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Religious liberalism

Religious liberalism is a conception of religion (or of a particular religion) which emphasizes personal and group liberty[1] and rationality.[2] It is an attitude towards one's own religion (as opposed to criticism of religion from a secular position, and as opposed to criticism of a religion other than one's own) which contrasts with a traditionalist or orthodox approach, and it is directly opposed by trends of religious fundamentalism. It is related to religious liberty, which is the tolerance of different religious beliefs and practices, but not all promoters of religious liberty are in favor of religious liberalism, and vice versa.[3]

Overview edit

In the context of religious liberalism, liberalism conveys the sense of classical liberalism as it developed in the Age of Enlightenment, which forms the starting point of both religious and political liberalism; but religious liberalism does not necessarily coincide with all meanings of liberalism in political philosophy. For example, an empirical attempt to show a link between religious liberalism and political liberalism proved inconclusive in a 1973 study in Illinois.[4]

Usage of the term liberal in the context of religious philosophy appeared as early as the mid-19th century[5] and became established by the first part of the 20th century; for example, in 1936, philosophy professor and Disciples of Christ minister Edward Scribner Ames wrote in his article "Liberalism in Religion":[6]

The term "liberalism" seems to be developing a religious usage which gives it growing significance. It is more sharply contrasted with fundamentalism, and signifies a far deeper meaning than modernism. Fundamentalism describes a relatively uncritical attitude. In it custom, traditionalism, and authoritarianism are dominant. ... There is no doubt that the loss of the traditional faith has left many people confused and rudderless, and they are finding that there is no adequate satisfaction in mere excitement or in flight from their finer ideals. They crave a sense of deeper meaning and direction for their life. Religious liberalism, not as a cult but as an attitude and method, turns to the living realities in the actual tasks of building more significant individual and collective human life.

Religious traditionalists, who reject the idea that tenets of modernity should have any impact on religious tradition, challenge the concept of religious liberalism.[citation needed] Secularists, who reject the idea that implementation of rationalistic or critical thought leaves any room for religion altogether, likewise dispute religious liberalism.[citation needed]

In Christianity edit

"Liberal Christianity" is an umbrella term for certain developments in Christian theology and culture since the Enlightenment of the late 18th century. It has become mostly mainstream within the major Christian denominations in the Western world, but is opposed by a movement of Christian fundamentalism which developed in response to these trends, and by Evangelicalism generally. It also contrasts with conservative forms of Christianity outside the Western world and outside the reach of Enlightenment philosophy and modernism, mostly within Eastern Christianity.[citation needed]

The Catholic Church in particular has a long tradition of controversy regarding questions of religious liberalism. Cardinal John Henry Newman (1801–1890), for example, was considered to be moderately liberal by 19th-century standards because he was critical of papal infallibility, but he explicitly opposed "liberalism in religion" because he argued it would lead to complete relativism.[7]

The conservative Presbyterian biblical scholar J. Gresham Machen criticized what he termed "naturalistic liberalism" in his 1923 book, Christianity and Liberalism, in which he intended to show that "despite the liberal use of traditional phraseology modern liberalism not only is a different religion from Christianity but belongs in a totally different class of religions".[8] The Anglican Christian apologist C. S. Lewis voiced a similar view in the mid-20th century, arguing that "theology of the liberal type" amounted to a complete re-invention of Christianity and a rejection of Christianity as understood by its own founders.[9]

In Judaism edit

German-Jewish religious reformers began to incorporate critical thought and humanist ideas into Judaism from the early 19th century.[citation needed] This resulted in the creation of various non-Orthodox denominations, from the moderately liberal Conservative Judaism to very liberal Reform Judaism. The moderate wing of Modern Orthodox Judaism, especially Open Orthodoxy, espouses a similar approach.

In Islam edit

Liberalism and progressivism within Islam involve professed Muslims who have created a considerable body of liberal thought about Islamic understanding and practice.[10] Their work is sometimes characterized as "progressive Islam" (al-Islām at-taqaddumī); some scholars, such as Omid Safi, regard progressive Islam and liberal Islam as two distinct movements.[11]

The methodologies of liberal or progressive Islam rest on the interpretation of traditional Islamic scripture (the Quran) and other texts (such as the Hadith), a process called ijtihad.[12][page needed] This can vary from the slight to the most liberal, where only the meaning of the Quran is considered to be a revelation, with its expression in words seen as the work of the prophet Muhammad in his particular time and context.

