基督复临安息日会对19世纪40年代至20世纪20年代伊斯兰教和穆斯林的理解

IF 0.2 0 RELIGION
A. Tompkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

基督复临安息日会对伊斯兰教的理解可以追溯到米勒派运动和穆斯林奥斯曼帝国将于1840年灭亡的预言。基督复临安息日会运动起源于米勒派运动,在整个19世纪末和20世纪初继续将伊斯兰教和预言联系在一起。伊斯兰教的预言性讨论经常使用贬低的语言和种族化的术语来描述穆斯林是反基督教的力量。在19世纪,基督复临安息日会信徒和穆斯林之间很少有个人互动。这种情况在20世纪逐渐改变,因为越来越多的基督复临安息日会信徒在穆斯林人口众多的地方工作。因此,出现了另一种描述和理解伊斯兰教的方式,这种方式不太依赖于预言式的解释,而是更认真地对待穆斯林的生活和信仰。虽然在20世纪20年代,对伊斯兰教的总体基调通常是负面的,但互动的增加开始创造对穆斯林不那么敌对的理解的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Seventh-day Adventist Understandings of Islam and Muslims from the 1840s–1920s
Seventh-day Adventist understandings of Islam can be traced to the Millerite movement and the prophetic prediction that the Muslim Ottoman Empire would fall in 1840. The Seventh-day Adventist movement, which came out of the Millerite movement, would continue to connect Islam and prophecy throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Often the prophetic discussions of Islam utilized demeaning language and racialized terminologies to describe Muslims as anti-Christian forces. There was very little personal interaction between Seventh-day Adventists and Muslims during the nineteenth century. This gradually changed in the twentieth century as more Seventh-day Adventists worked in places with significant Muslim populations. As a result, an alternative way of describing and understanding Islam emerged that was less reliant on prophetic interpretation and took more seriously the lives and beliefs of Muslims. While the general tone towards Islam typically was negative through the 1920s the increase in interaction began to create the possibility for less antagonistic understandings of Muslims.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: With in-depth analyses of worldwide Christianity and mission-focused book reviews, the International Bulletin of Mission Research is an unparalleled source of information on the world church in mission. The editors are committed to maintaining the highest possible academic editorial standards. IBMR provides an editorial voice that is dispassionate, analytical, fair minded, and nonpartisan. The IBMR includes: Feature articles and book reviews written by leading specialists on Christian mission from around the world—scholars from varied academic disciplines and theological perspectives The “Legacy” series with engaging accounts of pivotal mission leaders of the last two centuries and the equally engaging “My Pilgrimage in Mission” series that provides intimate insight into the lives of some of today’s most distinguished mission scholars and practitioners. Regional surveys and analyses of important mission documents and consultations. A “Noteworthy” news column that keeps you up to date on today’s mission leaders, conferences, and study opportunities. A listing of academic dissertations on mission and world Christianity. This dissertation list is online in our “Researching World Christianity: Doctoral Dissertations on Mission Since 1900” database. The feature “Ten Outstanding Books for Mission Studies” appears each April.
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