How Did Christianity Become Mixed With Polytheistic Beliefs?
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If true Christianity brought the message of the
Oneness of God (Tawheed), and stated that He alone is
to be worshipped to the exclusion of anyone else in
His creation, whether that is ‘Eesa (Jesus) or anyone
else, then how did this religion become mixed with
polytheistic beliefs (shirk) and how did they take
‘Eesa (Jesus – peace be upon him) and his mother as
gods besides Allaah?.
Praise be to Allaah.
There can be no doubt that the call to believe in
Allaah alone (Tawheed) and to worship Him alone to the
exclusion of anyone else, is the basic message that
was brought by the Prophet of Allaah ‘Eesa (peace be
upon him), as it was the basic message brought by all
the Prophets. Allaah says (interpretation of the
meaning):
"And verily, We have sent among every Ummah
(community, nation) a Messenger (proclaiming):
‘Worship Allaah (Alone), and avoid (or keep away from)
Taghoot (all false deities, i.e. do not worship
Taghoot besides Allaah).' Then of them were some whom
Allaah guided and of them were some upon whom the
straying was justified. So travel through the land and
see what was the end of those who denied (the truth)"
[al-Nahl 16:36]
"And We did not send any Messenger before you (O
Muhammad) but We revealed to him (saying): Laa ilaaha
illa Ana [none has the right to be worshipped but I (Allaah)],
so worship Me (Alone and none else)"
[al-Anbiya' 21:25]
‘Eesa will bear witness to this call against his
people, as Allaah says (interpretation of the
meaning):
"And (remember) when Allaah will say (on the Day of
Resurrection): 'O ‘Eesa (Jesus), son of Maryam (Mary)!
Did you say unto men: "Worship me and my mother as two
gods besides Allaah?"' He will say: ‘Glory be to You!
It was not for me to say what I had no right (to say).
Had I said such a thing, You would surely have known
it. You know what is in my inner-self though I do not
know what is in Yours; truly, You, only You, are the
All-Knower of all that is hidden (and unseen).
117. ‘Never did I say to them aught except what You (Allaah)
did command me to say: "Worship Allaah, my Lord and
your Lord." And I was a witness over them while I
dwelt amongst them, but when You took me up, You were
the Watcher over them; and You are a Witness to all
things'"
[al-Maa'idah 5:117]
With regard to how the followers of this religion
deviated after that from pure Tawheed to idolatrous
beliefs and the worship of Jesus and his mother
besides God, this is something which happened early on
in Christian history. We will quote here some evidence
to that effect from their own people's words. Let
whoever has ears listen.
It says in the American Encyclopedia:
The belief in the Oneness of God – as a theological
movement – began at a very early stage in history, and
in fact it preceded the belief in trinity by many
decades. Christianity developed from Judaism, and
Judaism firmly believes that there is one God.
The path that led from Jerusalem (the home of the
first disciples of Christ) to Nicea (where it was
decided in 325 CE that Christ was equal to God in
essence and eternal nature) can hardly be described as
a straight path.
The doctrine of trinity which was affirmed in the
fourth century CE bears no resemblance to the original
teachings of Christ concerning the nature of God. Au
contraire, it is the opposite, a deviation from that
teaching. Hence it developed in opposition to the
belief in One God… (27/294).
You can refer to the views of some of those Christians
who still believe in the Oneness of God in the same
American Encyclopedia, 27/300-301
Will Durant says:
When Christianity conquered Rome, the new religion
(i.e., Christianity) was infused with the blood of the
old idolatrous religion: the title of archbishop,
worship for the great mother, and an innumerable
number of lords who gave peace of mind and were like
who exist in all places and cannot be detected with
the senses. All of this came into Christianity as the
blood of the mother comes into her child.
The civilized empire handed over power and
administration to the papacy and the impact of the
word replaced the impact of the sword. The preachers
of the church started to assume positions of power.
Christianity did not put an end to idolatry, rather it
reinforced it. The Greek mind came back to life in a
new form, in the doctrines and rituals of the church.
