返回总目录
Muhammad and the Religion of Islam: Preface
Preface
One of the great fruits of the Protestant Reformation has
been the missionary movement that today has spread its
influence to every corner of the globe. It has proved to be
more successful in some areas than in others. Accordingly
most of the Protestant missionary force today is involved
in those fields that have proved to be more fertile and
responsive than others. Only a very small proportion of
missionaries is engaged in reaching Muslims for Christ.
Yet the Muslim world remains Christianity's greatest
challenge for there is no other religion that has succeeded
in making such inroads into traditional Christian realms as
Islam and no other faith of its magnitude which has resisted
the influence of the Gospel as this one has.
Since the end of the Second World War there has been a
phenomenon in the East that discerning Christians have
identified as providential. Muslims have emigrated by
hundreds of thousands from their traditional homelands
into Western countries, the customary heritage of Christendom.
The Church in the West has been presented with a unique
opportunity to evangelise Islam right on its doorstep. A mini
world of Islam has mushroomed so that there are today emigrants,
migrant-workers, students and the like from just about every
Muslim country in the world based in Europe, North America,
and other predominantly Christian lands in the West. God has
presented the evangelical Church with a new field of mission
and one which can be discharged by all Christians, whether
trained missionaries or not. Experience has shown that the
growth of minority Muslim communities in Christian countries
has opened the door for a more comprehensive form of ministry
than has hitherto been possible in most Muslim lands.
All over the Christian world there is a rising awareness and
consciousness of Islam and the need to evangelise Muslims,
especially those who are now our neighbours, fellow-citizens
and close associates. It is the firm conviction of many that
this is God's day for the salvation of the Muslims and the
need to equip the Church for the task it is beginning to
assume is being recognised by many.
I have had the privilege of witnessing to many thousands of
Muslims during the past twelve years. Although I am a
professional man established in business, the presence of a
few hundred thousand Muslims in South Africa has given me
the opportunity to become involved in a sustained ministry
of evangelism among them and in recent years I have become
more than ever persuaded that the future of Muslim evangelism
in the West lies in the hands of those Christians who live
near enough to Muslims to have regular access to them and
to befriend them. I am about to prepare the manuscript of
my book The Christian Witness to the Muslim which will
cover the whole field of a potential ministry of comprehensive
friendship evangelism among Muslims, provide effective means
of communicating the Gospel to them, and supply ways of
answering their usual objections to the Christian faith.
This book could have been ready for publication even now,
were it not for my firm belief that all Christians seeking
to become involved in any form of continuing evangelism among
Muslims should have a sound, basic knowledge of the religion,
heritage and customs of those they hope to reach.
The result of this conviction has been the preparation instead
of this volume Muhammad and the Religion of Islam. I have
sought and endeavoured to inform those who contemplate Muslim
evangelism of the history and development of Islam from the
time of Muhammad himself down to the present day as well as
survey the religion from an evangelical Christian perspective.
This book will be followed by the second, God-willing, before
the end of 1988. I trust that they will, as companion volumes,
reflect the fruits of many years of study and experience and
provide in some measure the basic knowledge every Christian
should have if he wishes to be effective in this field.
It is being wisely said in these days that we need to
"earn the right to be heard", that is, that we must be
equipped with a sound knowledge of the religion, convictions,
hopes and thought-patterns of those we desire to win to
Jesus Christ. Nowhere is this more applicable than in the
case of the Muslim. As my own personal knowledge of Islam
has increased over the years I have found it easier to
communicate with Muslims and to make the message of the
Gospel meaningful to them. The average Muslim has not only
his religious thinking but even his whole outlook on life
conditioned by the mentality of Islam. One cannot speak to
him as if he were just another human being. He has to be
approached for what he is - a Muslim trained to think like
a Muslim, and to have his ideas and beliefs fashioned in
accordance with the basic Muslim world-view.
It has also been my pleasant experience to find that many
Muslims sincerely respect anyone who has taken the trouble
to obtain an inside knowledge of their faith, even if he
is, as I am, a Christian evangelist ministering under the
conviction that he is called to reach Muslims for Christ.
Such a Christian is far more likely to convey his message
with an impact than those who know little or nothing of
Islam. Indeed it is also my experience that many Muslims,
confronted by Christians whose fervour to witness to them
is matched only by their ignorance of Islam, are quickly
comforted by the conclusion that the confidence of such men
in Christianity is caused purely by their lack of knowledge
of the surpassing beauties of Islam. The message is gently
pushed aside as the product of "zeal which is not according
to knowledge".
A Christian who really knows Islam is able to present the
Gospel against the Muslim's background and is far more
likely to command a responsive ear. For this reason I was
persuaded that the second book would be incomplete by itself
and that it needed this book as a companion volume to assist
Christians to approach Muslims in a truly comprehensive way.
