Preface, Leonard Swidler (Temple University, USA) Forward, Alan Race (University of Winchester, UK) 1. Dialogue before Dialogue, David Thomas (University of Birmingham, UK) 2. The Contemporary Context of Muslim-Christian Dialogue, Paul Hedges (University of Winchester, UK) 3. Can those Chosen by God Dialogue with Others?, Reuven Firestone (University of Southern California and Hebrew Union College, USA) 4. Interreligious Dialogue as Lay, Institutional, and Academic: Muslim Perspectives, Khaleel Mohammed (San Diego State University, USA) 5. Gender and Muslim-Christian Dialogue, Anne Hege Grung (University of Oslo, Norway) 6. Applying Sharia Principles of Religious Tolerance to the Protection of Children: Nigerian Religious Conflict and Reconciliation amongst Muslims and Christians, Yusuff J. Amuda (International Islamic University, Malaysia) 7. Peace-building Through Interfaith Dialogues: The DRC Model, Jean-Daniel Kabati (University of Kwazalu Natal, South Africa) 8. Initiative and Response: The Future of Muslim-Christian Dialogue, Douglas Pratt (University of Waikato, New Zealand, and University of Bern, Switzerland) 9. Christian Responses to Islamophobia, Ray Gaston (Queen's Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education, UK) 10. Christian Muslim Relations in the USA: A Postmodern Analysis after 9/11, Clinton Bennett (State University of New York, USA) 11. ‘Bringing Faith Back In’: Muslim and Christian Approaches to Nuclear (Non-)Proliferation and Disarmament, Shirin Shafaie (School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, UK) 12. Vatican and World Council of Church Initiatives: Weaving Interreligious Threads on Ecumenical Looms, Clare Amos (World Council of Churches) Bibliography Index
Contemporary and up-to-date coverage of the key theories and factors in Muslim-Christian relations, highlighting global case studies.
Paul Hedges is Associate Professor in Interreligious Studies in the Study of Inter-Religious Relations in Plural Societies programme at RSIS, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, and was previously Reader in Interreligious Studies at the University of Winchester, UK. He has published widely in interfaith areas, including Preparation and Fulfillment (2001), Christian Approaches to Other Faiths (co-edited with Alan Race, textbook: 2008; reader: 2009), Controversies in Interreligious Dialogue and the Theology of Religions (2010). He is General Editor of the multivolume series Controversies in Contemporary Religion (2014), and is on the Editorial Board of Studies in Interreligious Dialogue, and the Journal of Religious History.
A thorough and well-shaped publication which makes a significant
contribution to the field … The editor has succeeded in bringing
together a notable group of writers who have succeeded in
demonstrating the breadth and complexity of contemporary
Muslim-Christian encounter as well as raising a number of
significant issues relating to interreligious dialogue in
general.
*British Journal of Religious Education*
[The book's] greatest strength is the bringing together of a
diverse range of topics and issues under discussion in a variety of
local, national and international contexts ... I would recommend
the book to all those interested in inter-religious studies, and
interfaith dialogue in particular, be they academics, students
and/or practitioners.
*Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations*
A comprehensive contribution to the literature on Christian-Muslim
relations and interfaith dialogue.
*Journal of Dialogue Studies*
This is a timely and useful collection which combines historical,
theoretical and empirical approaches to contemporary
Muslim-Christian encounters – including the two religions' relation
to "Shifting Thirds" such as Judaism, secularism and shared social
challenges in differing contexts.
*Oddbjørn Leirvik, Professor of Interreligious Studies, University
of Oslo, Norway, and author of Interreligious Studies (Bloomsbury
Academic, 2014)*
In this superb edited collection, Paul Hedges confirms again his
characteristically open-hearted approach and integrity – both by
his own substantial contribution and by the very choice of
contributors. Along with the editor, the varied writers extend the
range and deepen the quality of modern Christian-Muslim
encounter.
*Shabbir Akhtar, Honorary Research Associate, Faculty of Theology,
University of Oxford, UK*
This volume brings together very useful insights from, on the one
hand, the history and theory and, on the other, the contemporary
praxis of Christian-Muslim encounter, from a wide variety of
geographical contexts, including Nigeria and the DRC, Germany and
Norway, Tower Hamlets and Bradford, Iran and Saudi Arabia, and the
situation in the USA from both Christian and Muslim perspectives. A
wide range of themes is also discussed, including gender and
nuclear non-proliferation, with input from Jewish and Muslim, as
well as Christian, commentators, and overall the complexity and
multi-dimensionality of Christian-Muslim Relations are very well
illustrated.
*Hugh Goddard, Director of the HRH Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Centre
for the Study of Islam in the Contemporary World, University of
Edinburgh, UK*
Religious leaders, seasoned interreligious relations practitioners,
and newcomers to dialogue all will find something useful …a
thought-provoking collection of perspectives on the history,
methodology, theology, and practice of Christian-Muslim dialogue in
a variety of contexts.
*Reading Religion*
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