Today’s Scripture Reading (October 13,
2017): Matthew 15
Muslim
Philosopher Al-Ghazali (1058-1111 C.E.) instructed his followers to “Declare your jihad on thirteen
enemies you cannot see - egoism, arrogance, conceit, selfishness, greed, lust,
intolerance, anger, lying, cheating, gossiping and slandering. If you can
master and destroy them, then you will be ready to fight the enemy you can
see.” Al-Ghazali has been described as
the single most influential Muslim after Muhammad. And it is not just on Islam
that he has left his mark. Through his influence on Christian figures like St.
Thomas Aquinas, his wisdom has crossed over dividing religious lines into
various areas of human existence.
Al-Ghazali’s words of jihad threaten to put off any contemporary
Christian listener. We regard jihad as something that does not pertain to us.
But I would argue that we need to hear the words of this Muslim philosopher;
that the world would be such a better place if we could just live out Al-Ghazali’s
instructions. Too many Christians do battle with the world without first doing battle with themselves. What would happen if we
did declare our fight on the thirteen
unseen enemies of our lives? What if we treated things like egoism, arrogance,
conceit, selfishness, greed, lust, intolerance, anger, lying, cheating,
gossiping and slandering as the enemy of our souls and committed ourselves to
their eradication from our lives before we decided to criticize the lives of
others?
Okay, if we were to declare jihad on the thirteen unseen
enemies, we might not get around to ever declaring jihad on anything or anyone
else. The battle against these thirteen enemies would be enough to fill a
lifetime. And the reality is that it is the same thirteen enemies, declared by
Al-Ghazali, that stop the Christian from genuinely
being the loving force in our world. Our power
is usurped by our thirteen unseen enemies.
Jesus declaration is that we are
stopped from accomplishing the will of God because we give a higher place to tradition than to God. The
actual Greek word that is used is παράδοσις (paradosis), a teaching from tradition. We ignore what God
directly instructs us to do because it does not measure up with the precepts we
have put in place in our own lives. And those tenets
are often a direct result of our thirteen unseen enemies. It is our ego that sets what we believe or want to believe above God’s
instruction. Our arrogance and our conceit and the strong desire that exists
within us to slander and gossip that stops us from being a force for the
positive in this world.
Specifically, it is this tradition of the thirteen unseen enemies that stop us from loving others the way that Jesus
loved. And until we declare war against our thirteen unseen enemies, we will never be able to love each other the way that Jesus instructed us to love. Instead, we will continue to allow
tradition to modify the commands of God – and in the end, we will accomplish nothing.
Tomorrow’s
Scripture Reading: Mark 7
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