C
Contarini
Guest
My favorite contemporary Islamic author is Seyyed Hossain Nasr, who is a Shi’ite and a Sufi. Fazlur Rahman is a good representative of a pretty mainstream, orthodox, moderately conservative Islam.Thanks for the help, my main reason for posting was I had no idea where to start… which I already realized I was confusing Buddha and Muhammad(which makes me realize I literally know nothing about Muhammad), for whatever reason.
Think I will probably start with an English translation of the Quran, and the Muslim perspective of things, then move onto the non-Muslim views.
Actually not even sure if there is actually a Mosque near me, I am assuming there is one near the college I plan on going to, though.
If you go to your local mosque, the chances are that you will encounter a fairly “fundamentalist” version of Islam (I mean this in the same way we’d use the term in Christianity, not in the sense the media often use it to mean “militant, violent Islam”). Saudi Arabia has used its oil wealth to spread its version of Islam around the world. So you may find a gap between what you read in books by people like Nasr and what you encounter in the mosque. They will likely be very friendly and courteous but will be very interested in converting you. You are likely to encounter arguments saying that the Qur’an somehow anticipated modern scientific knowledge and thus must be the Word of God (I find these arguments to be bogus), and criticisms of the doctrine of the Trinity and the divinity of Jesus (doctrines Muslims don’t understand very well, but of course most Christians don’t either, so Muslim criticisms often have a lot of traction with Christians who have always found the Church’s teachings confusing).
Feel free to come back and talk to us once you have read some more and talk to some Muslims. It’s important in this kind of inquiry to be both open-minded and critical.
I’m kind of the expert in not being converted to things. I have nearly become Catholic over and over (including this past year) and always talked myself out of it. Islam has never really gotten off the ground with me, for reasons I’d be happy to explain but might be premature at this point (though I love Sufism–if I ever did become Muslim, it would be in order to be a Sufi).
Edwin