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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Non-Christian sacred works & liturgy > Sacred texts
Jewish temples stood in Jerusalem for nearly one thousand years and
were a dominant feature in the life of the ancient Judeans
throughout antiquity. This volume strives to obtain a diachronic
and topical cross-section of central features of the varied aspects
of the Jewish temples that stood in Jerusalem, one that draws on
and incorporates different disciplinary and methodological
viewpoints. Ten contributions are included in this volume by: Gary
A. Anderson; Simeon Chavel; Avraham Faust; Paul M. Joyce; Yuval
Levavi; Risa Levitt; Eyal Regev; Lawrence H. Schiffman; Jeffrey
Stackert; Caroline Waerzeggers, edited by Tova Ganzel and Shalom E.
Holtz.
The book analyses all extant works by Ibn Jarir al-Tabari (d.
224/839-310/923), referring to their individual methodologies;
their legacy as al- madhhab al-jariri; and their scholarly and
socio- political context. Through the study of al- Tabari's works,
the book addresses research debates over dating the legal and
scholarly institutions and their disciplines; authorship and
transmission of scholarly writings; political theory and
administration; and 'origins' of the Qur'an and Islam. Al-Tabari
defined the Qur'an in linguistic and legal terms. The linguistic
terms refer to rhetoric and semiotics, and the legal to theories of
social contract, 'natural law', and rule of law. Both sets of terms
go into al-Tabari's theory of prophecy and administration,
including of 'minorities'. By engaging current debates about the
usefulness or not of the medieval Muslim scholars in research on
the Qur'an and early Islam, this book argues that the - 2 - 20:59
contribution of each medieval scholar be assessed on an individual
basis. Al-Tabari's philosophical, ethical, historical, linguistic,
and legal education produced analysis of the Qur'an and 'origins'
of Islam that stands up to some fronts in contemporary research.
The book thus adds to research on al-Tabari; early Islamic
disciplines and institutions; and the Qur'an and early Islam.
The current volume is an annotated translation of selections from a
noteworthy Muslim theologian Said Nursi (1876-1960) on the Quranic
theme of oneness of God (tawhid). Given the scarcity of theological
themes in Islamic literature in English as well as the lack of
studies on Said Nursi, who wrote in Ottoman Turkish, the book is an
important contribution to the field. It offers a contemporary peek
into the view that faith in God could be profoundly meaningful and
fulfilling spiritual path.
In Masters of Psalmody (bimo) Aurelie Nevot analyses the religious,
political and theoretical issues of a scriptural shamanism observed
in southwestern China among the Yi-Sani. Her focus is on blood
sacrifices and chants based on a secret and labile writing handled
only by ritualists called bimo. Through ethnographic data, the
author presents the still little known bimo metaphysics and
unravels the complexity of the local text-based ritual system in
which the continuity of each bimo lineage relies on the
transmission of manuscripts whose writing relates to lineage blood.
While illuminating the usages of this shamanistic tradition that is
characterized by scriptural variability between patrilineages,
Aurelie Nevot highlights the radical changes it is undergoing by
becoming a Chinese state tradition.
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