The Greek rituals appeared in the rituals of the
monastic saints. From Egypt came the idea of the holy
trinity, the day of reckoning, eternal reward and
punishment, and man's eternal life in one of the
other. From Egypt also came the worship of the mother
and child, the mystical union with God, the union
which led to Platonism and agnosticism, and the
erasing of Christian doctrine. And from Persia came
the belief in the return of the Messiah and his ruling
the earth for 1000 years.
Qissat al-Hadaarah, 11/418 (The Story of Civilization)
Despite the element of atheism in the words of Durant,
which is something that he is known for, and which is
apparent in his claim that the idea of eternal reward
or punishment came from the Egyptians, tracing the
origins of deviant idolatry in Christianity is no
longer a secret, and he is not the only one who has
researched them. In his book Christianity and
Idolatry, Robertson states that Mithraism, which is a
religion of Persian origin, flourished in Persia
approximately six centuries before the birth of
Christ, and it reached Rome around the year 70 CE,
where it spread throughout the Roman lands. Then it
reached Britain and spread to a number of British
cities. What concerns us here about this religion is
that it says:
- That Mithras, after whom it is named, was an
intermediary between God and man (for a similar
doctrine in Christianity, see Acts 4:12).
- He was born in a cave or in a corner of the earth
(cf. Luke 2:8)
- His birthday was December 25 (which is the day
celebrated by the Christians as the day when Jesus was
born)
- He had twelve disciples (cf. Matthew 10:1)
- He died to save the world (cf. I Corinthians 15:3)
- He was buried but he came back to life (cf. I
Corinthians 15:4)
- He ascended to heaven in front of his disciples (cf.
Acts 1:9)
- He was called "Saviour" (cf. Titus 2:13)
- Among his attributes is that he is like a peaceful
lamb (cf. John 1:29)
- The "Divine supper" was held in his memory every
year (cf. I Corinthians 11:23-25)
- One of his symbols was baptism
- Sunday was sacred to them
The French Orientalist Leon Joteh, in his book "An
Introduction to Islamic philosophy" is of the view
that the origin of the Christian trinity is to be
found in Greek philosophy, specifically in the ideas
of modern Platonism, which took the basis of the idea
of trinity as a view of the Creator of the universe
from Plato, then developed it to a great extent, so
that the resemblance between this idea and
Christianity became greater. So (in their view) the
Creator, the One Who is absolutely perfect, appointed
two intermediaries between him and mankind, who
emanated from Him, and were also part of Him at the
same time, meaning that they are contained in His
essence. These two entities are reasoning and divine
spirit. Then he said:
The marriage of Jewish belief and Greek philosophy did
not only produce philosophy, rather it produced a
religion too, namely Christianity which imbibed many
ideas from the Greeks. The Christian concept of
divinity is taken from the same source as modern
Platonism. Hence you see many similarities between the
two, although they may vary in some details. They are
both based on a belief in trinity, in which the three
"persons" are one.
This is what the American writer Draper refers to:
Idolatry and polytheism entered Christianity through
the influence of the hypocrites who occupied positions
of influence and high positions in the Roman state by
pretending to be Christians, but they never cared
about religion and were not sincere at all. Similarly
Constantine had spent his life in darkness and evil,
and he did not follow the commands of the church
except for a short while at the end of his life. (p.
337)
Although the followers of Christianity gained some
power, to the extent that they managed to have
Constantine appointed as ruler, they failed to
eradicate idolatry completely. As a result of their
struggle, their principles became fused with idolatry,
from which point there developed a new religion in
which Christianity and idolatry were manifested
equally.
Thus the Christians followed the same path of those
disbelievers who had come before them, step by step,
as their own Book testifies. And Allaah says
(interpretation of the meaning):
"And the Jews say: ‘Uzayr (Ezra) is the son of Allaah,
and the Christians say: Messiah is the son of Allaah.
That is their saying with their mouths, resembling the
saying of those who disbelieved aforetime. Allaah's
Curse be on them, how they are deluded away from the
truth!" [al-Tawbah 9:30]
And Allaah is the Source of strength.
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