Question: I
am a college student and I’m doing research about marriages and religion.
I have a question on which I would like to hear your opinion: Do you think
that it is alright for Muslim men to marry Christian women?
Answer: Islam
allow Muslim men to marry Christian women because Christians like Jews
are basically followers of monotheism. However, the placement and context
of the Qur’anic verse which permits such marriages show that it
is desirable that certain conditions be met if such a marriage is to take
place. Needless to say that the Qur’an has been revealed as a coherent
Book. It is not a disjointed collection of verses as is generally believed.
There is profound structural and thematic coherence in it. Each verse has
a definite context and until and unless this context is carefully kept
in consideration, the true implications of a verse can usually not be ascertained.
Disregarding the context of a verse often leads to serious misinterpretations
which distort the stance of the Qur’an. It is therefore of paramount
importance that each verse be interpreted in the light of its context.
Consider now the context of the verse
under discussion. The following verse immediately precedes it:
This day the disbelievers have abandoned all
hope of vanquishing your religion. Have no fear of them: fear Me. This
day I have perfected your religion for you and completed My favour upon
you and have chosen for you Islam as your religion. (5:3)
Consider next, the verse under consideration:
This day all things good and pure are made lawful
to you. The food of the People of the Book is lawful to you, and yours
to them. Lawful to you are the chaste among the believing women and the
chaste women among the People of the Book, provided that you give them
their dowries and desire chastity neither committing fornication nor taking
them as mistresses. (5:6)
It is clear from the above mentioned verses
that these directives pertain to the period when the supremacy of Islam
had been established in Arabia -- when the disbelievers had lost all hope
of overcoming the Islamic forces and the Muslims had become an unconquerable
force. It was in these circumstances that the Muslims were permitted to
marry Jewish and Christian women. Moreover, it is evident from the verse
that only virtuous and upright women among the People of the Book were
allowed to be taken in marriage.
It is evident that in such conditions
and circumstances, there was virtually no possibility of the Muslims being
influenced by their religions directives and cultural traditions. Instead,
there was a far greater possibility that such marriages would positively
influence the women of the People of the Book by inducing them to accept
Islam.
By analogy, therefore, such marriages
today seem desirable only in societies where the cultural traditions and
legal injunctions of Islam hold sway.
|