Religious Studies

Religious Studies examines the sacred texts, ritual systems, interpretive traditions, cosmologies, institutions, and moral worlds through which human societies have sought to understand existence, obligation, suffering, transcendence, and the structure of reality. In the history of ideas, religion has shaped conceptions of law, community, authority, salvation, memory, and the relationship between visible life and invisible order across civilizations.

This category explores the study of religion through scripture, commentary, ritual, myth, ethics, law, symbolism, and lived practice, including the ways traditions define truth, preserve continuity, negotiate difference, and respond to historical change. It considers how religious worlds organize meaning, structure belonging, authorize power, and generate enduring debates about justice, destiny, liberation, and the good life.

Religious Studies plays an important role in comparative inquiry because religion remains one of the central ways human beings have interpreted the cosmos, organized collective life, and confronted mortality, moral struggle, and ultimate questions of meaning. By engaging religious traditions seriously, this category deepens understanding of civilization, symbolic order, and the intellectual, ethical, and spiritual frameworks that have shaped human history.

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Arabic as a Shared Language of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Knowledge

Arabic became one of the great shared languages of Abrahamic intellectual life. In the medieval Islamic world, Muslims used Arabic for Qur’anic revelation, law, theology, philosophy, science, and administration; Christians used Arabic for biblical translation, theology, apologetics, liturgy, medicine, and philosophy; and Jews used Arabic and Judeo-Arabic for biblical commentary, law, philosophy, commerce, poetry, and everyday communication. This article examines Arabic as a shared language of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim knowledge without reducing it to a single religious identity. Arabic carried revelation, argument, translation, medicine, metaphysics, grammar, legal reasoning, and interreligious debate. It also clarifies why the word “Allah” should be understood as the Arabic word for God within a shared Semitic and Abrahamic linguistic world, not as the name of a separate deity.

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Khidr, Hidden Knowledge, and the Limits of Human Understanding

Khidr stands in Islamic sacred memory as the mysterious teacher of hidden knowledge, known through the Qur’anic account of Moses’ journey in Sūrat al-Kahf. The Qur’an does not name him directly, but later Muslim tradition identifies him as al-Khiḍr: a servant of Allah granted mercy and knowledge from the divine presence. His encounter with Moses is one of the Qur’an’s most challenging lessons on human limitation. A damaged boat, a slain youth, and a repaired wall appear morally bewildering until their hidden meanings are disclosed. This article reads Khidr as a figure of divine wisdom, patience, humility, and interpretive restraint, while warning against misuse of the story as a license for lawlessness, spiritual elitism, or contempt for ordinary moral responsibility.

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Luqman, Wisdom, and Moral Counsel in the Qur’an

Luqman stands in the Qur’an as a sacred figure of wisdom rather than as a prophet named in a formal prophetic genealogy. His counsel to his son in Sūrat Luqman offers one of the Qur’an’s most concentrated portraits of moral education: gratitude to Allah, refusal of idolatry, kindness to parents, accountability for even the smallest deed, prayer, public responsibility, patience, humility, and disciplined speech. This article reads Luqman as a figure of sacred counsel within Abrahamic moral memory, comparing Qur’anic wisdom with wider Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions of instruction while preserving Luqman’s distinctive Qur’anic voice. His wisdom is not abstract speculation but embodied guidance: how to worship, how to speak, how to walk, how to endure, and how to live before God.

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Mary / Maryam in Christian and Qur’anic Sacred Memory

Mary / Maryam stands at one of the most luminous meeting points in Abrahamic sacred memory. In Christianity, she is remembered as the mother of Jesus, the faithful servant whose consent, song, sorrow, and discipleship become inseparable from the Gospel story. In the Qur’an, Maryam is chosen, purified, protected, and vindicated; she is the only woman named directly in the Qur’an and is honored as a truthful woman whose life becomes a sign of divine mercy. This article reads Mary/Maryam across the New Testament, Qur’an, and later Christian and Islamic interpretation, emphasizing shared monotheism, revelation, moral purity, sacred motherhood, and divine nearness while carefully preserving real theological differences over Jesus, incarnation, prophecy, and sacred history.

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Optics, Astronomy, and Scientific Inquiry in the Islamic Golden Age

Optics, astronomy, and scientific inquiry in the Islamic Golden Age show how Islamic civilization transformed inherited knowledge through translation, mathematics, observation, criticism, instrumentation, and disciplined reasoning. Scholars working in Arabic, Persian, and other Islamicate languages studied light, vision, celestial motion, calendars, geography, instruments, planetary models, and the mathematical order of nature. Ibn al-Haytham’s Book of Optics became a landmark in the study of vision, light, experimentation, and mathematical analysis, while astronomers from al-Battani and al-Biruni to Nasir al-Din al-Tusi and the Maragha tradition refined observation and challenged inherited Ptolemaic models.

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Islamic Medicine and the Ordering of Natural Knowledge

Islamic medicine emerged within a civilization where healing, philosophy, observation, ethics, translation, hospitals, pharmacology, regimen, and the study of nature belonged to a wider order of knowledge. Drawing on Greek, Syriac, Persian, Indian, and local medical traditions, Muslim, Christian, Jewish, and other scholars translated, criticized, reorganized, and extended ancient medicine in Arabic. Figures such as al-Razi, Ibn Sina, al-Zahrawi, Ibn al-Nafis, and many others helped shape medicine as both practical care and disciplined natural knowledge.

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Falsafa and the Greek Inheritance in Islamic Civilization

Falsafa and the Greek inheritance in Islamic civilization describe one of the great intellectual encounters of world history: the movement of Greek, Syriac, Persian, and late antique philosophical knowledge into Arabic and its transformation within Islamic scholarly culture. Muslim, Christian, Jewish, Sabian, and other scholars translated and debated works associated with Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus, Galen, Euclid, Ptolemy, and later commentators, but falsafa was not passive preservation. Philosophers such as al-Kindi, al-Farabi, Ibn Sina, and Ibn Rushd reworked metaphysics, logic, psychology, ethics, political philosophy, medicine, astronomy, and the theory of prophecy within a world shaped by Qur’an, tawhid, kalam, law, and revelation.

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Islamic Civilization, Knowledge, and World History

Islamic civilization, knowledge, and world history cannot be understood as separate subjects. Islam emerged as revelation, recitation, prophecy, worship, law, mercy, theology, and moral discipline, but it also became a world-historical civilization of cities, institutions, scholarship, trade, translation, medicine, astronomy, mathematics, law, architecture, literature, governance, and global exchange. The Qur’an’s call to read, reflect, remember, judge with justice, seek wisdom, and recognize signs in creation helped form a civilization in which sacred text, language, law, reasoning, devotion, and inquiry were deeply entangled.

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Mercy, Beauty, and Discipline in the Islamic Tradition

Mercy, beauty, and discipline belong together in the Islamic tradition because Islam does not separate compassion from order, devotion from ethics, or spiritual refinement from daily practice. The Qur’an opens with the divine names of beneficence and mercy, presents Muhammad as a mercy to the worlds, and calls human beings toward justice, remembrance, restraint, gratitude, and purification. Beauty appears in creation, recitation, adab, worship, moral character, art, architecture, poetry, and the inner refinement of the heart. Discipline appears in prayer, fasting, charity, law, self-restraint, and the struggle against ego.

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