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Waiting for the Mahdi by Thomas Finger Thomas Finger is an independent scholar who is involved in ecumenical and interfaith work with the Mennonite Church U.S.A., Mennonite World Conference and Mennonite Central Committee. This article appeared in The Christian Century, June 17, 2008, pp. 27-28. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation; used by permission. Current articles and subscriptions information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted Brock. When Iran president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad addressed an open letter to George W. Bush in May 2006, he
invoked Judgment Day, the day when the deeds of all political leaders will be
examined. Ahmadinejad asked Bush whether either of them would be accepted
"in the promised world, where… Jesus Christ (Peace Be Upon Him) will be
present." Ahmadinejad appeared to be trying to connect with American
Christians and to critique Bush in light of the U.S. president's own faith. He
expressed not only his own reverence as a Muslim for Jesus but his expectation
that Jesus would return to earth. This expectation
is part of a Muslim belief in the appearance of the Mahdi--a savior who, along
with Jesus, is expected to bring justice and peace to the world at the end of
this age. Belief in the Mahdi plays a special role in Shi'a Islam, a strand of
Islam which includes about 15 percent of Muslims worldwide. Shi'as predominate
in Iran and account for more than half the Muslims in Iraq and Lebanon.
Significant Shi'a pockets also exist in Kuwait, Pakistan, Azerbaijan, Turkey
and Syria, forming a Shi'a crescent, a potential power bloc that worries many
Sunni Muslims as well as Western powers. Shi'a Islam
arose in disagreements over who should succeed the Prophet Muhammad when he
died in 632. Shi'as believe that it should have been Ali, the Prophet's cousin
and the husband of his daughter, Fatima. Ali was highly regarded for his pious
character and spiritual leadership. But Muhammad was succeeded by Abu Bakr, and
then by Umar and Uthman. These first three caliphs were mainly political and
military rulers. As Shi'as tell it, by 656, when Uthman died and Muslim rule
extended into eastern Iran, Armenia, Syria and Egypt, upper-class Muslims had
become obsessed with power and wealth. They looked down on their new subjects,
even those who had become Muslim. This empire had strayed far from the simpler,
more brotherly and righteous society prescribed by Muhammad. In 656 Ali
became the fourth caliph of Islam, but he was murdered in 661, and the
Caliphate passed to Uthman's descendants, the Umayyads. This precipitated the
most significant event in Shi'a history. In 680 Ali's son Husayn (Muhammad's
grandson) and 72 of his followers were surrounded by a massive Umayyad force at
Karbala, in what is now Iraq. Despite the hopeless odds, Husayn fought back,
but he and his followers were killed. According to
many Shi'as, Husayn undertook his desperate battle because Muslims had strayed
so far from Muhammad's teaching that only the shocking murder of his grandson
would jolt them into realizing the error of their ways. Shi'as mourn Husayn's
death on their most holy day, Ashoura. Their extensive weeping for his
sacrifice and their prayers to obtain its atoning benefits have been compared
to the rituals by which Christians mark Good Friday. But remembrance of
Husayn's martyrdom also prompts vows to avenge him. Shi'as believe
that Muslims should always have had one leader who combines administrative
skills and spiritual ones, as Muhammad and Ali did. Shi'as call these
extraordinary persons imams. (In Sunni Islam, the term imam refers to a leader of a mosque.) For Shi'as, Ali was the first
imam and Husayn the third. Iranian Shi'as
count 12 imams. All or most of them, according to Shi'a tradition, were
murdered by powerful Muslim governments. Although Shi'as have ruled Iran since
1501, through most of their history Shi'as have been a minority group,
otherwise excluded from centers of power. They believe that Allah took the 12th
imam, Abu'l-Qasim Muhammad, into "occultation"--that is, Allah hid
and protected him--in about 874. It is he who will reappear as the Mahdi, and
Jesus will reappear with him. Some Sunni
Muslims also await a Mahdi, though they usually expect him to be a contemporary
who will suddenly proclaim himself as such. Some Sunnis did so in the past and
led armies against their enemies (such as Muhammad Ahmad in the Sudan, who
succeeded in ending Egyptian occupation in 1881-1885). But Iranian Shi'as await
