
Mon, Feb. 25, 2008 Posted: 09:50 AM EST
There are an estimated 1.6 million Muslims in Great Britain. By some estimates, more people attend mosque than go to Anglican churches every week. Judging by recent comments by the Archbishop of Canterbury, it is easy to see why.
As most of you by now know, Archbishop Rowan William said in a recent interview that the UK has to face up to the fact that some of its citizens do not relate to the British legal system. He left no doubt who those citizens are: British Muslims.
So according to Williams, British Muslims should not have to choose between the stark alternatives of cultural loyalty or state loyalty. Instead, in the tradition of having your cake and eating it too, he proposes finding a constructive accommodation with some aspects of Muslim lawin other words, sharia.
British Muslims could choose to have marital or financial disputes resolved in sharia courts. Sharia courts in Britain? At first I thought the Archbishop misspoke.
But it turns out, no. He calls this supplementary jurisdiction unavoidable. He compared it to accommodating Christians in areas like abortion or gay adoption.
With all due respect to the Archbishop, there is no such parallel. The only thing that is unavoidable here is his failure to see sharia as it is practiced in the real world, as opposed to in seminars. As the Asia Times columnist Spengler put it, Williams is conceding a permanent role to extralegal violence in the political life of England.
In real-world Muslim communities throughout Europe, coercion is so commonplace that duly-constituted governments there no longer wield justice among its citizens. The imams do. And where would the Archbishop draw the line? At husbands beating their wives for wearing Western clothes or maybe stoning a woman accused of adultery?
Nor will, as Williams hopes, permitting sharia on British soil aid social cohesion. On the contrary, Williamss fellow bishop, Michael Nazir-Ali, recently spoke about what he calls no-go zones in Muslim communities where Christians dare not enter. As a result of death threats, bishop Nazir-Ali and his family require police protection.
Nazir-Ali, whose father had to leave Pakistan after converting to Christianity, told the UK Telegraph that sharia is in tension with fundamental aspects of Anglo-American law. That is because our legal tradition is rooted in the quite different moral and spiritual vision deriving from the Bible. This crucial difference seems to have escaped the Archbishop of Canterbury.
The Wests greatest contribution to civilization has been the rule of law, the bulwark of freedom, captured in Anglo-American jurisprudence. Now a ranking religious official proposes compromising that with a theocratic church rule? Please.
Williamss comments are a tragic sign of the Churchs weakness. We fawningly respond to Islamic overtures for dialogue, even as we see Christians being persecuted in Muslim nationsand sharia law being imposed on others right in our own backyards.
This weakness is the stuff that empty churches are made of.
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From BreakPoint®, February 25, 2008, Copyright 2008, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. BreakPoint® and Prison Fellowship Ministries® are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship
Chuck Colson
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