Tag Archives: connections
Global Connections . Religion
Beginning in the late 20th century, the number of adherents of Islam began to increase. Prior to independence in 1975, almost one-third of the population was nominally Christian, and a small number were Muslim. A number of Web sites, bloggers, and newspapers-TPM, Salon, Wonkette, Matt Yglesias, Amy Sullivan, Alan Jacobs, the Times, the Baltimore Sun, and many others-have stepped forward to challenge Gingrich’s demagoguery. The article said that Gingrich’s campaign against the New York mosque serves the interests of Osama Bin Laden. As it is prescribed to send prayers upon the Prophet (peace and prayers of Allah be upon him) in prayer when saying the tashahhud, and it is prescribed when giving khutbahs, saying Du’a and praying for forgiveness, and after the Adhan, and when entering and exiting the mosque, and when mentioning him in other circumstances, so it is more important to do so when writing his name in a book, letter, article and so on. Gingrich’s spokesman, Rick Tyler, has responded in Slate to an article I wrote last week. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., and Rick Lazio, the former Republican congressman running for governor of New York.
1) How closely have you followed the news about a proposed Muslim Community Center to be constructed two blocks from ground zero, the former location of the World Trade Center? Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House, is leading a jihad to nationalize the mosque fight and turn it into a culture war over “Islamism.” Meanwhile, uprisings against mosque construction have broken out in Tennessee, California, and Wisconsin. Have a prayer request? Scholars of the Salafi branch of Islam practiced in Saudi Arabia have instructed their followers not to abbreviate the salawat upon Muhammad. Gingrich, Palin, Giuliani, and their followers keep trying to dress up their complaint as a question about who’s running or funding the New York project. “I learned that in 20 years with the rate of the birth population, we will be overtaken by Islam, and their goal is to get people in Congress and the Supreme Court to see that Shariah is implemented,” a Tea Party activist tells the New York Times.
With 9.5 percent unemployment, with a majority of Americans wanting to repeal Obama’s health-care plan, with a majority of Americans favoring Arizona over the Obama administration on immigration, with the majority of Americans opposing a mosque at Ground Zero, with a majority of Americans feeling that the stimulus failed and that the Democratic Party increasingly is the party of job killers, I think that that’s what’s going to be the key this fall. Over the years, however, a series of laws have included provisions allowing government agencies to contract with religious organizations to provide social services needed to carry out the goals of that law. Do you tend to agree with the supporters, the opponents or do you think they both have a legitimate position? They say it’s being presented as a way to “demonstrate the presence of moderate Muslims in New York” and “serve as a monument to religious tolerance.” The only contrary argument offered is that it’s “an offense to the memory of those killed in the attacks on 9/11 and displays unacceptable insensitivity.” Given the choice between these two arguments, respondents side with the project’s opponents by a margin of 38 to 21 percent.
This is the real argument behind the campaign against the New York community center: It’s Muslim, it’s big, and it’s too close to where a bunch of Muslims killed a bunch of us. But no concrete thing can explain itself because (to shorten the argument considerably) even the necessity of such a thing is not identical to itself so it is not explaining itself (2017: 53). If Maitzen is right, nothing can be metaphysically ultimate in Schellenberg’s sense, and thus not metaphysically, axiologically and soteriologically ultimate at once. No authority except divine power can change this predictability. More specifically, the linh power of an entity resides in mediation between the two levels of order and disorder which govern social transformation. Baggini argues that atheism is a superior basis for ethics, claiming that a moral basis external to religious imperatives is necessary to evaluate the morality of the imperatives themselves-to be able to discern, for example, that “thou shalt steal” is immoral even if one’s religion instructs it-and that atheists, therefore, have the advantage of being more inclined to make such evaluations. On the other hand, they are not to take the task of inspiring faith to the extent of hypocrisy or inappropriateness, for example, by taking on other professions apart from being a monastic, or by courting favours by giving items to the laypeople.