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Islámská civilizace: Srovnání reprezentativních výkladů / Islamic civilization: A comparison of representative interpretationsGorčíková, Magdaléna January 2014 (has links)
Diploma thesis "Islamic civilization: A comparison of representative interpretations" presents theoretical and historical approach to comparative study of Islamic society by interpretation and comparison of principal scholars in which the author lays emphasis on basic social patterns of this society in long-term and dynamic development as well as on its role within modernization transformations. The main goal is to contribute by selective reflexion to understanding of the long-term historical experiences, its peculiar world views and institutional patterns as well as the ways it participates in history of the world. For this purpose the author employs interpretations and comparisons of the selected authors with particular focus on conception of Muslim society in the writings of Ernest Gellner. The first part is engaged in definition of Islamic civilization concept as one of the largest socio-cultural complexes in Eurasian macro-region. The second part focuses on political traditions and transformations as well as to some extent on economic structure of Islamic civilization. The last part pursues Islamic society as prospective alternative modernity in comparison to diverse conceptions of Islam interpretations proposed by other social science scholars.
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Religiöse Ansprechbarkeit der Post-Sowjetischen Kirgisen : eine sozio-missiologische Fallstudie des Bekehrungsprozesses der zum Christentum konvertierten Kirgisen = Religious accountability of post-Soviet Kyrgyz people: a socio-missiological case study of the conversion process to Christianity of proselyt Kyrgyz peopleZweininger, Jakob 91 1900 (has links)
The Kyrgyz are a Mongolian, Turkic ethno-linguistic people group. The political and
social changes of the post-soviet times have led to a great religious openness among the
Kyrgyz. Within one decade the nunber of Kyrgyz Christians has grown from few dozens to
over 3000. The intention of this work was to analyze the conversion process of the Kyrgyz
converts to Christianity and to apply the results to further missiological activity.
The religious background of the Kyrgyz, which is heavily influenced by Folk Islam,
was presented in the first chapter of the paper. In the second chapter, interviews collected
from Kyrgyz Christians were evaluated. The third chapter summarizes the most important
findings of the work and makes them applicable for missionary work. The precise knowledge
of the religious background of the Kyrgyz and intercultural communication that it is based
upon it can essentially dismantle barriers for the acceptance of the gospel. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M. Th. (Missiology)
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Religiose Ansprechbarkeit der Post-Sowjetischen Kirgisen : eine sozio-missiologische Fallstudie des Bekehrungsprozesses der zum Christentum konvertierten Kirgisen / Religious accountability of post-Soviet Kyrgyz people: a socio-missiological case study of the conversion process to Christianity of proselyt Kyrgyz peopleZweininger, Jakob 91 1900 (has links)
The Kyrgyz are a Mongolian, Turkic ethno-linguistic people group. The political and
social changes of the post-soviet times have led to a great religious openness among the
Kyrgyz. Within one decade the nunber of Kyrgyz Christians has grown from few dozens to
over 3000. The intention of this work was to analyze the conversion process of the Kyrgyz
converts to Christianity and to apply the results to further missiological activity.
The religious background of the Kyrgyz, which is heavily influenced by Folk Islam,
was presented in the first chapter of the paper. In the second chapter, interviews collected
from Kyrgyz Christians were evaluated. The third chapter summarizes the most important
findings of the work and makes them applicable for missionary work. The precise knowledge
of the religious background of the Kyrgyz and intercultural communication that it is based
upon it can essentially dismantle barriers for the acceptance of the gospel. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M. Th. (Missiology)
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Allah oder Christus? Eine missiologische fallstudie uber die grunde der hinwendungen der kyrgyzen zum Islam und Christentum / Allah or Christ ? a missiological case study analysing the reason for conversions to Islam and Christianity among Kyrgyz peopleZweininger, Jakob 02 1900 (has links)
Summaries in German and English / This thesis is a missiological case study analysing the reasons for conversions to Islam and
Christianity among Kyrgyz people in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan.
The Kyrgyz people have a rich religious heritage with a history of more than 2,200
years. The uprooting of religion and the atheistic indoctrination by the Soviet government
created a religious vacuum after the breakdown of the Soviet Union and caused a revival of
religious receptivity in the society.
Renewed receptivity to religion in the newly established sovereign Kyrgyzstan was
followed by a rise in religious activity of Muslims and Christians beginning in the late 20th
century. In only 15 years the number of mosques rose from 39 to 1,600 and the number of
professing Christians increased from a few dozen to more than 7,000. This change between
1990 and 2005 developed in three stages through religious instability, an increase in
missionary activity and the posturing of religious ideology during the government’s
democratization process.
