Thesis Summary
Shahrur links the three pillars of Islam to the voluntary covenant: belief in God, belief in the Last Day, and righteous action. In this way, rituals do not become a coercive entry point into religion; rather, they come within a covenant whose first value is freedom, responsibility, and action.
Foundational Atoms
- The pillars of Islam are three
- The covenant of Islam is a voluntary commitment
- The third pillar is righteous action
- Righteous action is part of Islam
- al-salwāt is not al-ṣalāh
- Almsgiving between voluntariness and obligation
- Fasting is a pre-Islamic rite with Muhammadan details
Position of Support within the Book
This structure appears within Shahrur’s treatment of Islam, faith, and covenant, where he links the pillars of Islam to voluntary freedom rather than coercion, and makes righteous action a foundational element rather than a subsidiary one.
Its Effect on Reading
This structure helps prevent the rituals from being read as a substitute for the covenant of values. Prayer, almsgiving, fasting, and pilgrimage are understood within a broader horizon: Islam is a free covenant, righteous action is a pillar, and the rituals are devotional particulars, not instruments of coercion.
Limits of the Reading
This structure does not negate the existing structure on Shahrur’s Islamic covenant is based on value-based pillars, not ritual belonging, but rather narrows the angle of view onto the relation between the pillars, the rituals, and voluntariness.