
11 'Is it the end of faith?' Greg Clarke at Melbourne Uni
11 'Does faith make sense?' Greg Clarke at Retro Cafe, Fitzroy
12 'Bash a Christian' Open Forum with Greg Clarke at Melbourne Uni
13 'Atheism & Belief: the difference Jesus makes' Greg Clarke in Melbourne
15 'Is Christianity the one true faith?' Greg Clarke debates Dan Barker at UOW
16 'Is the Bible an acceptable guide for morality?' Greg Clarke debates Dan Barker at UNSW
17 'Can you believe in God and Science?' Panel discussion in Melbourne
18 Philosophy in a Pub: 'Does God exist?'
“Enlightenment” comes to Australian Mosques?
Richard Shumack
| “IN MOSQUES across Australia Muslims are accustomed to men and women sitting separately. This physical division might change now that the Mufti of Australia, Sheikh Fehmi Naji El-Imam, has taken the enlightened step of calling for desegregation in mosques.” The Age, Nov 24, 2008. |
| Traditional Islam has had an uneasy history of relating to Western modernist thinking. Most well known is the Islamic modernist movement in 19th century Egypt. Its great leader Muhammad Abduh is famously quoted as noting that when he visited the West he found Islam but no Muslims. While Abduh saw himself as an Islamic reformer, returning Islam to its salafi (the first three generations of Islam) roots, ultimately his movement was rejected by traditional Islam as “modernist” rather than salafi. This history is instructive both as an example of the practical failure of Islam to adopt modernism but also due to the basis upon which the issue was settled. What settled the debate was the question of which theology best reflected the faith of the salifiyya (the forefathers)? Modernism itself was not seen as something necessarily worth seeking. Indeed significant Muslim thinkers, such as Seyyed Hossein Nasr, suggest that the Western enlightment, rather than being desirable as a model for Islam is rather a backward step towards the loss of a sacred worldview.3 |
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| The above observations are not made to condemn Islam, but to call
Westerners to better understand the dynamic of living in an
increasingly multi-faith society. It is important to avoid
worldview imperialism in our relations to other faiths. We must not
assume that Islam values all that is valued in the West, or that Islam
will inevitably move towards a modernist framework. We must recognise
the inherent tensions in a multi-faith society in which faiths have
exclusivist truth claims that extend to the shaping of the public
community. Moreover, on this issue at least, I suspect there are lessons to be learnt from the Muslim community. I am not sure that Christianity should be quick to abandon the public sphere to a secular modernism while retreating to a privatised individualised faith. Certainly the public arena is complicated in a multi-faith community, and while Christianity does not seek the legislative link between the political and the religious found in Islam, Nasr’s call for Muslims to remain profoundly “sacred” in their worldview may well be instructive to those of Christian faith. |
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| 13-Dec-2008 06:50 PM Tib | |
| good to see someone asking the right questions rather than the comfortable ones | |
| 09-Apr-2009 03:19 PM | |
| Love the site. Any chance you can incorporate a "Print" page facility? At present when I go to Print Preview I discover words are cut off on the right margin, so to print the article I have to cut and paste it. | |
| 25-Apr-2009 03:15 PM lutherfreak | |
| "When faced with a community issue Christians largely ask the hermeneutical question: “What would Jesus do?” In contrast, Muslims rather ask: “What did Mohammed do?”" I think the analysis of how christians do hermeneutics and community ethics is just wrong. Christians ask "What will keep my church alive and our faith and the scriptures a relevant and powerful force in society" NOT "What would Jesus do?". WWJD does not produce hegemony and empire, it produces wandering nomads and politicals hunted by faceless power. Still love your work Shooey, and good to see your still at it. | |
| 08-Mar-2010 06:53 PM Amy.K | |
| Lutherfreak, you're so right. This is a very helpful site! :) | |
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