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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The Five Pillars of Islam: Witness, Prayer, Charity, Fasting, and Pilgrimage

The Five Pillars of Islam name the foundational practices through which Muslim life is oriented toward God: witness, prayer, charity, fasting, and pilgrimage. They are not merely external rituals or identity markers. They form a disciplined pattern of worship, moral responsibility, bodily devotion, social obligation, economic purification, sacred time, and communal belonging. Through the shahadah, salah, zakat, sawm, and hajj, Islam becomes lived submission to the One God through speech, body, wealth, hunger, movement, memory, and community.

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Sīrah and the Sacred History of Early Islam

Sīrah and the sacred history of early Islam preserve the narrative memory of Muhammad’s life, prophetic mission, migration, community formation, struggle, mercy, teaching, and final guidance. If the Qur’an is the revealed recitation and hadith preserves transmitted reports of Prophetic speech and practice, sīrah gives the life of the Prophet a narrative arc. It remembers Makkah and Madinah, revelation and opposition, the Hijrah and the formation of the ummah, treaty and conflict, worship and law, household and public life, mercy and judgment, and the emergence of Islam as a lived sacred community.

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Hadith and the Preservation of Prophetic Memory

Hadith and the preservation of prophetic memory stand at the center of Islamic sacred life because the Qur’an was not received as an isolated text detached from the Prophet who recited, taught, embodied, and applied it. In Islam, Muhammad is not divine, but he is the final messenger, the recipient of revelation, and the model through whom the Qur’an became lived guidance. Hadith preserve reports of his words, actions, approvals, judgments, character, worship, mercy, household conduct, public leadership, and communal instruction. Through hadith, Muslims encountered how revelation was remembered in speech, practice, transmission, scholarship, law, ethics, and devotion.

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The Prophet Muhammad and the Formation of the Ummah

The Prophet Muhammad and the formation of the ummah stand at the center of Islamic sacred history because revelation in Islam does not remain an isolated message, private inspiration, or abstract doctrine. It becomes a community of worship, law, mercy, discipline, mutual responsibility, moral reform, and shared accountability before God. Muhammad is understood in Islam as the final messenger, the recipient and proclaimer of the Qur’an, and the human model through whom revelation became lived order. The ummah formed through recitation, prayer, migration, patience, brotherhood, treaty, charity, struggle, forgiveness, and the transformation of scattered tribal loyalties into a community ordered around tawhid and moral responsibility.

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The History of the Prophets in the Qur’anic Tradition

The history of the prophets in the Qur’anic tradition is not presented as a simple chronological biography of sacred figures. It is a moral, theological, and reformative history of revelation. Prophets appear as human messengers sent by God to call their communities back to tawhid, justice, mercy, repentance, and accountability. The Qur’an remembers Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Mary, Jesus, Muhammad, and many others not merely to preserve ancient memory, but to guide the living. Their stories reveal a recurring pattern: revelation comes, arrogance resists, the vulnerable are defended, idolatry is challenged, judgment exposes false power, and mercy remains open to those who return.

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The Qur’an: Revelation, Recitation, Guidance, and Sacred History

The Qur’an stands at the center of Islamic sacred life as revelation, recitation, guidance, remembrance, warning, mercy, law, worship, and sacred history. For Muslims, it is not merely a religious book but the revealed speech of God, sent down in Arabic to the Prophet Muhammad and preserved through recitation, memorization, writing, teaching, commentary, and communal practice. It calls humanity to worship the One God, remember earlier prophets, practice justice, care for the vulnerable, resist idolatry and arrogance, prepare for judgment, and live with moral accountability.

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Liturgy, Sacrament, and Christian Civilization

Liturgy, sacrament, and Christian civilization show how Christian doctrine becomes embodied in worship, time, architecture, music, ritual, pastoral care, education, art, law, and public culture. Christianity is not only a set of beliefs about Jesus, the church, or salvation. It is also a civilization of prayer: baptismal water, Eucharistic bread and wine, psalms, hymns, preaching, calendar, fasting, feasting, icons, vestments, silence, pilgrimage, monastic rhythm, parish life, house churches, revival meetings, and global local worship. This article examines how Christian sacred history is carried through liturgical practice, sacramental theology, communal memory, institutional formation, reform, and diverse worshiping cultures.

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Church, Creed, and Sacred Authority

Church, creed, and sacred authority stand at the center of Christian continuity. Christianity did not remain only a memory of Jesus or a collection of apostolic writings. It became a worshiping, teaching, sacramental, missionary, and institutional community that had to preserve the Gospel, interpret scripture, define doctrine, guard communal identity, resolve disputes, ordain leaders, discipline members, resist error, and transmit sacred memory across languages, empires, cultures, and centuries. This article examines church, creed, councils, scripture, tradition, apostolic succession, bishops, sacraments, canon, doctrinal authority, reform, accountability, and the diversity of Christian models of sacred authority.

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Incarnation, Redemption, and Resurrection

Incarnation, redemption, and resurrection form the doctrinal center of Christian sacred history. The doctrine of incarnation claims that the eternal Word becomes flesh without ceasing to be divine. Redemption interprets Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection as the work through which sin, death, alienation, bondage, violence, and estrangement are answered by God. Resurrection proclaims that the crucified Jesus has been raised and that new creation has begun. This article examines these doctrines through New Testament witness, Nicene and Chalcedonian Christology, patristic theology, atonement traditions, baptism, Eucharist, resurrection hope, and the distinctiveness of Christian doctrine within Abrahamic study.

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