A research of individual conversions produced complex results. Muslims were more
attune to traditional religious thinking than were Christians. Most Muslims committed themselves
to Islam because of their ancestral heritage. The secularization of society facilitated the
Kyrgyz to convert to Christianity and turn to Christ due to a crisis in personal identity.
Among Christians, conversions were primarily affected by relatives and friends persuading
them through testimony and example. Most Kyrgyz becoming Muslims were significantly
influenced by their parents. Faith in the existence of God was the basic prerequisite for both
Muslim and Christian commitment to their respective beliefs. For Muslims it meant to obey
the commandments of Allah, but Christians were led to confession of sins and to conversion.
Changes in lifestyles and mindsets Muslims traced back to the Islamic religious tradition. For
Christians, lives were affected through a relationship to Jesus Christ. / Die vorliegende Thesis ist eine missiologische Fallstudie, die die Gruinde der Hinwendung der
Kyrgyzen in der post-sovietischen Zeit zum Islam und Christentum untersucht.
Die Kyrgyzen haben ein reiches religioses Erbe einer uber 2200 jahrigen Geschichte.
Doch mit der religiosen, Entwurzelung und der atheistischen Indoktrination durch die
Sovietregierung entwickelte sich nach dem Zusammenbruch der Sovietunion ein religioses
,Vakuum" und bewirkten ein Wiedererwachen der religiosen Rezeptivitat in der Gesellschaft.
Aufgrund der neuen religiosen Rahmenbedingungen in dem seit 1991 souveranen
Kyrgyzstan folgte vonseiten der Muslime und Christen ein starker Anstieg religioser Aktivitaten.
In nur 15 Jahren stieg die Anzahl der registrierten Moscheen von 39 auf uber 1600 und
die Anzahl der Christen im gleichen Zeitraum von ein paar Dutzend auf uber 7000. Diese
Entwicklung verlief im Zeitraum von 1990 bis 2005 in drei Abschnitten und war gekennzeichnet
von anfanglichen religiosen Aufbruchen, einer Zunahme missionarischer Aktivitaten
und einer religiosen Positionierung im Demokratiesierungsprozess.
Die Untersuchung der individuell erlebten Hinwendungen brachte vielschichtige
Ergebnisse hervor. So war der farmiliare Hintergrund der Muslime im allgemeinen religioser
als der der Christen. Die meisten Muslime bekannten sich aufgrund ihrer Abstammung zum
Islam. Die Sakularisierung der Familien begunstigte die Hinwendung der Kyrgyzen zum
Christentum, die sich vor allem aufgrund einer existenziellen Auseinandersetzung zu Jesus
wandten. Bei Christen waren es vor allem Verwandte und Freunde, die mit Worten und Leben
auf Jesus hinwiesen, bei Muslimen die Eltern. Sowohl bei Muslimen als auch Christen war
der Glaube an die Exitenz Gottes die wesentliche Vorraussetzung, wobei dies die Muslime
zur Befolgung der Gebote Allahs, Christen zur Sundenerkenntnis und einer Bekehrung bewegte.
Eine Lebens- und Sinnesanderung fuhrten Muslime auf den Islam und Christen auf
ihre Beziehung zu Jesus Christus zuruck. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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Contextualization and folk Islam : a case study in the SudanHadaway, Robin Dale 11 1900 (has links)
Estimates suggest that seventy percent of Muslims follow
folk Islam (popular Islam), rather than the orthodox Islamic
faith. Most methods for reaching Muslims with the
Gospel have concentrated on one of two broad approaches
with a third blending the first two methods.
Apologetic, polemic and dialogue techniques argue
that Christianity is more valid or reasonable than Islam.
Other approaches consist of contextualized methods seeking
some common ground between Christianity and Islam.
Apologetic arguments have not been very effective
with folk Muslims because cognitive propositions fail to
answer the “why” questions posed by popular Islam. Most
contextualized methods also miss the mark with folk Muslims;
they rarely attend Islamic worship, observe the
five pillars of Islam, or read the Qur’an. A few missiologists
propose a fourth category for reaching Muslims –
contextualizing according to their worldview.
This thesis explores what are the best approaches
for evangelizing folk Muslims who are particularly influenced
by African Traditional Religion (ATR). The Beja
tribe of the Sudan and the Sukuma tribe of Tanzania serve
as case studies. I argue for a contextualized approach to
folk Muslims, addressing their unique worldviews. ATRinfluenced
folk Muslims lean toward a fear-power
worldview, while the Sufis among them hold to an existential-
transcendent worldview. Each group, therefore,
necessitates a different evangelism approach.
