It
wasn't supposed to turn out this way. The prophets of secularization
were absolutely certain that religious belief would recede in the
modern age. As they saw the new age coming, they were confident that
religious belief -- or at least any strong form of belief - would burn
away like the morning mist as modernity took shape.
As Peter L. Berger explained in "Secularization Falsified" [First Things,
February 2008]: "Ever since the Enlightenment, intellectuals of every
stripe have believed that the inevitable consequence of modernity is
the decline of religion. The reason was supposed to be the progress of
science and its concomitant rationality, replacing the irrationality
and superstition of religion."
But the new age did not turn out to be so secular after all. Berger comments:
It has been more than a century since Nietzsche proclaimed the
death of God. The prophecy was widely accepted as referring to an
alleged fact about increasing disbelief in religion, both by those who
rejoiced in it and those who deplored it. As the twentieth century
proceeded, however, the alleged fact became increasingly dubious. And
it is very dubious indeed as a description of our point in time at the
beginning of the twenty-first century. Religion has not been declining.
On the contrary, in much of the world there has been a veritable
explosion of religious faith.
Peter Berger is one of the most authoritative voices in modern
sociology. He understands better than most that the prophets of
secularization were too hasty in writing religion off as a major force
in the world. Looking back at the very figures who helped shape the
modern world, he comments, "Not to put too fine a point on it, they
were mistaken."
In his own way, Stephen Prothero makes the same point. In a recent column in The Wall Street Journal,
Prothero argues that one cannot understand the current crisis of piracy
off the coast of Somalia without understanding the religious roots of
this resurgence.
Prothero serves as chairman of the Department of Religion at Boston
University (where Professor Berger also t, aught for many years). He is
also author of Religious Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know -- And Doesn't.
When it comes to religious literacy, a bit of knowledge would serve the
foreign policy elites, the military, and the media when it comes to the
revival of piracy.
As Prothero explains in "Muhammad of the High Seas:"
The late spate of piracy off the coast of Somalia has been
analyzed so far almost entirely in political and economic terms:
Somalia is lawless and impoverished, so Somali men are taking world
trade for a ride. Religion comes up in this analysis only in terms of
fears about potential ties between Somali pirates and Islamist groups
such as al Qaeda and al Shabab.
But according to Boston University's World Religion Database,
the Somali population is 99% Muslim, and the last time the U.S. was
menaced by piracy, in the late 18th century, the so-called Barbary
pirates of north Africa also operated out of Muslim havens. For those
who know something about Muhammad and the origins of Islam, more than
coincidence is at work: Religion, it turns out, should be factored into
the piracy problem.
"Factored into" the problem might be an understatement. Prothero is
careful to put the issue of Islam and piracy into its historical
context. As Muhammad and his followers left Mecca for Medina in the
early seven century, they needed income. As Prothero explains,
"Muhammad turned to the longstanding Arabian practice of the ghazu, or
bounty raid." Muhammad's raids were on land, but the practice of
sea-based piracy by Muslims follows the same logic.
Prothero makes that logic very clear:
All this might be of purely antiquarian concern except for the
fact that Muslims today regard Muhammad not only as God's final prophet
but also as the human being par excellence. The Hadith, an Islamic
scripture second in authority only to the Quran, records thousands of
instances of Muhammad's beliefs and actions, so Muslims can follow his
example on matters as detailed as the cut of his beard. If Christians
ask, "What Would Jesus Do?" Muslims ask, "What Would Muhammad Do?"
Islam is a worldview, and many of its most central presuppositions
run counter to Western ideals. At the same time, Western intellectual
elites seem still committed to the basic idea of secularization and the
irrelevance of religious belief. At the popular level, most Americans
wouldn't know the difference between the Barbary pirates and a Disney
movie.
All this does not necessarily point to any specific policy proposal
or military response. It does, however, remind us that beliefs really
do matter. Just ask those shipping crews looking warily across the
Gulf of Aden.