C
Cecilianus
Guest
I’m coming into this thread late without having read through all 12 pages of comments, so my apologies if I repeat something.I have a feeling that this thread is going disintegrate into a fury of arguments and harsh words but I pray not…
I became Catholic in 2007 after a year of RCIA. I have struggled to be the best Catholic I could be, I studied theology like crazy, I went to Mass, and I followed God.
I have to say that I am impressed with Islam, very very impressed. The Qur’an is like a beautiful ray of light. Muhammad (pbuh) is a wonderful example. The Muslims I know follow Christ’s example better than most Catholics, they are more peaceful and loving than I thought possible. Their devotion to God is absolute. And the evidence for Islam is piling up for me. I know many here have negative opinions about Islam, Muslims, and the Prophet Muhammad and I did too once but now that I have put a lot of time into studying the religion and talking to many people, I have discovered the true Islam. True Islam is not the fanatical religion of the media nor is it a woman-hating, gun-toting, violent mockery of religion as I had been taught. It very well might be the most peaceful faith on earth. God is in Islam, I can’t deny it any longer. Believe me I’ve tried!
I love the Church, but God has led me to Her and God may be leading me to Islam. I am willing to put everything else aside to follow God where He wills, even if I must put aside my beloved Mother Church. I will submit to God in all things, He will lead me where He wills.
I hesitate to ask…thoughts?
please keep it civil
pax vobiscum
Irish
Discussions about Islam inevitably end up with people talking past each other because there is no single monolithic reality behind Islam - it is a spectrum, ranging from the ugly/demonic (fundamentalism) to the absolutely sublime (such as tawwasuf). You say you see the Qur’an as a beautiful ray of light - there are many beautiful rays of light within Islam, such as the simple piety of the believer bowing down to God five times a day (which Pius XII saw as such a consolation to him), the beauty of the ahadith (“I was a hidden treasure and longed to be known…” among others), the communion with God experienced - genuinely, according to most orthodox Catholic scholars (Robert Charles Zaehner and Edward Ingram Watkin among others) - of the Sufis, the truly beautiful Ninety-Nine Names of God, and most especially the tender devotion of many Muslims to the Sayyidatna Maryam. Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, in his beautiful book “The World’s First Love, Mary the Mother of God” devotes an entire chapter to the Qur’an, and Christians in the Spain of Alfonso el Sabio sang hymns to the Virgin specifically mentioning her miracles performed upon the intercession of her Islamic devotees.
However, all the beauty of Islam points me back to my Catholic Faith. Islam certainly has truth - but Catholicism has the fullness of truth. The mutawwasuf Sheikh 'Isa Nur al-Din (born under the name of Frithjof Schuon) distinguished between the exoteric form of a religion and its esoteric core, the latter of which he strictly identified both with truth and with sanctity. Although Schuon had converted to what he thought was “esoteric” Islam, he singled out Christianity as unique in that, unlike all other religions, its exoteric form of Catholicism WAS identical to its esoterism - while for Islam, sanctity could only be found among heterodox Sufis, Christianity/Catholicism ITSELF is the means to sanctity. This is perfectly in accord with Catholic teaching on the Church: while Muslims may achieve union with God and sanctity through mysterious channels of grace, God’s Church subsists in the Catholic Church and is most surely approached there.
What most draws me back to Catholicism is the explicit discussion of the Eucharist in surah “The Banquet” [5]:114-115. Yet, as I see so often in the Qur’an, the glorious theology is then tarnished by complete silliness in the next verse, where Mohammed mistakes the Christian doctrine of the Trinity as being composed of Jesus, Mary, and Allah. Likewise, Mohammed’s life was tarnished by some pretty base sins, such as his insatiable lust for more wives (violating the rules he gave to the rest of the community) and his maltreatment of Fatima (peace be upon her).
Islam has some rays of light, but Christ is the Sun from Whom all light shines. None of the splendor veritatis (splendor of truth) must or even can be rejected in the Catholic Faith, and the beauty you see is already present (though hidden) in its infinite fullness in the Most Blessed Sacrament.
In the Name of God, the Beneficent the Merciful - Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.