Question: Who
is a Kafir? How can a Christian be a Kafir and still be from
among the People of the book?
Answer: A
person becomes a Kafir when he denies the truth in spite of being
convinced that it is the truth. Since it is humanly impossible for a person
to determine whether some person is denying the truth or not, it is only
on the basis of information provided by the Almighty that a person can
be called a Kafir. In the times of His Rusul, He chose to impart
this information to his Rusul through Wahi; however, after the departure
of the last Rasul Muhammad (sws), people who have knowingly denied
the truth cannot be pinpointed since the institution of Wahi has
been terminated. No Muslim preacher is in a position to reveal the truth
in a manner a Rasul is able to, nor can he ascertain who among his
addressees is guilty of knowingly denying the truth. After the Prophet
(sws), only on the Day of Judgement will it now be known whether a particular
person is a Kafir or not.
It is evident from this explanation
that the Christians and Jews and followers of other religions in times
after the Prophet (sws) are not Kafirs; the right name for them
is non-Muslims. As far as Christians are concerned, it is to be noted that
they are basically followers of monotheism. They never admit to polytheism,
though they are involved in it. A person becomes a polytheist when he openly
admits that he is a polytheist, even though he may be practising polytheism
in some form; the reason is that a person might be doing something wrong
without realizing what he is doing; Christians, whether of today or from
the period of Jesus (sws), have never admitted to polytheism. Trinity to
them is in accordance with monotheism. Of course, we do not agree with
them, but unless they realize it, we can only say that in spite of claiming
to be monotheists they are involved in polytheism. Their case is the case
of a Muslim who goes to the grave of a saint to ask him to grant a wish;
we shall not call such a Muslim a polytheist; we shall tell him that what
he is doing is something against monotheism to which he himself strongly
claims adherence. Similarly, we shall not call Christians polytheists,
but we will keep telling them that what they are doing is not in accordance
with monotheism.
It is precisely for this reason that
the Qur’an never referred to the People of the Book as polytheists
though they subscribed to certain blatant forms of polytheism. The Qur’an
only
called the Ismaelites as polytheists because they admittedly subscribed
and testified to the creed of polytheism. They strongly advocated that
polytheism was the very religion the Almighty had revealed and claimed
that they were the strong adherents to this religion.
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