that it is
love/truth/grace that saves and these are actualized through alternative
paths or real objectives of various dogmatic formulations – and we
can’t foreclose debate on such possibilities – we must in principle
remain open to claims that salvation can’t be restricted to one’s own
tradition. We can’t be sure about God’s choice to extend His mercy to
any particular person. We don’t know faith or state of a person at the
moment of death or even during life as faith has an existential aspect
that is impenetrable to the gaze of the other/analyst and thus we must
suspend judgment. One can count on fingers persons whose fate is sealed
according to traditional canon and about the rest one can have a goodly
opinion or reserve one’s opinion. Since justice has to be done as God is
Justice, the accident of birth in particular religion can’t be central
determining factor in winning salvation. God is sure to institute reward
but can suspend or forgive punishment. There is asymmetry between
duration of His Heaven, promise of reward and mercy and duration of hell
and threat of punishment.
The following select questions one could
ask any defender of monopoly of salvation: (i) Do you think it is
absolutely certain that Islam restricts salvation to Muslims or
non-Muslims can be saved due to the facts that they are not exposed to
Islam in an attractive manner, divine mercy can’t be restricted and
their various excuses/weaknesses could be entertained? (ii) Can you
vouch for the possibility that so many sane persons will deny Islam when
Islam is presented in a truly attractive manner? Isn’t it the case that
Islam has yet to be presented in the attractive manner to major
historians, philosophers, social scientists, writers and politicians of
the world or they are just ignorant arrogant foolhardy complacent
people? (iii) Isn’t salvation in principle open to all sincere seekers –
anonymous Muslims? Does Islam save by confession to belong to a
particular community identity or to Truth, Intelligence, Objective
Order, surrendering the self to the One/non-self/Real? Is Islam here
inclusive of previous revealed traditions and thus not identifiable with
historical Islam’s distinctive identity? (iv) Who can declare someone
unworthy of salvation? Who can assert who has faith and who has none or
who knows truth and then arrogantly denies it? Did God give exclusive
rights to Muslims to determine eligibility of visa documents of
particular cases to heaven? (v) Do we need to speculate about future
fate or note the present status of a particular person to have
reasonable view of his fate here and hereafter? Does one go to hell or
heaven or one is in hell or heaven really and one’s poverty or riches
get only clearly manifested posthumously? Isn’t virtue its own reward?
Aren’t this and otherworld coterminous? Aren’t all the goodly things
here reflections from the other world? Isn’t God/Heaven in the present
moment, in eternal now? (vi) Given a Muhammedan is one who realizes the
perfections of all the prophets – an ideal worthy of emulating for every
man who can assert that he is truly a Muhammedan and give each created
thing exactly what is due to it and who can be more inclusivist than a
Muhammedan in this sense? Hesitancy to answer all these questions shows
one concedes, in theory or practice, salvation to religious other.
Indeed if God’s Mercy has the last word, we can be hopeful. Indeed, as
traditions indicate and some scholars argue, hell shall be emptied or
cooled or turned into a place of bliss and none can escape God the
Irresistible (resist His love) in the long run and God arranges return
of all and sundry to Him and to rest in God is salvation. God alone
exists or His Face alone remains as everything else is ephemeral. Saints
and sages like Ibn Arabi inform, first hand, of heaven and hell and
illuminate the question of monopoly on salvation so that one sees for
oneself and needn’t just speculate with Ulema that are not urafa/hukama.
Monopoly on salvation is across traditions including Islam by most
mystics and traditional philosophers, artists/poets, most modern
scholars of world religions and significant number of believers as part
of their belief system.
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