Liberal Muslims see themselves as returning to the principles of the early ummah ethical and pluralistic intent of the Quran.[13] They distance themselves from some traditional and less liberal interpretations of Islamic law which they regard as culturally based and without universal applicability.[citation needed] The reform movement uses Tawhid (monotheism) "as an organizing principle for human society and the basis of religious knowledge, history, metaphysics, aesthetics, and ethics, as well as social, economic and world order".[14]

Islamic Modernism has been described as "the first Muslim ideological response to the Western cultural challenge"[15] attempting to reconcile Islamic faith with modern values such as nationalism, democracy, civil rights, rationality, equality, and progress.[16][page needed] It featured a "critical reexamination of the classical conceptions and methods of jurisprudence" and a new approach to Islamic theology and Quranic exegesis.[15]

It was the first of several Islamic movements—including secularism, Islamism, and Salafism—that emerged in the middle of the 19th century in reaction to the rapid changes of the time, especially the perceived onslaught of Western culture and colonialism on the Muslim world.[16] Founders include Muhammad Abduh, a Sheikh of Al-Azhar University for a brief period before his death in 1905, Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani, and Muhammad Rashid Rida (d. 1935).

The early Islamic modernists (al-Afghani and Muhammad Abdu) used the term salafiyya[17] to refer to their attempt at renovation of Islamic thought,[18] and this salafiyya movement is often known in the West as "Islamic modernism," although it is very different from what is currently called the Salafi movement, which generally signifies "ideologies such as wahhabism".[18] According to Malise Ruthven, Islamic modernism suffered since its inception from co-option of its original reformism by both secularist rulers and by "the official ulama" whose "task it is to legitimise" rulers' actions in religious terms.[19]

Examples of liberal movements within Islam are Progressive British Muslims (formed following the 2005 London terrorist attacks, defunct by 2012), British Muslims for Secular Democracy (formed 2006), or Muslims for Progressive Values (formed 2007).[citation needed]

In eastern religions edit

Eastern religions were not immediately affected by liberalism and Enlightenment philosophy, and have partly undertaken reform movements only after contact with Western philosophy in the 19th and 20th centuries.[citation needed] Thus Hindu reform movements emerged in British India in the 19th century.[citation needed] Buddhist modernism (or "New Buddhism") arose in its Japanese form as a reaction to the Meiji Restoration, and was again transformed outside of Japan in the 20th century, notably giving rise to modern Zen Buddhism.[20][21]