The first chapter presents preliminary matters, the
research question, a literature review, and a rationale
for the thesis. The second chapter analyzes the case
study example of Beja folk Islam. Chapter three examines
folk Islam and its relationship to orthodox Islam,including further illustrations from the Beja tribe. The
fourth chapter explores the subject of ATR and its relationship
to folk Islam. The Sukuma tribe of Tanzania
serves as a base-line model of ATR for a comparison with
Beja folk Islam. Chapter five introduces the topic of
contextualization in Muslim evangelization and assesses
the effectiveness and validity of methods that have been
used. Chapter six suggests worldview approaches for
reaching ATR and Sufi-influenced folk Muslims. The final
chapter summarizes the thesis content, reviews the response
to the research question, and analyzes the implications
of the findings of the case study. / Christian Spirituality, Church History & Missiology / D.Th. (Missiology)
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Evangelism and folk Islam: a case study in South Coast KenyaNyagwoka, Joseph B., 1971- 09 1900 (has links)
The Islamic religion has become a challenge to Christianity due to its rapid growth around the world today. Christianity and Islam are both devising strategies on how to reach out to each other with their conflicting messages. Christian missiologists have come up with several approaches of doing Mission to the Muslims. However, because of the Islamic practices and beliefs that vary in different contexts or from place to place, some of the approaches are not effective in some areas. The nature of the cultural context has more often made it progressively difficult for the Christian churches and missionaries to do Mission among the Muslim countries, including those at South Coast of Kenya, the Digo folk Muslims.
The call for a suitable understanding of an evangelism approach among the Digo folk Muslims is an essential concept for an effective Mission to them. There is no doubt that in Digoland, there is still a great challenge in evangelising the Digo people. Even though currently there is a good number of un-indigenous churches in this area, the problem remains that the Digo Muslims have not effectively responded to the Gospel of Jesus Christ at large. It is also clear that the evangelism approaches that the Christian churches are using have not been effective.
This thesis analytically examines evangelism approaches to Mission among the Digo folk Muslims by seven selected Christian churches from different denominations in the South Coast of Kenya. The study investigates the effectiveness of the evangelism approaches, which these churches are using with the Digo folk Muslims in sharing the gospel. Mostly using data collected from oral interviews, the study finds that Mission involvement to Digo Muslims is slow and not as effective as evidenced by the small number of the Muslim background believers in the selected churches. The churches and the Muslim background believers face challenges that include fear due to threats from the Muslim community as they perceive the Christians as adversaries who are stealing their members. Moreover, the few Muslims are, at times threatened with death. The churches also face challenges from the lack of effective training in Muslim evangelism in context including the financial constraints for Muslim Mission in the area.
The research concludes that significantly, there is a need for the selected churches to reexamine and reconsider their evangelism approaches to Digo folk Muslims with a view to improving their ways of engaging in sharing the gospel with them. Finally, the study formulates and proposes a practical biblical model for effective Mission to these Digo Muslims. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology with specialisation in Muslim Evangelism)
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Allah oder Christus? Eine missiologische fallstudie uber die grunde der hinwendungen der kyrgyzen zum Islam und Christentum / Allah or Christ ? a missiological case study analysing the reason for conversions to Islam and Christianity among Kyrgyz peopleZweininger, Jakob 02 1900 (has links)
Summaries in German and English / This thesis is a missiological case study analysing the reasons for conversions to Islam and
Christianity among Kyrgyz people in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan.
The Kyrgyz people have a rich religious heritage with a history of more than 2,200
years. The uprooting of religion and the atheistic indoctrination by the Soviet government
created a religious vacuum after the breakdown of the Soviet Union and caused a revival of
religious receptivity in the society.
Renewed receptivity to religion in the newly established sovereign Kyrgyzstan was
followed by a rise in religious activity of Muslims and Christians beginning in the late 20th
century. In only 15 years the number of mosques rose from 39 to 1,600 and the number of
professing Christians increased from a few dozen to more than 7,000. This change between
1990 and 2005 developed in three stages through religious instability, an increase in
missionary activity and the posturing of religious ideology during the government’s
democratization process.
A research of individual conversions produced complex results. Muslims were more
attune to traditional religious thinking than were Christians. Most Muslims committed themselves
to Islam because of their ancestral heritage. The secularization of society facilitated the
Kyrgyz to convert to Christianity and turn to Christ due to a crisis in personal identity.
Among Christians, conversions were primarily affected by relatives and friends persuading
them through testimony and example. Most Kyrgyz becoming Muslims were significantly
influenced by their parents. Faith in the existence of God was the basic prerequisite for both
Muslim and Christian commitment to their respective beliefs. For Muslims it meant to obey
the commandments of Allah, but Christians were led to confession of sins and to conversion.
