This path reads one of the most sensitive areas of Shahrur’s project: governance. For him, the term does not lead to a religious state or to the authority of a jurist above society, but rather to a strict distinction between what belongs to God in permissibility and prohibition, and what people make in law, constitution, and civil legislation.

The issue here is not an abstract political question about rule, but a question about the source of obligation: do human beings have the right to add prohibitions in the name of religion? Does civil law become an offshoot of religious authority? Or does prohibition remain limited to revelation, while society takes charge of organizing the permissible and the variable through elected institutions and public law?

Path question

How does Shahrur redefine governance so that it prevents human beings from monopolizing prohibition, without preventing society from making law?

Short answer

Governance, for Shahrur, means that God alone possesses permissibility and prohibition, not that a religious group or political authority rules in God’s name. Therefore, human beings cannot add new prohibitions, but they can enact civil laws that regulate the permissible and the variable sphere. In this way, the state becomes, for him, a state of law, constitution, and citizenship, and legislation becomes the prerogative of elected councils, not of jurists or a single ruler.

Summary

  • Governance regulates the authority of prohibition; it does not grant anyone a sacred political mandate.
  • Prohibition is divine and limited, whereas civil law is human and changeable regulation.
  • Those vested with authority are read as a legislative body whose enactments are obeyed, not as persons.
  • The constitution is a human social contract, and legislation belongs to civil representation.

Ascending map

Begin with the distinction between the permissible and the prohibited, then move up to the difference between prohibition and law, then to governance as the confining of prohibition to God. After that, move to the civil state: the constitution, law, elected councils, and those vested with authority. At that point Shahrur’s specific position becomes visible: religion remains a value reference, but political power does not become the owner of prohibition.

LevelIts questionIts knot
The permissible and the prohibitedWho owns prohibition?Prohibition belongs to God alone
Prohibition and lawDoes every ban count as prohibition?Prohibition and prohibition do not always coincide
GovernanceIs it political rule in God’s name?Confining prohibition to revelation
The constitutionWho regulates society?A social contract and civil law
Those vested with authorityWhose obedience is due?The enactments, not the persons

Connecting relations

Books to read

Close verses

  • An-Nisa 59: a gateway to those vested with authority, obedience, and legislation.
  • Al-A’raf 33: a gateway to confining prohibitions.
  • Al-Ma’idah 1: a gateway to permissibility and contracts.
  • Al-‘Ankabut 29: an example of the difference between social rule and prohibition.
  • Al-Kahf 26: a close foundation for constructing the concept of governance.

Before/after

Before this path, read Legislation and Limits to understand the difference between prohibition, limit, and law, and read The State and Religion to understand the broader political framework.

After it, move to Good Governance and Democracy if you want to see the effect of this distinction on the constitution, institutions, and accountability, or to Principles of Jurisprudence and Critique of Traditional Jurisprudence if you want its effect on jurisprudence, or to Monism and Pluralism if you want its effect on critiquing authoritarianism.

Point of dispute

The disagreement here is that Shahrur empties governance of its common ideological meaning in political Islam and returns it to the chapter of prohibition. Those who agree with him see in this a way of preventing the use of religion to produce despotism and takfir. Those who object to him see that he narrows the meaning of sharia and rule, or loads the text with the model of the modern state, constitution, and elected councils.

Within the atlas