Liberal religion in Unitarianism edit

The term liberal religion has been used by Unitarian Christians,[5] as well as Unitarian Universalists,[22] to refer to their own brand of religious liberalism; the term has also been used by non-Unitarians, such as Quakers.[23] The Journal of Liberal Religion was published by the Unitarian Ministerial Union, Meadville Theological School, and Universalist Ministerial Association from 1939 to 1949, and was edited by James Luther Adams, an influential Unitarian theologian.[24] Fifty years later, a new version of the journal was published in an online format from 1999 to 2009.[25]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Newman 1991, p. 144: "... when people talk about 'religious liberalism,' they are normally referring to a commitment to a certain kind of conception of what religion is and, accordingly, of how religious attitudes, institutions, and communities should be developed or reshaped so as to accommodate and promote particular forms of personal and group freedom."
  2. ^ Newman 1991, p. 159: "... religious liberalism came to be so concerned with respect for reason, reasonableness, and rationality ... ."
  3. ^ Newman 1991, p. 143–144: "However, given the way in which terminology has evolved, we must be careful not to assume too close an association between 'religious liberty' and 'religious liberalism.' Many people who think that religious liberty is basically a good thing that ought to be promoted do not wish to be regarded as advocates of religious liberalism; some of them even feel that many of those who call themselves 'religious liberals' are enemies of religious liberty, or at least end up undermining religious liberty in the process of promoting their own special brand of 'liberal religion.' ... One notable problem here is that, when liberalism is considered in relation to religion, one may be thinking primarily of a certain 'liberal' conception of religion itself (in contrast with, say, orthodox, conservative, traditionalist, or fundamentalist conceptions) or one may be thinking more of a 'liberal' political view of the value of religious liberty. But, when people talk about 'religious liberalism,' they are usually thinking of the former more than the latter, although they may uncritically assume that the two necessarily accompany one another."
  4. ^ Stellway, Richard J. (Summer 1973). "The correspondence between religious orientation and socio‐political liberalism and conservatism". The Sociological Quarterly. 14 (3): 430–439. doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.1973.tb00871.x. JSTOR 4105689.
  5. ^ a b For example: Ellis, George Edward (November 1856). "Relations of reason and faith". The Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany. Boston: Crosby, Nichols, and Company for the American Unitarian Association. 26 (3): 412–456 (444–445, 450). OCLC 6122907. The first of all the requisites in such a religion is that it shall be Liberal. We mention this condition even before that of Truth, because a religion that is not liberal cannot be true. The devout and intelligent demand a liberal religion, a religion large, free, generous, comprehensive in its lessons, a religion expansive in its spirit, lofty in its views, and with a sweep of blessings as wide as the range of man's necessities and sins. This is what is meant by a Liberal Religion, or Liberal views of religion, or Liberal Christianity. ... Thoughtful, earnest, and devout minds now demand a liberal religion. Liberal in the honest, pure, and noble sense of that word. Not liberal in the sense of license, recklessness, or indifference; not in making a scoff of holy restraints and solemn mysteries. Not liberal as the worldling or the fool uses the word, for overthrowing all distinctions, and reducing life to a revel or a riot. ... Such a faith cannot afford to raise an issue with reason on a single point, so far as their road on the highway of truth will allow them to keep company together. When they part for faith to advance beyond reason, they must part in perfect harmony.
  6. ^ Ames, Edward Scribner (July 1936). "Liberalism in religion". International Journal of Ethics. 46 (4): 429–443. doi:10.1086/intejethi.46.4.2989282. JSTOR 2989282. S2CID 144873810.
  7. ^ "Liberalism in religion is the doctrine that there is no positive truth in religion, but that one creed is as good as another…", J. H. Newman 'Biglietto Speech' http://www.newmanreader.org/works/addresses/file2.html
  8. ^ Machen asserted that "If the Jesus of naturalistic reconstruction were really taken as an example, disaster would soon follow. As a matter of fact, however, the modern liberal does not really take as his example the Jesus of the liberal historians; what he really does in practice is to manufacture as his example a simple exponent of a non-doctrinal religion whom the abler historians even of his own school know never to have existed except in the imagination of modern men." Machen, J. Gresham (2009) [1923]. Christianity and liberalism (New ed.). Grand Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. pp. 6, 81. ISBN 9780802864994. OCLC 368048449.
  9. ^ Lewis, C. S. (1988). The essential C.S. Lewis. New York: Collier Books. p. 353. ISBN 0020195508. OCLC 17840856. All theology of the liberal type involves at some point—and often involves throughout—the claim that the real behavior and purpose and teaching of Christ came very rapidly to be misunderstood and misrepresented by his followers, and has been recovered or exhumed only by modern scholars. (From an essay titled "Modern theology and biblical criticism" written in 1959.)
