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Ummah : A New Paradigm for a Global World / Katrin A. Jomaa.

By: Material type: TextTextDescription: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781438482064
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BP163 .U463 2021
  • BP170
  • BP173
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Purpose and Focus of the Book -- Theoretical Background and Current Need for This Study -- Exegetical References -- Chapter 1 Conceptual Meaning of Ummah in the Meccan Verses of the Qurʼān -- Ummah in the Literature -- Analysis of the word ummah in the Meccan verses of the Qurʼān -- Ummah, Appointed Term (ajal), and Associated Responsibility -- Ummah, Religion, and Forefathers -- Ummah and al-Kitāb -- Ummah and Imām -- Ummah and the Covenant (al-Mīthāq)
Ummah, Ummī Prophet, and the Global Ummah -- Ummah and Sovereignty -- Leadership, the Book, and Justice -- Land (Territory) -- Ummah and Nation-State -- Al-Ummah al-Wāḥidah and Its Differentiation across Human History -- Ummah of the Prophets -- Dealing with Religious Diversity -- Confederates of Evil (al-Aḥzāb) -- The Reformers (Muṣliḥūn) -- Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Ummah in the Medinan Verses of the Qurʼān -- The Notion of a Shared Ummah: Rights and Obligations -- Prophet Abraham (Ibrāhīm) Was an Ummah
The Best Religion (Dīn) is Following Millat Ibrāhīm "al-Ḥanīf" -- Al-Manāsik (the Rituals) -- The Middle Ummah (al-Ummah al-Wasaṭ) and the Witness (Shahāda) -- Ummah from Ahl Al-Kitāb (Jews and Christians) -- The Best Ummah (Khayr Ummah) Ever Raised Up for Humankind -- Ummah of the Book and Governance -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Ummah in the Medina Constitution -- Al-Muʼminūn ("The Believers") -- Decrees Addressing the Believers -- Decrees Addressing the Jews
Sacred Land (ḥaram) -- Conclusion -- Chapter 4 The Ummah and Political Governance-Comparative -- The Ummah and the Aristotelian Polis -- Khalīfa and Political Animal -- Khalīfa -- Khalīfa in Early, Classical, and Modern Exegesis -- Khilāfa in Islamic Literature -- Aristotelian Polis and Qurʼanic Ummah -- Polis and Ummah: Medium Whereby Citizens Exercise Virtuous Activity -- Difference between Law and Sharīʹah -- Rule of Law (Polis and Ummah) -- Resolving Conflict by Invoking Competing Virtues in Aristotle and the Qur'ān
Polis and Constitution versus Ummah and al-Kitāb 222 -- Introducing Reforms through the Constitution -- The Characters of Constitution and the Citizen Mirror Each Other -- Constitutional Law Transformed into Community Norm -- Polis and Justice versus Ummah and Wasaṭiyyah -- Justice as a "Mean" and the Concept of "Wasaṭ" -- Understanding "Prophet Abraham Was an Ummah" through Aristotle's "Unity of Virtues" -- Ummah Attains Justice through Shūra (Collective Judgment of Khulafā)
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction BP163 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1250089633

Includes bibliographies and index.

Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Purpose and Focus of the Book -- Theoretical Background and Current Need for This Study -- Exegetical References -- Chapter 1 Conceptual Meaning of Ummah in the Meccan Verses of the Qurʼān -- Ummah in the Literature -- Analysis of the word ummah in the Meccan verses of the Qurʼān -- Ummah, Appointed Term (ajal), and Associated Responsibility -- Ummah, Religion, and Forefathers -- Ummah and al-Kitāb -- Ummah and Imām -- Ummah and the Covenant (al-Mīthāq)

A Possible Order of a Global Ummah Composed of Different Umam? -- Ummah, Ummī Prophet, and the Global Ummah -- Ummah and Sovereignty -- Leadership, the Book, and Justice -- Land (Territory) -- Ummah and Nation-State -- Al-Ummah al-Wāḥidah and Its Differentiation across Human History -- Ummah of the Prophets -- Dealing with Religious Diversity -- Confederates of Evil (al-Aḥzāb) -- The Reformers (Muṣliḥūn) -- Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Ummah in the Medinan Verses of the Qurʼān -- The Notion of a Shared Ummah: Rights and Obligations -- Prophet Abraham (Ibrāhīm) Was an Ummah

Defining the Ideology and Outlook of the Muslim Ummah through Prophet Abraham -- The Best Religion (Dīn) is Following Millat Ibrāhīm "al-Ḥanīf" -- Al-Manāsik (the Rituals) -- The Middle Ummah (al-Ummah al-Wasaṭ) and the Witness (Shahāda) -- Ummah from Ahl Al-Kitāb (Jews and Christians) -- The Best Ummah (Khayr Ummah) Ever Raised Up for Humankind -- Ummah of the Book and Governance -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3: Ummah in the Medina Constitution -- Al-Muʼminūn ("The Believers") -- Decrees Addressing the Believers -- Decrees Addressing the Jews

Decrees Addressing Ahl as-Ṣaḥīfah (the People of the Constitution) -- Sacred Land (ḥaram) -- Conclusion -- Chapter 4 The Ummah and Political Governance-Comparative -- The Ummah and the Aristotelian Polis -- Khalīfa and Political Animal -- Khalīfa -- Khalīfa in Early, Classical, and Modern Exegesis -- Khilāfa in Islamic Literature -- Aristotelian Polis and Qurʼanic Ummah -- Polis and Ummah: Medium Whereby Citizens Exercise Virtuous Activity -- Difference between Law and Sharīʹah -- Rule of Law (Polis and Ummah) -- Resolving Conflict by Invoking Competing Virtues in Aristotle and the Qur'ān

Community and State in Contemporary Political Theory -- Polis and Constitution versus Ummah and al-Kitāb 222 -- Introducing Reforms through the Constitution -- The Characters of Constitution and the Citizen Mirror Each Other -- Constitutional Law Transformed into Community Norm -- Polis and Justice versus Ummah and Wasaṭiyyah -- Justice as a "Mean" and the Concept of "Wasaṭ" -- Understanding "Prophet Abraham Was an Ummah" through Aristotle's "Unity of Virtues" -- Ummah Attains Justice through Shūra (Collective Judgment of Khulafā)

Justice Is Manifested in the "Common Good" Resulting from Collective Judgment.

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