Cover image for Engaging with Bediuzzaman Said Nursi : a model of interfaith dialogue
Title:
Engaging with Bediuzzaman Said Nursi : a model of interfaith dialogue
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Farnham, Surrey, England ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, c2009
Physical Description:
viii, 179 p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780754669319

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30000010237685 BP172 M326 2009 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Too often interfaith dialogue is generic and unfocused. Often it involves 'liberals' from each tradition coming together to criticize the 'conservatives' in their own traditions. This book provides a model for interfaith dialogue that challenges very directly the 'dialogue industry'. This book involves a Christian theologian in deep conversation with a Muslim theologian. Bediuzzaman Said Nursi (1877-1960) was born at the end of the Ottoman Empire and lived through the emergence of an aggressive secular state. He had to think through, in remarkably creative ways, the challenge of faith within a secular environment, the relationship of faith and politics, and the implications and challenge of diversity and difference. His entire project is captured in his magnum opus 'The Risale-i Nur'. In the first eight chapters of this book, we engage closely with the thought of Nursi and tease out insights that Christians can learn from and accommodate. Having established the method, the second section of the book examines the precise implications for the interfaith movement. The problem with the interfaith movement is that it is an act of western cultural imperialism - they are taking the individualist assumptions of modern America and imposing them on the conversation. The problems with John Hick's and Leonard Swidler's approach are exposed. Moving out from Islam, the book then demonstrates how the model of interfaith changes when Christians are in conversation with Hinduism in India. A new set of Dialogue Ten Commandments are suggested. The book concludes with an appeal for a commitment to include and reach the 'conservatives' in the major religious traditions.


Author Notes

The Very Revd Ian Markham is Dean and President of Virginia Theological Seminary. He is the author and editor of numerous books, including: Understanding Christian Doctrine, (2007), Do Morals Matter? (2006), Islam, Globalization, and Ethics, with Ibraham Ozdemir, (2005), A Theology of Engagement (2004), September 11: Religious Perspectives and Consequences (2002), Theological Liberalism (2002), A World Religions Reader, 2nd edition (2000), Encountering Religion (1998), and Truth and the Reality of God (1998).


Table of Contents

Part 1 Learning from Said Nursi
Introduction: Christian Theology and Islam
Religious basis for ethics
Challenging atheism
Living life accountable
Faith first, politics second
Engaging religious diversity
Coping with globalization
Grounded spirituality: the challenge of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
What Christians can learn from Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
Part 2 Rethinking Dialogue
The dialogue industry
Learning from India
A new decalogue
Conservatives and dialogue: why it is essential to get conservatives excited about the dialogue project
Neither conservative nor liberal: a theology of Christian engagement with non-Christian traditions
Conclusion
Index