  10. ^ Safi, Omid, ed. (2003). Progressive Muslims: on justice, gender and pluralism. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. ISBN 9781851683161. OCLC 52380025.
  11. ^ Safi, Omid. . averroes-foundation.org. Averroes Foundation. Archived from the original on July 9, 2006.
  12. ^ Aslan, Reza (2011) [2005]. No god but God: the origins, evolution, and future of Islam (Updated ed.). New York: Random House. ISBN 9780812982442. OCLC 720168240.
  13. ^ Sajid, Abdul Jalil (December 10, 2001). . mcb.org.uk. Muslim Council of Britain. Archived from the original on June 7, 2008.
  14. ^ "Tawhid". oxfordislamicstudies.com. Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  15. ^ a b Moaddel, Mansoor (2005). Islamic modernism, nationalism, and fundamentalism: episode and discourse. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 2. ISBN 9780226533339. OCLC 55870974. Islamic modernism was the first Muslim ideological response to the Western cultural challenge. Started in India and Egypt in the second part of the 19th century ... reflected in the work of a group of like-minded Muslim scholars, featuring a critical reexamination of the classical conceptions and methods of jurisprudence and a formulation of a new approach to Islamic theology and Quranic exegesis. This new approach, which was nothing short of an outright rebellion against Islamic orthodoxy, displayed astonishing compatibility with the ideas of the Enlightenment.
  16. ^ a b Martin, Richard C., ed. (2016) [2004]. Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim world (2nd ed.). Farmington Hills, MI: Macmillan Reference, a part of Gale, Cengage Learning. ISBN 9780028662695. OCLC 907621923.
  17. ^ Brown, Jonathan A. C. (2009). "Salafism: Modernist Salafism from the 20th century to the present". oxfordbibliographies.com. Oxford Bibliographies. doi:10.1093/obo/9780195390155-0070.
  18. ^ a b Atzori, Daniel (August 31, 2012). . abo.net. Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2015. Salafism is, therefore, a modern phenomenon, being the desire of contemporary Muslims to rediscover what they see as the pure, original and authentic Islam, ... However, there is a difference between two profoundly different trends which sought inspiration from the concept of salafiyya. Indeed, between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of 20th century, intellectuals such as Jamal Edin al-Afghani and Muhammad Abdu used salafiyya to mean a renovation of Islamic thought, with features that would today be described as rationalist, modernist and even progressive. This salafiyya movement is often known in the West as "Islamic modernism." However, the term salafism is today generally employed to signify ideologies such as Wahhabism, the puritanical ideology of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
  19. ^ Ruthven, Malise (2006) [1984]. Islam in the world (3rd ed.). Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. p. 318. ISBN 9780195305036. OCLC 64685006. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  20. ^ McMahan, David L. (2008). The making of Buddhist modernism. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195183276.001.0001. ISBN 9780195183276. OCLC 216938497.
  21. ^ Havnevik, Hanna; Hüsken, Ute; Teeuwen, Mark; Tikhonov, Vladimir; Wellens, Koen, eds. (2017). Buddhist modernities: re-inventing tradition in the globalizing modern world. Routledge studies in religion. Vol. 54. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138687844. OCLC 970042282.
  22. ^ For example: Murphy, Robert (1995). "The church green: ecology and the future". In O'Neal, Dan; Wesley, Alice Blair; Ford, James Ishmael (eds.). The transient and permanent in liberal religion: reflections from the UUMA Convocation on Ministry. Boston: Skinner House Books. pp. 195–206 (195). ISBN 1558963308. OCLC 35280453. Does liberal religion have a future? If we answer in the affirmative, can we begin to imagine the outlines of liberal religion in the next century? What will the Unitarian Universalist movement look like in the decade of the 2090s? Cf. Miller, Robert L'H. (Spring 1976). "The religious value system of Unitarian Universalists". Review of Religious Research. 17 (3): 189–208. doi:10.2307/3510610. JSTOR 3510610. The repetition of the distinctive pattern in both higher and lower ranking of both terminal and instrumental values leads one to a firmer basis for sensing a distinctive Unitarian Universalist pattern of religiousness. It is, perhaps, more accurately defined as a pattern of liberal religion which further research may disclose is typical, for example, of such groups as Reform Judaism.
  23. ^ For example, on Quakerism as liberal religion: Dandelion, Pink; Collins, Peter, eds. (2008). The Quaker condition: the sociology of a liberal religion. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 18. ISBN 9781847185655. OCLC 227278348. This is the first book of its kind and is intended to be the beginning, rather than the final word. It adds considerably to the study of Quakerism but also to the study of Liberal religion per se. And on Islam as liberal religion: Foody, Kathleen (October 2016). "Pedagogical projects: teaching liberal religion after 9/11". The Muslim World. 106 (4): 719–739. doi:10.1111/muwo.12167.
  24. ^ "The Journal of Liberal Religion". worldcat.org. Retrieved 2017-11-20. Published from 1939 to 1949.
  25. ^ "The Journal of Liberal Religion". meadville.edu. ISSN 1527-9324. Retrieved 2020-06-19. Published from 1999 to 2009.

