Portal: Modern Movements in Islam: Difference between revisions

[checked revision][checked revision]
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
{{PortalArticle|description=The All Pakistan Ulema Council is a Muslim organization in Pakistan, founded with the intention of reducing sectarian and interfaith violence through a return to the Islamic tradition, whose members include Islamic clerics and legal scholars from a range of persuasions. Its head is Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi.|title=All Pakistan Ulema Council|image=|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|image=|summary=|title=Taliban|description=The Taliban is a politically and militarily mobilized fundamentalist Hanafi group operating in Afghanistan. The group governed part of the country between 1996 and 2001 and has since tried to restore its control. The group seeks to implement traditional Islamic law without cowering to Western imperatives.}}
{{PortalArticle|description=The All Pakistan Ulema Council is a Muslim organization in Pakistan, founded with the intention of reducing sectarian and interfaith violence through a return to the Islamic tradition, whose members include Islamic clerics and legal scholars from a range of persuasions. Its head is Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi.|title=All Pakistan Ulema Council|image=|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|image=|summary=|title=Taliban|description=The Taliban is a politically and militarily mobilized fundamentalist Hanafi group operating in Afghanistan. The group governed part of the country between 1996 and 2001 and has since tried to restore its control. The group seeks to implement traditional Islamic law without cowering to Western imperatives.}}


=== Other articles in this section ===
===Other articles in this section===
{{col-float|width=25em}}
{{col-float|width=25em}}
*[[Islamic Republic of Pakistan]]
*[[Islamic Republic of Pakistan]]
Line 33: Line 33:


==Modern ''dawah'' (Islamic evangelism)==
==Modern ''dawah'' (Islamic evangelism)==
<br />
{{PortalArticle|image=Quran and Science.png|title=Islam and Science|summary=|description=Among the many and diverse matters discussed in or touched upon by Islamic scriptures are topics of direct or indirect scientific interest. These topics include reproductive science, embryology, cosmology, medicine, and a slew of other topics. While mainstream academic scholars and scientists have found the discussion of these topics contained in Islamic scripture to be unremarkable in its seventh-century context, in recent times, many traditional Muslim scholars and figures have argued that Islamic scriptures contains statements which not only adhere to but also predict modern science. Criticism of these ideas has been widespread and has even come from Muslim scholars themselves.}}{{PortalArticle|image=Zakir Naik.png|title=Zakir Naik|description=A medical doctor by training, Naik is famous for theorizing and employing correlations between Islamic scripture and modern science for the purpose of ''dawah'', or evangelism.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|image=Maurice Bucaille.JPG|title=Bucailleism|description=Bucailleism is a term used for the movement to relate modern science with religion, principally Islam. Named after the French surgeon Maurice Bucaille, author of The Bible, the Quran and Science, Bucaillists have promoted the idea that the Quran is of divine origin, arguing that it contains scientifically correct facts, and that "one of the main convincing evidences" that lead many to convert to Islam "is the large number of scientific facts in the Quran."|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|image=Dr. keith moore.jpg|title=Dr. Keith Moore|description=In the 1980s he accepted an invitation by the Embryology Committee of King Abdulaziz University to produce a special 3rd edition of his most successful book ''The Developing Human'' specifically for use by Muslim students in Islamic Universities. The additions to the text for this new edition were those of co-author Abdul Majeed al-Zindani. Moore's name is frequently cited by modern Islamic scholars.|summary=}}
 
===Other articles in this section===
=== Other articles in this section ===
{{col-float|width=25em}}
{{col-float|width=25em}}
*[[Mistranslations of Islamic Scripture (English)]]
*[[Mistranslations of Islamic Scripture (English)]]
Line 41: Line 40:
*[[Misrepresentations of Islamic Scripture (English)]]
*[[Misrepresentations of Islamic Scripture (English)]]
{{Col-float-break|width=25em}}
{{Col-float-break|width=25em}}
 
*[[Fastest Growing Religion]]
{{col-float-end}}
{{col-float-end}}


Line 59: Line 58:
<br />
<br />


== References ==
==References==
<references />
<references />
Editors, recentchangescleanup, Reviewers
6,633

edits