Changes in lifestyles and mindsets Muslims traced back to the Islamic religious tradition. For
Christians, lives were affected through a relationship to Jesus Christ. / Die vorliegende Thesis ist eine missiologische Fallstudie, die die Gruinde der Hinwendung der
Kyrgyzen in der post-sovietischen Zeit zum Islam und Christentum untersucht.
Die Kyrgyzen haben ein reiches religioses Erbe einer uber 2200 jahrigen Geschichte.
Doch mit der religiosen, Entwurzelung und der atheistischen Indoktrination durch die
Sovietregierung entwickelte sich nach dem Zusammenbruch der Sovietunion ein religioses
,Vakuum" und bewirkten ein Wiedererwachen der religiosen Rezeptivitat in der Gesellschaft.
Aufgrund der neuen religiosen Rahmenbedingungen in dem seit 1991 souveranen
Kyrgyzstan folgte vonseiten der Muslime und Christen ein starker Anstieg religioser Aktivitaten.
In nur 15 Jahren stieg die Anzahl der registrierten Moscheen von 39 auf uber 1600 und
die Anzahl der Christen im gleichen Zeitraum von ein paar Dutzend auf uber 7000. Diese
Entwicklung verlief im Zeitraum von 1990 bis 2005 in drei Abschnitten und war gekennzeichnet
von anfanglichen religiosen Aufbruchen, einer Zunahme missionarischer Aktivitaten
und einer religiosen Positionierung im Demokratiesierungsprozess.
Die Untersuchung der individuell erlebten Hinwendungen brachte vielschichtige
Ergebnisse hervor. So war der farmiliare Hintergrund der Muslime im allgemeinen religioser
als der der Christen. Die meisten Muslime bekannten sich aufgrund ihrer Abstammung zum
Islam. Die Sakularisierung der Familien begunstigte die Hinwendung der Kyrgyzen zum
Christentum, die sich vor allem aufgrund einer existenziellen Auseinandersetzung zu Jesus
wandten. Bei Christen waren es vor allem Verwandte und Freunde, die mit Worten und Leben
auf Jesus hinwiesen, bei Muslimen die Eltern. Sowohl bei Muslimen als auch Christen war
der Glaube an die Exitenz Gottes die wesentliche Vorraussetzung, wobei dies die Muslime
zur Befolgung der Gebote Allahs, Christen zur Sundenerkenntnis und einer Bekehrung bewegte.
Eine Lebens- und Sinnesanderung fuhrten Muslime auf den Islam und Christen auf
ihre Beziehung zu Jesus Christus zuruck. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D. Th. (Missiology)
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Contextualization and folk Islam : a case study in the SudanHadaway, Robin Dale 11 1900 (has links)
Estimates suggest that seventy percent of Muslims follow
folk Islam (popular Islam), rather than the orthodox Islamic
faith. Most methods for reaching Muslims with the
Gospel have concentrated on one of two broad approaches
with a third blending the first two methods.
Apologetic, polemic and dialogue techniques argue
that Christianity is more valid or reasonable than Islam.
Other approaches consist of contextualized methods seeking
some common ground between Christianity and Islam.
Apologetic arguments have not been very effective
with folk Muslims because cognitive propositions fail to
answer the “why” questions posed by popular Islam. Most
contextualized methods also miss the mark with folk Muslims;
they rarely attend Islamic worship, observe the
five pillars of Islam, or read the Qur’an. A few missiologists
propose a fourth category for reaching Muslims –
contextualizing according to their worldview.
This thesis explores what are the best approaches
for evangelizing folk Muslims who are particularly influenced
by African Traditional Religion (ATR). The Beja
tribe of the Sudan and the Sukuma tribe of Tanzania serve
as case studies. I argue for a contextualized approach to
folk Muslims, addressing their unique worldviews. ATRinfluenced
folk Muslims lean toward a fear-power
worldview, while the Sufis among them hold to an existential-
transcendent worldview. Each group, therefore,
necessitates a different evangelism approach.
The first chapter presents preliminary matters, the
research question, a literature review, and a rationale
for the thesis. The second chapter analyzes the case
study example of Beja folk Islam. Chapter three examines
folk Islam and its relationship to orthodox Islam,including further illustrations from the Beja tribe. The
fourth chapter explores the subject of ATR and its relationship
to folk Islam. The Sukuma tribe of Tanzania
serves as a base-line model of ATR for a comparison with
Beja folk Islam. Chapter five introduces the topic of
contextualization in Muslim evangelization and assesses
the effectiveness and validity of methods that have been
used. Chapter six suggests worldview approaches for
reaching ATR and Sufi-influenced folk Muslims. The final
chapter summarizes the thesis content, reviews the response
to the research question, and analyzes the implications
of the findings of the case study. / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / D.Th. (Missiology)
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