References edit

religious, liberalism, religious, liberties, freedom, religion, liberal, theology, redirects, here, confused, with, liberation, theology, conception, religion, particular, religion, which, emphasizes, personal, group, liberty, rationality, attitude, towards, r. For religious liberties see Freedom of religion Liberal theology redirects here Not to be confused with Liberation theology Religious liberalism is a conception of religion or of a particular religion which emphasizes personal and group liberty 1 and rationality 2 It is an attitude towards one s own religion as opposed to criticism of religion from a secular position and as opposed to criticism of a religion other than one s own which contrasts with a traditionalist or orthodox approach and it is directly opposed by trends of religious fundamentalism It is related to religious liberty which is the tolerance of different religious beliefs and practices but not all promoters of religious liberty are in favor of religious liberalism and vice versa 3 Contents 1 Overview 2 In Christianity 3 In Judaism 4 In Islam 5 In eastern religions 6 Liberal religion in Unitarianism 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesOverview editIn the context of religious liberalism liberalism conveys the sense of classical liberalism as it developed in the Age of Enlightenment which forms the starting point of both religious and political liberalism but religious liberalism does not necessarily coincide with all meanings of liberalism in political philosophy For example an empirical attempt to show a link between religious liberalism and political liberalism proved inconclusive in a 1973 study in Illinois 4 Usage of the term liberal in the context of religious philosophy appeared as early as the mid 19th century 5 and became established by the first part of the 20th century for example in 1936 philosophy professor and Disciples of Christ minister Edward Scribner Ames wrote in his article Liberalism in Religion 6 The term liberalism seems to be developing a religious usage which gives it growing significance It is more sharply contrasted with fundamentalism and signifies a far deeper meaning than modernism Fundamentalism describes a relatively uncritical attitude In it custom traditionalism and authoritarianism are dominant There is no doubt that the loss of the traditional faith has left many people confused and rudderless and they are finding that there is no adequate satisfaction in mere excitement or in flight from their finer ideals They crave a sense of deeper meaning and direction for their life Religious liberalism not as a cult but as an attitude and method turns to the living realities in the actual tasks of building more significant individual and collective human life Religious traditionalists who reject the idea that tenets of modernity should have any impact on religious tradition challenge the concept of religious liberalism citation needed Secularists who reject the idea that implementation of rationalistic or critical thought leaves any room for religion altogether likewise dispute religious liberalism citation needed In Christianity editSee also Liberal Christianity Modernism in the Catholic Church and Progressive Christianity Liberal Christianity is an umbrella term for certain developments in Christian theology and culture since the Enlightenment of the late 18th century It has become mostly mainstream within the major Christian denominations in the Western world but is opposed by a movement of Christian fundamentalism which developed in response to these trends and by Evangelicalism generally It also contrasts with conservative forms of Christianity outside the Western world and outside the reach of Enlightenment philosophy and modernism mostly within Eastern Christianity citation needed The Catholic Church in particular has a long tradition of controversy regarding questions of religious liberalism Cardinal John Henry Newman 1801 1890 for example was considered to be moderately liberal by 19th century standards because he was critical of papal infallibility but he explicitly opposed liberalism in religion because he argued it would lead to complete relativism 7 The conservative Presbyterian biblical scholar J Gresham Machen criticized what he termed naturalistic liberalism in his 1923 book Christianity and Liberalism in which he intended to show that despite the liberal use of traditional phraseology modern liberalism not only is a different religion from Christianity but belongs in a totally different class of religions 8 The Anglican Christian apologist C S Lewis voiced a similar view in the mid 20th century arguing that theology of the liberal type amounted to a complete re invention of Christianity and a rejection of Christianity as understood by its own founders 9 In Judaism editSee also Conservative Judaism Reform Judaism and Reconstructionist Judaism German Jewish religious reformers began to incorporate critical thought and humanist ideas into