In Mel Brooks’ comedy “History of the World Part I,”
Moses is shown descending from Mount Sinai with three stone tablets in hand. As
he declares, “I give you the Fifteen Commandments,” one falls and breaks, and
Moses corrects himself, “er, Ten Commandments.” Jews, including the observant,
find this funny rather than offensive. As we learned once again in Garland,
Texas, Muslims do not laugh at jokes about Mohammed, the purported author of
the Koran (as Moses is the author of the Torah). Two wannabe Jihadists with
assault rifles and body armor were no match for an off-duty Texas traffic cop
with a sidearm, but the incident might have turned into a massacre worse than
the murder of the Charlie Hebdo staff in January.
Why do Jews as well as Christians–but not
Muslims–laugh at jokes about the founders of their faiths?
The answer is that radically different deities are
in question. Judaism begins with a covenant between God and human
beings–Abraham and his descendants–that is a partnership in which God is
normally, but not always, the senior partner. As Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks observes, the Jewish
sages of antiquity envisioned Moses acting as a judge for God,
permitting God to annul his earlier vow to destroy the Jewish people after the
sin of the Golden Calf. This is unimaginable in Islam, just as unimaginable as
the Christian God who humbles himself on the cross.
That does not diminish the sanctity of holy writ:
if a Torah scroll is dropped accidentally during Jewish services, Jewish law
binds the congregation to a month of fasting. But the Jewish (and hence also
the Christian) God allows his children to give him an argument, as Abraham does
in the matter of Sodom and Gomorrah, and Moses does on several occasions. Humor
arises from the impossible tension between an infinite God and finite
man. “Humor is intrinsic to Christianity,” wrote the great Danish
theologian Soren Kierkegaard, “because truth is hidden in mystery.”
Jewish and Christian Scripture are human reports of
an encounter with the Divine. The foundation of the Christian Bible are four
separate reports of the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth that in some respects
contradict each other. The Koran, to be sure, has contradictory elements, which
are addressed through so-called Abrogation Theory (Naskh),
allowing one Koranic verse to be nullified by another. But Mohammed’s
revelation of the Koran is not a human report so much as a stenographic
transcription of the purported words of Allah. No Muslim argues that
Mohammed was more than human, but for practical purposes he is
indistinguishable from Allah, because he was simply the vessel into which Allah
supposedly his directions. To make light of Mohammed is to impugn
Allah. It is not blasphemous to laugh at Moses, whose human failings prevented
him from leaving the people of Israel into the promised land. To humanize
Mohammed, though, is an act of lèse-majesté against
the Muslim God. That is not quite the same thing as joking about
Moses or St. Matthew.
Personally, I find most convincing the argument by
the German convert to Islam, Prof. Muhammed Sven Kalisch, that the Prophet
Mohammed did not exist in the first place–at least not a man who in any way
resembles the figure portrayed in the standard Muslim account. That is in some
ways beside the point: there is no divine-human encounter in Islam, no
revelation, only the selection of a human mouth as the loudspeaker by which
Allah declares his Koran. Allah could as well have employed a talking rock. The
Muslim god therefore remains utterly remote from humans, unconstrained in power
and arbitrary in his actions. It is Allah’s caprice that electrons spin around
an atom’s nucleus, or that planets describe an ellipsis around the sun.
As Franz Rosenzweig observed, the actions of God
are indistinguishable from naive observation of the natural world. They simply
are the way things are, and for no other reason than it is Allah’s whim that
they be that way. An atheist who believes that the world is utterly chaotic and
random will see the world in precisely the same way, with one grand difference:
the way things are, to Muslims, includes the sedimentary layers of centuries of
tribal practice: wife-beating, slavery, punishment by amputation, female
genital mutilation (depending on the tribal history), and so forth. To slight
Mohammed, and by extension Allah, means the ruin of the way things are, the
dissolution of the ties that hold society together. To question the way things
are is to inspire social chaos.
Author: David P. Goldman
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