I’ve Moved!
November 20, 2008
So I’m sure that most people have noticed that the site has been offline for a few days. There’s a reason for that, which I will get to shortly. But first, let me just say this:
In fact, I am blogging at a new site I have just finished setting up: kennethhynek.net. A full explanation for the reasons behind the move can be found here
.
That said, this is not the end of Time Immortal. My wife Grace has expressed interest in taking over blogging at this domain, and I am working to make sure that she gets set up here as soon as possible.
Also, my profound apologies for the modification to the site face; the move was not as seamless as I would have hoped, and many of the image files for this theme, and in the gallery, were corrupted during the course of their evacuation from my previous web host’s servers. Until such time as I have repaired them, I’ve put a clean-looking template in place of the previous one.
Update: for the purposes of further traffic shaping, new posts from kennethhynek.net will be excerpted below. Full articles can be read at the new blog.
Because Islam is such a friend of press freedom, right?
September 5, 2008
Shaukat Khawja is complaining that the Jooooooooos only allow freedom of the press for themselves
. It’s a perennial theme for the perpetually aggrieved blogger who calls himself ‘Rehmat’; the Joooooos are at fault for everything, and are responsible for everybody else’s shortcomings.
Oh, and the Joooooos are also out to denigrate everyone else’s Religion.
And look at this allegation: the Israeli Mossad was actually responsible for the Muhammed cartoons published in Denmark.
Shaukat is also up in arms over the insults directed at Jesus in the recent movie the Da Vinci Code, produced by (the Jew!) Brian Grazer. And while I appreciate Shaukat’s defence of Christ, I might point out that the Koran — which I can only assume Rehmat holds in high regard — does little better than the poor prose of Dan Brown when it comes to giving due glory to Jesus.
After all, the Koran denies Jesus’ divinity and asserts that He did not die upon the Cross. That’s about as insulting to Christian beliefs as anything portrayed in some crappy movie starring Tom Hanks‘ bad haircut.
Update: Welcome, Steynians
!
Reader Mail: BSG Thanksgiving
April 11, 2008
Count Roland writes in with some thoughts about some recent promotional material for a series we both enjoy watching — Battlestar Galactica. While the picture itself dates back to a promotional campaign that the SciFi Channel ran back in January of this year, I haven’t really commented on the image….well…because let’s face it: rip-offs of the famous painting of Christ and the apostles sitting at the table are a dime a dozen.
Have you seen the picture on scifi.com’s BSG page? It is The Last Supper but with Caprica Six presiding and BSG characters attending. I was surprised to see it, but it seems to be in some taste - not raunchy, say - and it would seem to be in jest. Especially since the Cylons are the monotheists and Caprica saved them from their destructive path (sort of…).
I wonder, O Writer, if this would generate problems and if it generates less than the homosexual parody, then perhaps the Muslim response is made at least more understandable if not condonable. If we react less harshly to fiction than doctrine parodies, perhaps they react more strongly for dogma than we do for doctrine.
But wait, fiction, such as The Satanic Verses, has caused quite vehement response too. Perhaps the dogma of “Islam and Muhammad are always right” creates a great deal more fiction than our dogmas, the creeds for Christians and some others, such as inspiration of Scripture not specifically mentioned in the creeds. Maybe , too, our dogma of love impels us to a different response than the dogma of shame and retribution.
Here’s the picture to which Roland is referring, just for reference (corrected — oops!):
[image:7094:c:s=1:l=x]
As noted above, I am aware of the “Last Supper” promo picture, and I am equally aware of the various ways in which it alternatively is and is not supposed to be concerned with the identity of the final Cylon, whoever he or she might be. I don’t think it is in the best taste, but I certainly don’t find it offensive. The positioning of Tricia Helfer’s “Head Six” at the center of the table is interesting, and may be a commentary on the nature of the being that only Gaius Baltar can see (she does assert, often, that she is “an angel of God“). More interesting, I think, is the positioning of Jamie Bamber’s Lee Adama in the place of Judas Iscariot, and the fact that the seat of Simon Peter is yet empty*.
I may be misunderstanding Roland‘ second paragraph, but I don’t think anything about this picture — the intent that went into it, its composition, or the reaction to it from both Christians and non-Christians — in any way condones some of the more violent reactions that one sees from the Islamic community against similar, greater, and sometimes lesser slights. That’s not to say that a response is not justified — it is simply to remark that if the response takes the form of murderous riots, it has become far worse than that which it protests, and is a grave moral evil.
I think Roland hits the mark exactly by mentioning the concept of fiction, which I think is key in forming a proper response to what could be called parodies of representations of religious figures. In much the same way as anyone who thinks that the Da Vinci Code has anything more than a coincidental relationship to reality needs to give his or her head a shake, so too does anyone who is offended by a fiction-derived representation of a real religious figure need to pause and consider carefully his or her reaction. Fiction is just that — fiction, not reality. It doesn’t matter where Head Six is positioned in the picture, nor does it matter who occupies the central position of the picture, so long as in reality that position was and is occupied by Christ. And it is, just as it was.
I think that Roland also hits the mark by noting a major difference between Islamic theology and Christian theology — whereas Christian Theology is predicated on the concepts of love and mercy, Islamic theology seems to be predicated on doctrines of submission and militarism. And so while the Christian response to a perceived blasphemy (because really, that is what is at issue here) might be to shake one’s head and wonder at the reasoning behind the composition, the Islamic (Islamist?) response seems to be to demand that the errant composer be made to suffer for his actions.