Judaism from the early 19th century citation needed This resulted in the creation of various non Orthodox denominations from the moderately liberal Conservative Judaism to very liberal Reform Judaism The moderate wing of Modern Orthodox Judaism especially Open Orthodoxy espouses a similar approach In Islam editLiberalism and progressivism within Islam involve professed Muslims who have created a considerable body of liberal thought about Islamic understanding and practice 10 Their work is sometimes characterized as progressive Islam al Islam at taqaddumi some scholars such as Omid Safi regard progressive Islam and liberal Islam as two distinct movements 11 The methodologies of liberal or progressive Islam rest on the interpretation of traditional Islamic scripture the Quran and other texts such as the Hadith a process called ijtihad 12 page needed This can vary from the slight to the most liberal where only the meaning of the Quran is considered to be a revelation with its expression in words seen as the work of the prophet Muhammad in his particular time and context Liberal Muslims see themselves as returning to the principles of the early ummah ethical and pluralistic intent of the Quran 13 They distance themselves from some traditional and less liberal interpretations of Islamic law which they regard as culturally based and without universal applicability citation needed The reform movement uses Tawhid monotheism as an organizing principle for human society and the basis of religious knowledge history metaphysics aesthetics and ethics as well as social economic and world order 14 Islamic Modernism has been described as the first Muslim ideological response to the Western cultural challenge 15 attempting to reconcile Islamic faith with modern values such as nationalism democracy civil rights rationality equality and progress 16 page needed It featured a critical reexamination of the classical conceptions and methods of jurisprudence and a new approach to Islamic theology and Quranic exegesis 15 It was the first of several Islamic movements including secularism Islamism and Salafism that emerged in the middle of the 19th century in reaction to the rapid changes of the time especially the perceived onslaught of Western culture and colonialism on the Muslim world 16 Founders include Muhammad Abduh a Sheikh of Al Azhar University for a brief period before his death in 1905 Jamal ad Din al Afghani and Muhammad Rashid Rida d 1935 The early Islamic modernists al Afghani and Muhammad Abdu used the term salafiyya 17 to refer to their attempt at renovation of Islamic thought 18 and this salafiyya movement is often known in the West as Islamic modernism although it is very different from what is currently called the Salafi movement which generally signifies ideologies such as wahhabism 18 According to Malise Ruthven Islamic modernism suffered since its inception from co option of its original reformism by both secularist rulers and by the official ulama whose task it is to legitimise rulers actions in religious terms 19 Examples of liberal movements within Islam are Progressive British Muslims formed following the 2005 London terrorist attacks defunct by 2012 British Muslims for Secular Democracy formed 2006 or Muslims for Progressive Values formed 2007 citation needed In eastern religions editSee also Eastern religions Eastern religions were not immediately affected by liberalism and Enlightenment philosophy and have partly undertaken reform movements only after contact with Western philosophy in the 19th and 20th centuries citation needed Thus Hindu reform movements emerged in British India in the 19th century citation needed Buddhist modernism or New Buddhism arose in its Japanese form as a reaction to the Meiji Restoration and was again transformed outside of Japan in the 20th century notably giving rise to modern Zen Buddhism 20 21 Liberal religion in Unitarianism editMain article Unitarian Universalism The term liberal religion has been used by Unitarian Christians 5 as well as Unitarian Universalists 22 to refer to their own brand of religious liberalism the term has also been used by non Unitarians such as Quakers 23 The Journal of Liberal Religion was published by the Unitarian Ministerial Union Meadville Theological School and Universalist Ministerial Association from 1939 to 1949 and was edited by James Luther Adams an influential Unitarian theologian 24 Fifty years later a new version of the journal was published in an online format from 1999 to 2009 25 See also edit nbsp Religion portalMultiple religious belonging Post theism Postchristianity Red Letter Christians Religious naturalism Religious pluralism Religious Society of Friends Sea of Faith Secular theology SecularismNotes edit Newman 1991 p 144 when people talk about religious liberalism they are normally referring to a commitment to a certain kind of conception of what religion is and accordingly of how religious attitudes institutions and communities should be developed or