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Knowledge
and Religious Experience (continued)
During the last five hundred
years religious thought in Islam has been practically stationary. There was
a time when European thought received inspiration from the world of Islam. The
most remarkable phenomenon of modern history, however, is the enormous rapidity
with which the world of Islam is spiritually moving towards the West. There
is nothing wrong in this movement, for European culture, on its intellectual
side, is only a further development of some of the most important phases of
the culture of Islam. Our only fear is that the dazzling exterior of European
culture may arrest our movement and we may fail to reach the true inwardness
of that culture. During all the centuries of our intellectual stupor Europe
has been seriously thinking on the great problems in which the philosophers
and scientists of Islam were so keenly interested. Since the Middle Ages, when
the schools of Muslim theology were completed, infinite advance has taken place
in the domain of human thought and experience. The extension of mans power
over Nature has given him a new faith and a fresh sense of superiority over
the forces that constitute his environment. New points of view have been suggested,
old problems have been re-stated in the light of fresh experience, and new problems
have arisen. It seems as if the intellect of man is outgrowing its own most
fundamental categories - time, space, and causality. With the advance of scientific
thought even our concept of intelligibility is undergoing a change.18
The theory of Einstein has brought a new vision of the universe and suggests
new ways of looking at the problems common to both religion and philosophy.
No wonder then that the younger generation of Islam in Asia and Africa demand
a fresh orientation of their faith. With the reawakening of Islam, therefore,
it is necessary to examine, in an independent spirit, what Europe has thought
and how far the conclusions reached by her can help us in the revision and,
if necessary, reconstruction, of theological thought in Islam. Besides this
it is not possible to ignore generally anti-religious and especially anti-Islamic
propaganda in Central Asia which has already crossed the Indian frontier. Some
of the apostles of this movement are born Muslims, and one of them, Tewfâk Fikret,
the Turkish poet, who died only a short time ago,19 has gone to the
extent of using our great poet-thinker, Mirz« Abd al-Q«dir Bedil of Akbar«b«d,
for the purposes of this movement. Surely, it is high time to look to the essentials
of Islam. In these lectures I propose to undertake a philosophical discussion
of some of the basic of ideas of Islam, in the hope that this may, at least,
be helpful towards a proper understanding of the meaning of Islam as a message
to humanity. Also with a view to give a kind of ground-outline for further discussion,
I propose, in this preliminary lecture, to consider the character of knowledge
and religious experience.
The main
purpose of the Qur«n is to awaken in man the higher consciousness of his
manifold relations with God and the universe. It is in view of this essential
aspect of the Quranic teaching that Goethe, while making a general review of
Islam as an educational force, said to Eckermann: You see this teaching
never fails; with all our systems, we cannot go, and generally speaking no man
can go, farther than that.20 The problem of Islam was really
suggested by the mutual conflict, and at the same time mutual attraction, presented
by the two forces of religion and civilization. The same problem confronted
early Christianity. The great point in Christianity is the search for an independent
content for spiritual life which, according to the insight of its founder, could
be elevated, not by the forces of a world external to the soul of man, but by
the revelation of a new world within his soul. Islam fully agrees with this
insight and supplements it by the further insight that the illumination of the
new world thus revealed is not something foreign to the world of matter but
permeates it through and through.
Thus the
affirmation of spirit sought by Christianity would come not by the renunciation
of external forces which are already permeated by the illumination of spirit,
but by a proper adjustment of mans relation to these forces in view of
the light received from the world within. It is the mysterious touch of the
ideal that animates and sustains the real, and through it alone we can discover
and affirm the ideal. With Islam the ideal and the real are not two opposing
forces which cannot be reconciled. The life of the ideal consists, not in a
total breach with the real which would tend to shatter the organic wholeness
of life into painful oppositions, but in the perpetual endeavour of the ideal
to appropriate the real with a view eventually to absorb it, to convert it into
itself and illuminate its whole being. It is the sharp opposition between the
subject and the object, the mathematical without and the biological within,
that impressed Christianity. Islam, however, faces the opposition with a view
to overcome it. This essential difference in looking at a fundamental relation
determines the respective attitudes of these great religions towards the problem
of human life in its present surroundings. Both demand the affirmation of the
spiritual self in man, with this difference only that Islam, recognizing the
contact of the ideal with the real, says yes to the world of matter21
and points the way to master it with a view to discover a basis for a realistic
regulation of life.
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[See
Notes]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:02:52 AM
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