The question, I suppose, becomes why Islam tends toward the violent response, whereas Christianity tends toward the non-violent, when the issue at hand is something which is perceived to be a slight against each respective religion. One thought which I keep returning to is that the only real reason to act violently in response to a blasphemous or insulting depiction of a religious figure is if the true nature of the figure depicted is more accurately revealed in the blasphemous image than in the traditional depiction, and if the intended goal of the violence is to suppress that truth. I don’t suggest that I am condoning violence in the cause of a cover-up — I am merely noting that, to me at least, that’s really the only thing I can think of when I try to imagine a motive that would cause a person to act out violently against a cheap-shot blasphemous image. In essence, the violence emerges when the blasphemy hits too close to home.
Since I regard Muhammad as a false prophet, and as a generally unsavoury person, I regard depictions of him which dispute his sanctity as being more accurate than those which affirm it, and I realize that I admit a certain bias in my thinking if this latest statement is considered in parallel with the previous paragraph. I submit, nevertheless, that the preceding is still a valid point for consideration.
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readers!
* although the traditional left-to-right order of apostles lists Judas as being to the left of Peter, a closer look at the picture shows that Peter’s seat is left of that of Judas’, and that Peter is leaning over toward John (who is to the right of Judas).
DVC: Islam
January 15, 2008
No one is going to produce proof that Jesus Christ did not rise from the grave three days after the Crucifixion, of course. Humankind will choose to believe or not that God revealed Himself in this fashion. But Islam stands at risk of a Da Vinci Code effect, for in Islam, God’s self-revelation took the form not of the Exodus, nor the revelation at Mount Sinai, nor the Resurrection, but rather a book, namely the Koran. The Encyclopaedia of Islam (1982) observes, “The closest analogue in Christian belief to the role of the Koran in Muslim belief is not the Bible, but Christ.” The Koran alone is the revelatory event in Islam.
What if scholars can prove beyond reasonable doubt that the Koran was not dictated by the Archangel Gabriel to the Prophet [Muhammad] during the 7th century, but rather was redacted by later writers drawing on a variety of extant Christian and Jewish sources? That would be the precise equivalent of proving that the Jesus Christ of the Gospels really was a composite of several individuals, some of whom lived a century or two apart.
It has long been known that variant copies of the Koran exist, including some found in 1972 in a paper grave at in Yemen, the subject of a cover story in the January 1999 Atlantic Monthly. Before the Yemeni authorities shut the door to Western scholars, two German academics, Gerhard R Puin and H C Graf von Bothmer, made 35,000 microfilm copies, which remain at the University of the Saarland. Many scholars believe that the German archive, which includes photocopies of manuscripts as old as 700 AD, will provide more evidence of variation in the Koran.
The history of the archive reads like an Islamic version of the Da Vinci Code. It is not clear why its existence was occulted for sixty years, or why it has come to light now, or when scholars will have free access to it.
Interesting, to say the least. Not that I have any doubts that Islam, as a religion, is false…but in studying Scripture for the various classes I’ve taken on the science-religion dialogue, and in forming various apologetics related to that, one of the things I’ve stumbled across is that Scripture (especially the early books of what Christians call the Old Testament) is formed from different written sources which were redacted together several centuries before the birth of Christ. It is not unreasonable to assume that the Islamic holy book was similarly comprised from several different sources — many ancient texts were.
Where the problem arises, as the article above points out, is that such a discovery would actually be a bit of an undoing for Islam…because the Koran occupies such a high place in Islamic theology, since it is reportedly (if I understand the idea correctly) Muhammad’s direct transcription of the literal word of Allah as delivered by the angel Gabriel. Unlike the Bible, Talmud, or Torah (all of which are understood to be the works of human authors whose words God has guided, but who are still writing as free and rational persons all their own), the Koran cannot survive the discovery that it is comprised of writings from several different authorial sources. And absent the Koran, Islam cannot thrive.
Now, the Reader might be wondering why this discovery hasn’t come to light until now, despite the history behind it. Well…in a word, the Nazis:
Why were the Nazis so eager to suppress Koranic criticism? Most likely, the answer lies in their alliance with Islamist leaders, who shared their hatred of the Jews and also sought leverage against the British in the Middle East. The most recent of many books on this subject, Matthias Kuntzel’s Jihad and Jew-Hatred, was reviewed January 13 in the New York Times by Jeffrey Goldberg, who reports
Kuntzel makes a bold and consequential argument: the dissemination of European models of anti-Semitism among Muslims was not haphazard, but an actual project of the Nazi Party, meant to turn Muslims against Jews and Zionism. He says that in the years before World War II, two Muslim leaders in particular willingly and knowingly carried Nazi ideology directly to the Muslim masses. They were Haj Amin al-Husseini, the mufti of Jerusalem, and the Egyptian proto-Islamist Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood.It may be a very long time before the contents of the Bavarian archive are known. Some Koranic critics, notably the pseudonymous scholar “Ibn Warraq”, claim that Professor Angelika Neuwirth, the archive’s custodian, has denied access to scholars who stray from the traditional interpretation. Neuwirth admits that she has had the archive since 1990. She has 18 years of funding to study the Bavarian archive, and it is not clear who will have access to it.
The collusion between the Nazis and some of the Islamic regimes in Arabia have been documented by others. What is surprising to learn is that Hitler’s regime was evidently so committed to that collusion that it was willing to try and suppress this sort of study.
(In Soviet Russia, hat tips you: Ace of Spades)





