The basic point of the secular in the modern West is to "liberate"
certain pursuits—the state, the economy, science—from the
authority of religion. This is also assumed to be the goal and
meaning of "secular" in Islam. Sherman Jackson argues, however,
that that assumption is wrong. In Islam the "secular" was neither
outside "religion" nor a rival to it. "Religion," in Islam was not
identical to Islam's "sacred law," or "shari'ah." Nor did classical
Muslim jurists see shari'ah as the all-encompassing, exclusive
means of determining what is "Islamic." In fact, while, as
religion, Islam's jurisdiction was unlimited, shari'ah's
jurisdiction, as a sacred law, was limited. In other words, while
everything remained within the purview of the divine gaze of the
God of Islam, not everything could be determined by shari'ah or on
the basis of its revelatory sources. Various aspects of
state-policy, the economy, science, and the like were
"differentiated," from shari'ah and its revelatory sources, without
becoming non-religious or un-Islamic. Given the asymmetry between
the circumference of shari'ah and that of Islam as religion, not
everything that fell outside the former fell outside the latter. In
other words, an idea or action could be non-shar'i (not dictated by
shari'ah) without being non-Islamic, let alone anti-Islam. The
ideas and actions that fall into this category are what Jackson
terms "the Islamic Secular." Crucially, the Islamic Secular differs
from the Western secular in that, while the whole point of the
Western secular is to liberate various pursuits from religion, the
Islamic Secular differentiates these disciplines not from religion
but simply from shari'ah. Similarly, while both secularization and
secularism play key roles in the Western secular, both of these
concepts are alien to the Islamic Secular, as the Islamic Secular
seeks neither to discipline nor to displace religion, nor expand to
its own jurisdiction at religion's expense. The Islamic Secular is
a complement to religion, in effect, a "religious secular." Nowhere
are the practical implications of this more impactful than in
Islam's relationship with the modern state. In this book, Jackson
makes the case for the Islamic Secular on the basis of Islam's own
pre-modern juristic tradition and shows how the Islamic Secular
impacts the relationship between Islam and the modern state,
including the Islamic State.
General
Imprint: |
Oxford UniversityPress
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
December 2023 |
Authors: |
Sherman A. Jackson
(King Faisal Chair of Islamic Thought and Culture and Professor of Religion and American Studies and Ethnicity)
|
Dimensions: |
235 x 156mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
528 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-19-766178-9 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-19-766178-5 |
Barcode: |
9780197661789 |
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