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'Peters writes very well. The scholarship is excellent, and the
book fills a gap in the available material. There are several lives
of the Prophet, but none that does what this one does. Most are
written to prove a particular thesis about the nature of the
Prophet's career. This one simply puts down what can be known with
any certainty about the career of Muhammad from the point of view
of the contemporary secular historian.'- William C. Chittick
Invoking a concept as simple as it is brilliant, F. E. Peters
has taken the basic texts of the three related--and
competitive--religious systems we call Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam and has juxtaposed them in a topical and parallel arrangement
according to the issues that most concerned all these "children of
Abraham." Through these extensive passages, and the author's
skillful connective commentary, the three traditions are shown with
their similarities sometimes startlingly underlined and their
well-known differences now more profoundly exposed. What emerges
from this unique and ambitious work is a panorama of belief,
practice, and sensibility that will broaden our understanding of
our religious and political roots in a past that is, by these
communities' definition, still the present. The hardcover edition
of the work is bound in one volume, and in the paperback version
the identical material is broken down into three smaller but
self-contained books. The third, "The Works of the Spirit," focuses
on spirituality and worship and contains material on monasticism,
theology, mysticism, and the "End Time." Throughout the work we
hear an amazing variety of voices, some familiar, some not, all of
them central to the primary and secondary canons of their own
tradition: alongside the Scriptural voice of God are the words of
theologians, priests, visionaries, lawyers, rulers and the ruled.
The work ends, as does the same author's now classic Children of
Abraham, in what Peters calls the "classical period," that is,
before the great movements of modernism and reform that were to
transform Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
Jesus and Muhammad are two of the best known and revered figures in
history, each with a billion or more global followers. Now, in this
intriguing volume, F.E. Peters offers a clear and compelling
analysis of the parallel lives of Jesus and Muhammad, the first
such in-depth comparison in print.
Like a detective, Peters compiles "dossiers" of what we do and do
not know about the lives and portraits of these towering figures,
drawing on the views of modern historians and the evidence of the
Gospels and the Quran. With erudition and wit, the author nimbly
leads the reader through drama and dogma to reveal surprising
similarities between the two leaders and their messages. Each had a
public career as a semi-successful preacher. Both encountered
opposition that threatened their lives and those of their
followers. Each left a body of teaching purported to be their very
words, with an urgent imperative that all must become believers in
the face of the approaching apocalypse. Both are symbols of hope on
the one hand and of God's terrible judgment on the other. They are
bringers of peace--and the sword. There is, however, a fundamental
difference. Muslims revere Muhammad ibn Abdullah of Mecca as a
mortal prophet. Although known as a prophet in his day, the
Galilean Jew Jesus was and is believed by his followers to have
been the promised Messiah, indeed the son of God. The Quran records
revelations received by Muhammad as the messenger of God, whereas
the revelations of the Gospels focus on Jesus and the events of his
life and death.
A lasting contribution to interfaith understanding, Jesus and
Muhammad offers lucid, intelligent answers to questions that
underlie some of the world's most intractable conflicts.
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