What Are the Reasons for the Muslims’ Spiritual Apathy?

When Sheikh Muhammad ‘Abduh (1849-1905), one of the most influential Muslim scholars of the late 19th and early 20th century, famously declared that he had found Islam but no Muslims abroad (in the West), and Muslims but no Islam at home (in the Muslim world), he wanted to bring home the message that Muslims were more and more drifting away not only from the original revealed message of Islam, but also from the power and guidance both of sound reasoning and pure human nature, or instinct.

As such, Muslims became very weak and vulnerable. While Westerners were increasingly abandoning their traditional religious beliefs and values in favor of pervasive secularism, agnosticism, irreligious modernism and liberalism, Muslims were grappling with the task of reclaiming a collective identity, orientation and purpose.

Trying to find their feet in the midst of emerging modern trends and phenomena, which were fanned by the notions of active westernization, imperialism and globalization, Muslims were consumed by the idea of a mere cultural and civilizational survival.

Though avid proponents of secular humanism and scientific materialism, westerners were enabled to easily overshadow Muslims in many a civilization-building aspect.

That was so on account of their faithfulness to the positions and roles of sound reasoning and intrinsic human nature, something that Muslims were increasingly finding hard to do.

It is true that Muslims possess the heavenly inspiration and guidance, but for the latter’s actualization and application in the complex vicissitudes of life, the function of sound reason and unimpeded human nature, or instinct, is always paramount.

Neither revelation, nor human reason and human nature alone, will suffice for the realization of a comprehensive civilizational program.

Subtle integration between the two is the only solution and way forward. This way, whereas westerners were compromising especially their spirituality and morality, Muslims were increasingly compromising everything. Having forsaken both revelation and reason, they were in danger of losing both this world and the Hereafter.

The problem of discrepancies between Islam and Muslims, which Sheikh Muhammad ‘Abduh highlighted more than a century ago, was continually in force for a long time.

Due to a number of internal as well as external factors, it, of late, kept growing, and its negative effects multiplying, at a rate hitherto unheard of, so much so that today’s Muslims as the ummah (community) stand as far from Islam — as a civilizational force — as never before. The greatest of optimists can hardly see a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel.

Unfortunately, the Muslim youth are repeatedly the biggest victim of the whole tragedy, as they often find themselves painfully torn between gloomy reality and fancy dreams, ambiguous rhetoric and concrete action, and between blind imitation and formalism, and pursuing the authentic meaning and substance of life.

The condition is bound to eventually take its toll on the intellectual, spiritual and moral development of the Muslim youth, depriving the ummah thereby of their badly needed involvements and contributions for its alleviation and growth.

The situation made a scholar to observe that while a great many Muslims declare themselves Muslims, they, in actual fact, are hardcore materialists and skeptics. While their lips attest to the monotheistic creed of Islam, their hearts and minds embrace and take great delight in something else.

In the same vein, some who reverted to Islam also said: “Thank God we knew Islam before knowing Muslims”.

What are the main reasons for this spiritual apathy?

Westernization, as a process whereby societies come under or adopt Western culture, including lifestyle, religion, philosophy, entertainment, government and values, is often cited as one of the main reasons for a rapid decline in Muslims’ religiosity. It is often perceived that being westernized is the antithesis of being a good Muslim.

Westerners made so much progress in various areas of culture and civilization that many Muslims could not resist the prospect of following in their footsteps in order to attain the same results.

This applied as much to such areas that did not conflict with the message of Islam, as to such that plainly did. Western development models were aggressively promoted as most progressive and as something man has always idealized and dreamed about. A worship-like attitude was often attached to them.

But if Muslims are westernized, they are expected to be as advanced and prosperous as Westerners themselves. They are expected to be there or thereabouts in their countries’ physical development. That, however, is not the case by any means.

One wonders, if Muslims are westernized, why their institutions of learning are not as advanced and dynamic as those in the West, why their economies are not as robust, why their governments are not as functional, just and honest, why their cities are not as efficient and clean, why their judiciaries are not as independent, why their legal systems are not as fair and just, why their citizens’ human rights are not as much respected, why they are not as free and democratic, why their natural environments are not as much taken care of, etc.

All this shows that Muslims are not westernized in the sense that they painstakingly follow, or try to benefit from, the West in what is inherently good, beneficial and in harmony with the Islamic message and values, as well as with Muslim cultures, tradition and history.

Such a proposition applies, by and large, to certain aspects of those worldly life segments as industry, science, technology, politics, economics, government, media and, to some extent, language. That is consistent with the Prophet’s words:

“Wisdom is the lost property of the believer, he may claim it wherever he finds it” (Jami’ al-Tirmidhi).

Rather, Muslims are westernized in the sense that they deliberately chose to be a leading consumer of the Western lifestyles and a dumping ground for the junk of Western culture. They chose to be at the receiving end of the Western cultural imperialism.

At times, many Muslims appear to be more western than Westerners themselves. They developed an inferiority complex, believing that anything associated with the West is superior, and anything associated with them is mediocre. Especially in their cultural, intellectual, entertainment and professional matters, the epicenters of Western culture became their qiblahs.

It is undeniable that culturally, the West is in retreat. The edifice of its culture is steadily crumbling, but Muslims, led by their incompetent governments, seem to be the last to realize that. A number of Muslim countries are poised to be the last bastions of Western culture.

As a result, Muslims abandoned their glorious Islamic teachings and values in favor of Western values rooted in atheism, materialism, hedonism, selfishness, discrimination and greed, whereby God has been either rejected or humanized, and man, in turn, with his animal desires, deified.

Muslims, moreover, ended up exploring and idolizing Western people’s histories, national institutions, heroes and traditions, neglecting, or utterly forgetting, their own. They also tailored their educational systems in such a way as to serve primarily the interests of the West, rather than their own.

Thus, the status quo was set to be perpetuated interminably, and the uninterrupted supply lines for puppet politicians, business leaders, aristocrats, educators and other professionals, ensured.

That said, one wonders – for example — what made the Saudi government happy to allow some hotels, restaurants, coffee shops, clothing stores and fashion shops, whose brands evoke, yet stand for the spirit and symbols of more than a few dimensions of Western culture, to operate in the immediate vicinity of al-Masjid al-Haram.

Since they are meant to accommodate, feed and satisfy other basic needs of millions of pilgrims, those hotels, restaurants, coffee shops, clothing stores and fashion shops indirectly constitute a segment of the immense and ever expanding complex of al-Masjid al-Haram. That’s why they must be managed more seriously and more accountably.

Read the full paper in PDF.

About Dr. Spahic Omer
Dr. Spahic Omer, an award-winning author, is an Associate Professor at the Kulliyyah of Islamic Revealed Knowledge and Human Sciences, International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM). He studied in Bosnia, Egypt and Malaysia. In the year 2000, he obtained his PhD from the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur in the field of Islamic history and civilization. His research interests cover Islamic history, culture and civilization, as well as the history and theory of Islamic built environment. He can be reached at: [email protected].