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E-raamat: Prayer: Christian and Muslim Perspectives

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  • Formaat: 192 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Nov-2013
  • Kirjastus: Georgetown University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781626160248
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 192 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Nov-2013
  • Kirjastus: Georgetown University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781626160248

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Religion / Christian Studies / Islamic Studies

"While many of the current interfaith projects are strictly theological in nature, Prayer: Christian and Muslim Perspectives breaks new ground by looking at what religious human beings all over the world do: pray. In learning about the rituals that gives shape to our deepest yearning and highest aspirations, we also come to grapple with how we see God and our own true nature. Recommended for all who are interested in the Christian tradition, the Islamic tradition, and the dialogue between the two"

---Omid Safi, professor of Islamic Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Prayer: Christian and Muslim Perspectives is a rich collection of essays, scriptural texts, and personal reflections, drawn from the 2011 Building Bridges seminar in Doha, Qatar, that features leading scholars analyzing the meaning and function of prayer within their traditions



Prayer: Christian and Muslim Perspectives is a rich collection of essays, scriptural texts, and personal reflections featuring leading scholars analyzing the meaning and function of prayer within their traditions. Drawn from the 2011 Building Bridges seminar in Doha, Qatar, the essays in this volume explore the devotional practices of each tradition and how these practices are taught and learned. Relevant texts are included, with commentary, as are personal reflections on prayer by each of the seminar participants. The volume also contains a Christian reflection on Islamic prayer and a Muslim reflection on Christian prayer. An extensive account of the informal conversations at the seminar conveys a vivid sense of the lively, penetrating, but respectful dialogue that took place.

Arvustused

A scholarly assessment recommended for any interested in prayer and its incarnation in different faiths. Midwest Book Review Very useful for all those who are engaged in interfaith dialogue as well as for students of both religions. -- Abdur Rashid Siddiqui Muslim Book Review A rich resource for Christians and Muslims alike, providing for both some tools for deeper understanding and appreciation for the practice of prayer. Also an excellent example of interfaith dialogue in action. Dialogue & Alliance

Muu info

While many of the current interfaith projects are strictly theological in nature, Prayer: Christian and Muslim Perspectives breaks new ground by looking at what religious human beings all over the world do: pray. In learning about the rituals that gives shape to our deepest yearning and highest aspirations, we also come to grapple with how we see God, and our own true nature. Recommended for all who are interested in the Christian tradition, the Islamic tradition, and the dialogue between the two. -- Omid Safi, professor of Islamic Studies, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
Participants and Contributors vii
Introduction xi
David Marshall
Preface xv
Rowan Williams
PART I SURVEYS
1(76)
Lived Prayer: Some Examples from the Christian Tradition
3(10)
Michael Plekon
A Qur'anic Theology of Prayer
13(12)
Reza Shah-Kazemi
Muslim Prayer in Practice
25(16)
M. M. Dheen Mohamed
Christian Prayer in Practice
41(12)
Philip Sheldrake
A Muslim Response to Christian Prayer
53(12)
Caner Dagli
A Christian Perspective on Muslim Prayer
65(8)
Daniel A. Madigan
Response
73(4)
Rowan Williams
PART II PRAYER AND SCRIPTURE
77(44)
The Lord's Prayer
79(12)
Susan Eastman
Al-Fatiha
91(8)
Rkia Elraoui Cornell
Prayer in the Spirit in Romans 8
99(16)
Philip Seddon
In Reverence of the Almighty: Understanding Prayer and Worship in Qur'an 3: 190--94 and 29:45
115(6)
Asma Afsaruddin
PART III LEARNING TO PRAY
121(54)
Learning to Pray with and in the Christian Tradition: Personal Reflections
123(12)
Lucy Gardner
Learning to Pray as a Muslim: The Foundational Stage
135(6)
Ibrahim Mogra
Growing in Prayer as a Christian
141(6)
Timothy Wright
Growing in Prayer as a Muslim: Reflections and Lessons of a Struggler
147(12)
Timothy J. Gianotti
Conversations in Qatar
159(16)
Lucinda Mosher
Afterword 175(4)
Rowan Williams
Personal Reflections on Prayer 179(22)
Index 201
David Marshall is director of the Anglican Episcopal House of Studies and associate professor of the practice of Christian-Muslim relations, Duke Divinity School and the academic director of the Building Bridges seminar. Lucinda Mosher is the faculty associate for Interfaith Studies, Hartford Seminary and the assistant academic director of the Building Bridges seminar.