reshaped so as to accommodate and promote particular forms of personal and group freedom Newman 1991 p 159 religious liberalism came to be so concerned with respect for reason reasonableness and rationality Newman 1991 p 143 144 However given the way in which terminology has evolved we must be careful not to assume too close an association between religious liberty and religious liberalism Many people who think that religious liberty is basically a good thing that ought to be promoted do not wish to be regarded as advocates of religious liberalism some of them even feel that many of those who call themselves religious liberals are enemies of religious liberty or at least end up undermining religious liberty in the process of promoting their own special brand of liberal religion One notable problem here is that when liberalism is considered in relation to religion one may be thinking primarily of a certain liberal conception of religion itself in contrast with say orthodox conservative traditionalist or fundamentalist conceptions or one may be thinking more of a liberal political view of the value of religious liberty But when people talk about religious liberalism they are usually thinking of the former more than the latter although they may uncritically assume that the two necessarily accompany one another Stellway Richard J Summer 1973 The correspondence between religious orientation and socio political liberalism and conservatism The Sociological Quarterly 14 3 430 439 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1973 tb00871 x JSTOR 4105689 a b For example Ellis George Edward November 1856 Relations of reason and faith The Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany Boston Crosby Nichols and Company for the American Unitarian Association 26 3 412 456 444 445 450 OCLC 6122907 The first of all the requisites in such a religion is that it shall be Liberal We mention this condition even before that of Truth because a religion that is not liberal cannot be true The devout and intelligent demand a liberal religion a religion large free generous comprehensive in its lessons a religion expansive in its spirit lofty in its views and with a sweep of blessings as wide as the range of man s necessities and sins This is what is meant by a Liberal Religion or Liberal views of religion or Liberal Christianity Thoughtful earnest and devout minds now demand a liberal religion Liberal in the honest pure and noble sense of that word Not liberal in the sense of license recklessness or indifference not in making a scoff of holy restraints and solemn mysteries Not liberal as the worldling or the fool uses the word for overthrowing all distinctions and reducing life to a revel or a riot Such a faith cannot afford to raise an issue with reason on a single point so far as their road on the highway of truth will allow them to keep company together When they part for faith to advance beyond reason they must part in perfect harmony Ames Edward Scribner July 1936 Liberalism in religion International Journal of Ethics 46 4 429 443 doi 10 1086 intejethi 46 4 2989282 JSTOR 2989282 S2CID 144873810 Liberalism in religion is the doctrine that there is no positive truth in religion but that one creed is as good as another J H Newman Biglietto Speech http www newmanreader org works addresses file2 html Machen asserted that If the Jesus of naturalistic reconstruction were really taken as an example disaster would soon follow As a matter of fact however the modern liberal does not really take as his example the Jesus of the liberal historians what he really does in practice is to manufacture as his example a simple exponent of a non doctrinal religion whom the abler historians even of his own school know never to have existed except in the imagination of modern men Machen J Gresham 2009 1923 Christianity and liberalism New ed Grand Rapids Mich William B Eerdmans Publishing Company pp 6 81 ISBN 9780802864994 OCLC 368048449 Lewis C S 1988 The essential C S Lewis New York Collier Books p 353 ISBN 0020195508 OCLC 17840856 All theology of the liberal type involves at some point and often involves throughout the claim that the real behavior and purpose and teaching of Christ came very rapidly to be misunderstood and misrepresented by his followers and has been recovered or exhumed only by modern scholars From an essay titled Modern theology and biblical criticism written in 1959 Safi Omid ed 2003 Progressive Muslims on justice gender and pluralism Oxford Oneworld Publications ISBN 9781851683161 OCLC 52380025 Safi Omid What is Progressive Islam averroes foundation org Averroes Foundation Archived from the original on July 9 2006 Aslan Reza 2011 2005 No god but God the origins evolution and future of Islam Updated ed New York Random House ISBN 9780812982442 OCLC 720168240 Sajid Abdul Jalil December 10 2001 Islam against Religious Extremism and Fanaticism speech delivered by Imam Abdul Jalil Sajid at a meeting on International NGO Rights and Humanity mcb org