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Horizon Before Flag: Why Universal Spirituality Must Precede Religious Identity

  Horizon Before Flag: Why Universal Spirituality Must Precede Religious Identity Adis Duderija ( AI assisted)  In religious terms, that means something simple but often ignored: before we induct children into a confessional spiritual tradition—whether it is rooted in Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, or any other inherited path—we must first ground them in universal spirituality. If we fail to do so, we risk raising not mature believers, but fragile identities. And fragile identities, when threatened, become dangerous. Universal spirituality is not a rival to religious tradition. It is its foundation. It includes moral imagination, empathy, humility before mystery, reverence for life, commitment to truth, and the recognition of shared human dignity. It teaches children that compassion is good before it tells them who to worship; that honesty matters before it defines orthodoxy; that wonder is universal before it becomes doctrinal. Only when young people unders...
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On M. Al-Ghazali and Y. Qaradawi’s Approach to Hadith: A Critical Perspective based on Progressive Islam’s Approach to the Concept of Sunna

  On M. Al-Ghazali and Y. Qaradawi’s Approach to Hadith: A Critical Perspective based on Progressive Islam’s Approach to the Concept of Sunna   Adis Duderija The exploration of hadith and Sunna in Islamic jurisprudence has been significantly shaped by thinkers like M. Al-Ghazali and Y. Qaradawi. Their works engage deeply with the concepts of prophetic authority, hadith criticism, and the status of hadith in relation to the Qur’an. However, a critical examination of their approaches through the lens of progressive Muslim thought reveals deeper tensions and challenges within their frameworks. This progressive discourse emphasizes contextualization, plurality, and the need for reinterpretation of hadith, prompting a reevaluation of the contributions made by Al-Ghazali and Qaradawi. Al-Ghazali’s Traditionalism Revisited M. Al-Ghazali’s Al-Sunna al-Nabawiyya bayna Ahl al-Fiqh wa Ahl al-Hadith is a seminal text that upholds a classical interpretation of hadith while also ...

From Cult to Cosmopolis: Why Our Religious Future Depends on How We Read Our Traditions

  From Cult to Cosmopolis: Why Our Religious Future Depends on How We Read Our Traditions Adis Duderija The same religious text. The same inherited tradition. Yet radically different outcomes. One community nurtures compassion, intellectual humility, and moral growth. Another breeds fear, conformity, and hostility toward outsiders. A third transforms faith into a tribal badge, weaponised for political or cultural supremacy. What explains this divergence is not the text itself, nor even the tradition as such. It is the mode of approach. Broadly speaking, religious traditions today are approached in three dominant ways: cult-like, sectarian, and cosmopolitan. The future of religion, and , in some cases,  social cohesion—depends on which path we choose. The Cult-Like Approach: Obedience Without Thought A cult-like approach treats religious texts and authorities as infallible, closed, and beyond questioning. Interpretation is monopolized. Doubt is framed as moral failure. Loyalt...