Dr.
Adis Duderija
Over the decade or so of publishing on theory of progressive
Islam a number of people have asked me why do I use the word “progressive.” While
I have provided a systematic and detailed discussion (in academic terms) of
what this means from a philosophical, epistemological
and methodological perspective in my academic writings on the
subject matter, I understand that given that progressive Islam /progressive Muslim
thought is very much present at
grassroots level that there is a need to provide a non-academic explanation. In what follows I provide four reasons why I
use the word “progressive” in progressive Islam/progressive Muslim thought:
Reason one : Quran and Sunna were progressive in approaching ethical
and legal issues of that time by having a more ethical vision beyond what was
considered as status quo and customary ( ma'ruf/ 'urf) ! Progressive Islam
wants to stay true to this vision.
Reason two: ethical values like justice and fairness do not remain
frozen in time. They, as collective human experience testifies, in principle
are subject to change as God's creative powers have a direct bearing on our own
collective reason and our collective ethico-moral compass. Our aim is to ever
more faithfully approximate the Divine as source of absolute Beauty, Justice
and Mercy and that is only possible if our ethical systems do not remain frozen
( as in case of traditionalist/pre-modern
based approaches) and are theorized
in such a manner to allow space for progress /improvement in the never ending
quest for ethical perfection. Theory of progressive Islam does exactly that.
Reason three: to highlight the strong affinities in the kind of
theologies, interpretational approaches and socio-political and ethical values
that exist among progressive religious/spiritual movements worldwide whose
pillars are affirmation of religious pluralism and strong commitment to social
and gender justice. For example, the Network
of Spiritual Progressives.
Reason 4: For the same reason why we have Sufi Islam, Sunni Islam, Shi'i Islam.
It's about affirming the fact that progressive Islam has its own methodology of
interpretation and its own theological
orientation and its own approach to conceptualising
the Islamic
intellectual tradition (that are discussed in my works systematically and
in some detail).
There are additional reasons too but I hope that the
above provides an adequate explanation as to why ‘progressive’ in progressive Islam/
progressive Muslim Thought.
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