uk Muslim Council of Britain Archived from the original on June 7 2008 Tawhid oxfordislamicstudies com Oxford Islamic Studies Online Retrieved 22 March 2015 a b Moaddel Mansoor 2005 Islamic modernism nationalism and fundamentalism episode and discourse Chicago University of Chicago Press p 2 ISBN 9780226533339 OCLC 55870974 Islamic modernism was the first Muslim ideological response to the Western cultural challenge Started in India and Egypt in the second part of the 19th century reflected in the work of a group of like minded Muslim scholars featuring a critical reexamination of the classical conceptions and methods of jurisprudence and a formulation of a new approach to Islamic theology and Quranic exegesis This new approach which was nothing short of an outright rebellion against Islamic orthodoxy displayed astonishing compatibility with the ideas of the Enlightenment a b Martin Richard C ed 2016 2004 Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim world 2nd ed Farmington Hills MI Macmillan Reference a part of Gale Cengage Learning ISBN 9780028662695 OCLC 907621923 Brown Jonathan A C 2009 Salafism Modernist Salafism from the 20th century to the present oxfordbibliographies com Oxford Bibliographies doi 10 1093 obo 9780195390155 0070 a b Atzori Daniel August 31 2012 The rise of global Salafism abo net Archived from the original on April 24 2014 Retrieved 6 January 2015 Salafism is therefore a modern phenomenon being the desire of contemporary Muslims to rediscover what they see as the pure original and authentic Islam However there is a difference between two profoundly different trends which sought inspiration from the concept of salafiyya Indeed between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of 20th century intellectuals such as Jamal Edin al Afghani and Muhammad Abdu used salafiyya to mean a renovation of Islamic thought with features that would today be described as rationalist modernist and even progressive This salafiyya movement is often known in the West as Islamic modernism However the term salafism is today generally employed to signify ideologies such as Wahhabism the puritanical ideology of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Ruthven Malise 2006 1984 Islam in the world 3rd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 318 ISBN 9780195305036 OCLC 64685006 Retrieved 23 April 2015 McMahan David L 2008 The making of Buddhist modernism Oxford New York Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195183276 001 0001 ISBN 9780195183276 OCLC 216938497 Havnevik Hanna Husken Ute Teeuwen Mark Tikhonov Vladimir Wellens Koen eds 2017 Buddhist modernities re inventing tradition in the globalizing modern world Routledge studies in religion Vol 54 New York Routledge ISBN 9781138687844 OCLC 970042282 For example Murphy Robert 1995 The church green ecology and the future In O Neal Dan Wesley Alice Blair Ford James Ishmael eds The transient and permanent in liberal religion reflections from the UUMA Convocation on Ministry Boston Skinner House Books pp 195 206 195 ISBN 1558963308 OCLC 35280453 Does liberal religion have a future If we answer in the affirmative can we begin to imagine the outlines of liberal religion in the next century What will the Unitarian Universalist movement look like in the decade of the 2090s Cf Miller Robert L H Spring 1976 The religious value system of Unitarian Universalists Review of Religious Research 17 3 189 208 doi 10 2307 3510610 JSTOR 3510610 The repetition of the distinctive pattern in both higher and lower ranking of both terminal and instrumental values leads one to a firmer basis for sensing a distinctive Unitarian Universalist pattern of religiousness It is perhaps more accurately defined as a pattern of liberal religion which further research may disclose is typical for example of such groups as Reform Judaism For example on Quakerism as liberal religion Dandelion Pink Collins Peter eds 2008 The Quaker condition the sociology of a liberal religion Newcastle Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 18 ISBN 9781847185655 OCLC 227278348 This is the first book of its kind and is intended to be the beginning rather than the final word It adds considerably to the study of Quakerism but also to the study of Liberal religion per se And on Islam as liberal religion Foody Kathleen October 2016 Pedagogical projects teaching liberal religion after 9 11 The Muslim World 106 4 719 739 doi 10 1111 muwo 12167 The Journal of Liberal Religion worldcat org Retrieved 2017 11 20 Published from 1939 to 1949 The Journal of Liberal Religion meadville edu ISSN 1527 9324 Retrieved 2020 06 19 Published from 1999 to 2009 References editNewman Jay 1991 Religious liberalism On religious freedom Ottawa University of Ottawa Press pp 143 180 ISBN 0776603086 OCLC 25051708 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religious liberalism amp oldid 1174557863, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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