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Call of the Minaret

By Kenneth Cragg (Author)
Our Price $ 29.01  
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Item Number 104812  
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Item Description...

'From dawn to after sunset the clock in the mosque punctuates the life of Islam with the consciousness of God.' First published in 1956, The Call of the Minaret remains one of the most acclaimed works in the field of Muslim-Christian relations. Now Kenneth Cragg brings the discussion into the twenty-first century in this third edition of his seminal work, complete with new material including an updated bibliography. Taking the Muslim call to prayer as his starting point, the author unravels the significance of the muezzin's haunting cry, considering prophethood, prayer, politics and community to present a more complete understanding of Islam. It becomes clear that the Islamic call to prayer transcends the boundaries of religion, containing a summons for Christians and Muslims alike. Drawing upon both scholarship and his own abiding spirituality, Kenneth Cragg's study of the two faiths pays homage to both, drawing them out of the shadows of enmity and into the light of mutual understanding.


Item Specifications...

Pages   384
Dimensions:   Length: 8.6" Width: 5.36" Height: 1.17"
Weight:   1.04 lbs.
Binding  Softcover
Publisher   Oneworld Publications
ISBN  1851682104  
EAN  9781851682102  


Availability  2 units.
Availability accurate as of May 30, 2012 04:49.
Usually ships within one to two business days from La Vergne, TN.
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Product Categories
2Books > Subjects > Religion & Spirituality > Islam > General   [1743  similar products]
3Books > Subjects > Religion & Spirituality > Religious Studies > Comparative Religion   [2405  similar products]



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Reviews - What do our customers think?
Call of the Minaret - by Kenneth Cragg  Dec 11, 2001
This book by Kenneth Cragg is superb. Cragg has a heart for people, all people, and at the same time, a deep and abiding faith in Jesus Christ, King of kings, and Lord of lords. He is an articulate and scholarly Mother Theresa.

The first half of the book describes Islam and its beliefs. He apparently has the approval of Muslims, who say that his descriptions are accurate. He does not shrink from spelling out the problems and issues within Islam, nor its radical differences from Christianity.

The second half of the book describes how Christians can helpfully relate to Islam. It ought to be required reading for missionaries and all Christians for its powerful perspective on how to reach out to persons of other beliefs.

Cragg wrote the book in 1955, when Islamic peoples were just coming into modernity and finding their own national identities, largely because of WWII and the collapse of the colonial empires. Charges of terrorism were even then being leveled. The book is a superb introduction to the Islamic world leading up to the present confrontation with terrorism from within their ranks.

Cragg does not deal with the issues of terrorism as we see it half a century later, but he does help the reader understand how Islam must inevitably drift in that direction. Allah is a distant deity, whom one never gets to know personally, never as "Father". One gets to know only the law of Allah. That kind of distant, almost deist, deity is guaranteed to inspire deep feelings of resentment and anger in its worshippers. Just as with a human father of like character. It is a religion without grace in the Christian understanding of the word.

Cragg describes the plight and yearnings of the Muslims with great sensitivity, and with clarity on how Christians can maintain their worship of the Triune God and at the same time reach out with social and political as well as religious integrity.

It would be hard to imagine a better introduction to Islam, especially in light of the current spiritual warfare developing (yet once again) between Islam and Christianity. Christians are very ill equipped to deal with spiritual warfare on almost any front. They would do well to learn about Islam from someone who sees their need for Christ, and at the same time loves them deeply.

Blessings,
Earle Fox

 

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