someone who has long represented a people persecuted ever since Muhammad's time
and who will finally vindicate them. Since Iran is
the world's leading Shi'a power, many Iranians expect that it will play a major
role in preparing for the Mahdi and in his subsequent activity. This belief
renders Iranian Mahdism enormously significant in global politics. What do Iranian
Shi'as expect to happen when their Mahdi, or 12th imam, and Jesus reappear? It
is impossible to give a definite answer, because Iranian Shi'as differ among
themselves. I have spoken at two large Mahdism conferences in Tehran and
dialogued formally with Shi'a leaders several times. My impression is that
Iranian Mahdism could either lead toward political and military expansion or be
channeled into cooperative efforts. Iranian leaders
valorize the 1979 revolution that overthrew the shah and brought Ayotollah
Khomeini to power. Khomeini often invoked Shi'a history and compared his cause
with Husayn's and the shah's with the Umayyads, Husayn's killers. When he took
power, Khomeini executed many of his opponents. Khomeini also began exporting
the Shi'a revolution. He kindled discontent in other countries, sometimes with
violent means or violent results, until Iran was exhausted by its war with Iraq
(1980-1988). Iran might have lost that war had not many thousands of young
people, heeding the Shi'a call to martyrdom, stormed Iraqi forces with few weapons
or none at all. Though Iran's
recent history raises the possibility of a militant form of Islam, Mahdism can
also be invoked to encourage interfaith and international dialogue. This is
because Mahdism, like all eschatologies, envisions more than the conquest of
evil; it envisions the coming of a just and peaceful social order and the end
of poverty and suffering for all peoples. A major question is whether the
future is seen as discontinuous or continuous with the preceding history. When
eschatologies stress discontinuity, they often legitimate efforts to bring
about that future by violent means. When eschatologies emphasize some measure
of continuity, they usually inspire people to start living by the ideals of the
future in the present, and to try to realize them in their societies. One can
see this element also among Iranian Shi'as, who believe that becoming more
righteous, individually and socially, is a prerequisite for the Mahdi's coming.
Many Iranians and their leaders regard this as the special task of the world's
only Shi'a-governed nation. Though Shi'a
Islam and Christianity both have eschatological visions, and this opens an
avenue for dialogue between Iranian Shi'as and North American Christians, one
difference between Shi'a and Christian eschatology is the central role of
Shari'a law in Mahdism. Iranians insist that the Mahdi will ensure justice for
all, but in Iran today, Shari'a law is sometimes implemented by the lash, by
amputation or by hanging. Women are subjected to various restrictions (for
example, all women, both residents and visitors, must wear headscarves in
public). But many
interpretations of Shari'a flourish in the Muslim world and in Iran. For
example, Shirin Ebadi, the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who is greatly
honored by many Iranians (and opposed by others), repeatedly invokes Islamic
legal tradition to support women's rights and other human rights. Jesus' place in
Mahdism provides another matter for discussion. Jesus often appears to be the
Mahdi's second in command. The Muslims I have talked to leave Jesus' role
vague. When I asked a Shi'a scholar how the Mahdi's coming would affect
Christians, he said that there would be no problems, since Jesus and the Mahdi
will work together. I pressed on: "What if these Christians believe Jesus
is divine?" Jesus, he replied, will clarify that he is not divine and that
he was Muhammad's forerunner. "What if Jesus says he is what we Christians
believe?" I asked. The scholar stared and stammered; that possibility was
incomprehensible--the Jesus who comes with the Mahdi will be the honored
prophet, nothing more. Following a
recent conference in Tehran I spent ten days in Iran. While there I was
repeatedly interviewed for radio, television and films and constantly asked for
my views of Christianity and America. Many interviewers, mostly young people,
kept asking questions well beyond the allotted time. Iranians seem desperate
for contacts with Americans. They want to hear what we really think, and for us
to hear what they really think. In view of the ominous clouds that overhang
American-Iranian relations, I hope that we will continue to develop and learn
from such conversations. |