Although the book covers four hundred pages it is purely
introductory. I have supplemented it with a number of quotes
which I believe enrich the text, help to document it, and
often express matters in a far more effective way than I
could. It is also my purpose to acquaint Christians with
many of the major works on Islam. Although a number of
these will be inaccessible to most of my readers, I trust
that many will be encouraged to obtain and read other books
on Islam.
I have also had the privilege of relying first-hand on English
translations of many of the major works of Hadith literature.
When I began working among Muslims in 1973 only the Sirat
Rasulullah of Ibn Ishaq was freely available in English.
Since then a great number of works have been translated and
I am indeed privileged to be able to quote directly from them
in a work on the heritage of Islam. It is my sincere hope that
the remaining three major works of Hadith mentioned in this
book will also appear in English in the near future but we can
in the meantime be grateful for the translation of the Sahihs
of Bukhari and Muslim and the Sunan of Abu Dawud.
While on the subject of books I should perhaps mention that
the date of each respective book mentioned in the bibliography
at the end of this book is only the date of the copy that I
have consulted. It is not nepessarily the date of publication
of the original work which, where known to me, is quoted in
brackets in each case. I must express my considerable debt
to Hughes' masterpiece A Dictionary of Islam. I have
constantly consulted it and believe that it is by far the best
resource work available. Every Christian seeking to obtain a
basic knowledge of Islam should earnestly endeavour to obtain
a copy of this book.
Although the present work is chiefly an assessment of Islam
and accordingly does not deal comprehensively with the teaching
of the Qur'an about Jesus, the Trinity, etc. (these will be
covered in the second book), it is written purposefully from
an evangelical Christian perspective. I have at all times
sought to be as fair as I can be and have endeavoured to
be strictly accurate, but do not claim to have written
dispassionately or purely objectively. The writer is a
Christian by firm, independent conviction, and accordingly
writes as such. This book, therefore, is not only informative
but also approaches and evaluates Islam in the light of the
Christian faith and on many occasions does so critically and
finds Islam wanting.
Many will be inclined to conclude that this book is not only
a description of Islam but also a refutation of it. I make no
apology for this. I have a healthy respect for Muhammad, his
book and his religion, but sincerely believe that he does not
compare with Jesus Christ and that Christianity, in its
Biblical form, is far superior to Islam.
I have also considered it necessary to deal with the Muslim
tendency to place both Muhammad and the Qur'an in a category
of perfection. Muslim writers customarily gloss over the
defects of both and it is only very rarely that one finds
them subduing their sentiments in the cause of presenting a
truly historical picture. This has become a universal vogue
in the world of Islam and, without any desire to cause
offence but with the purpose of obtaining a truer perspective,
I have purposefully analysed many of these sentiments in the
light of Islam's sources and historical heritage.
It is also common to find Muslims charging Western writers
on Islam with a prejudice against it, even when they write
somewhat sympathetically. I am persuaded that such complaints
are often ill-founded. Many Western scholars, having taken
pains to assess Islam as objectively and sincerely as they
can, are nevertheless discounted and faulted purely because
they will not make any concessions to popular Muslim sentiments.
I do not expect Muslim readers to review this book favourably
in the circumstances, but do sincerely trust that they will
acknowledge that my conclusions and opinions have been based
on records drawn from within the heritage of Islam (i.e.
the Qur'an, major works of Hadith literature and other
Islamic sources) and that they have always been factually
stated and carefully documented.
Lastly a brief word should be said about the transliteration
of Arabic texts from the Qur'an and other works into English.
As the Arabic script is principally phonetic I have sought
to reproduce it as phonetically as I can so that the form
here set forth conveys as closely as possible the pronunciation
of the original. To give an example, whereas some writers
are inclined to write the definite article, al, as it
appears in the consonantal script, I have followed the usual
pronunciation, especially where the word to which the article
is attached begins with one of the so-called "sun-letters" (al-hurufush-shamsiyah), for example as-Siddiq
(written in the script as al-Siddiq).
I have generally not indicated long vowels or the use of
the three diphthong letters to elongate a vowel except in
direct quotes from the Qur'an. All quotes from the Qur'an
in English are from the translation by Abdullah Yusuf Ali
unless otherwise stated. Translations of particular verses
quoted in the original language are usually my own,
appearing always within the body of my own text.
As is generally customary today, the feminine ta marbutah
has been used in the transliteration of words employing this
form by the addition of an "h" to the relevant word in each
case. I have endeavoured to be as consistent as I can be in
transliteration (employing an order coming into general use
today), but where a widely accepted form of a word has taken
root in writings on Islam, I have retained its traditional
arrangement (e.g. muezzin for muadh-dhin, etc).
Readers, I am sure, will recognise that there is great value
in having some knowledge of Arabic and I urge those contemplating
Arabic studies to pursue them.
This book has been written primarily for evangelical Christians
to give them a sound, basic knowledge of Islam and its heritage.
It is my fervent hope that it will inspire confidence in those
seeking to witness to Muslims and equip them in some measure
for the task.
John Gilchrist.
10th July 1984
Muhammad and the Religion of Islam: Table of Contents
Answering Islam Home Page