Lexington Books
Pages: 324
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-3521-1 • Hardback • April 2009 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
978-0-7391-3522-8 • Paperback • October 2010 • $59.99 • (£46.00)
978-0-7391-3523-5 • eBook • February 2009 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Mohammed Abu-Nimer is professor in the International Peace and Conflict Resolution program for the School of International Service and director of the Peacebuilding and Development Insitute at American University. He is also the founder and director of the Salam Institute for Peace and Justice David Augsburger is professor of pastoral care and counseling in the School of Theology at Fuller Theological Seminary.
Part 1 I. Introduction
Part 2 II. Peace-Building, Nonviolence, and Conflict Resolution
Chapter 3 The Practices of Forgiveness and Reconciliation in Conflict Transformation
Chapter 4 Response to Augsberger
Chapter 5 Muslim Perspectives on War and Peace
Chapter 6 Response to Kadayifci
Part 7 III. Religious Diversity and Identity
Chapter 8 The Qur'anic Perspective on Religious Pluralism
Chapter 9 I am as my Servant thinks of Me
Chapter 10 Response to Hassan and Harris
Chapter 11 Social Location and Christian Identity: Some Historical Perspectives
Chapter 12 Response to Shenk and Dueck
Part 13 Interfaith and Intra-Faith Dialogue
Chapter 14 Theological Foundation of Interfaith Dialogue and Peaceful Coexistence: The Koran's Universal Perspectives
Chapter 15 Fear and Muslim-Christian Conflict Transformation: Resources from Attachment Theory and Affect Regulation
Chapter 16 Toward Mutual Respectful Witness
Chapter 17 The Right to Religious Conversion: Between Apostasy and Proselytization
Chapter 18 Response to all articles
Chapter 19 Response to Bakar and Omar
Part 20 V. Contemporary Issues, Case Studies
Chapter 21 Rethinking Human Rights: A Common Challenge for Muslims and Christians
Chapter 22 Let Peace Flourish: Descriptive and Applied Research from the Conflict Transformation Grant
Chapter 23 Abrahamic Faiths: Models of Interfaith Dialogue in the U. S.
Chapter 24 Response to all articles
Part 25 Concluding Remarks
Part 26 Appendices
Abu-Nimer and Ausburger's Peace-building by, between, and beyond Muslims and Evangelical Christians shows us how through forgiveness and coexistence we can create a new humanity. Their dialogues surface hidden treasures of both communities. Their essays achieve a new form of knowing so that we see one another in humanizing contexts, allowing us to look together toward a common future. The co-editors and co-authors enable us to perceive harmony and complementarities amid great cultural diversity. People of varied backgrounds are turning to a new set of beliefs. While they may not share the same form, they do share the essential premise that the world and its people are one community. This sense of unity which includes diverse human societies is the central concept around which this book is organized. It is indispensible for those of us in peace studies and those who work toward a culture of peace.
— Abdul Aziz Said, American University
This book will appeal to those interested in Muslim-Christian dialogue, in general, and dialogue between Muslims and Evangelical Christians, in particular. Those concerned about justice and peace-making in a post-9/11 world will also find it of interest. This volume disproves those who question the possibility of genuine interfaith dialogue or who claim that such dialogue is structured solely along Christian emphases. Its contributions demonstrate that topics such as peace-making, forgiveness, justice, and respect have significant value in both traditions. . . . this book is a valuable resource for summaries of Evangelical Christian and Muslim approaches to peace-making, forgiveness and reconciliation, and interfaith dialogue.
— Journal of Ecumenical Studies, Spring 2010
In this important book Muslims and Evangelicals discuss the resources that each community can bring to the urgent task of peace-building. But the dialogue regularly moves to a deeper level. The discussions often take the form of personal stories of hopes and fears, of quests for forgiveness and reconciliation. This book points us to exciting new possibilities for working together in promoting the common good!
— Richard J. Mouw, PhD, President Emeritus, Fuller Theological Seminary
The contents of this volume represent the most substantive of the scholarly presentations and responses made at two consultations, in April 2005 and April 2006, convened by faculty of Fuller Theological Seminary, the Salam Institute of Peace and Justice, and the Islamic Society of North America. The co-editors provide a helpful introduction and conclusion....Instructors of peace studies courses should not ignore the classroom potential of this text in a post-9/11 era.
— Religious Studies Review