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      Worldly Wisdom

      and Foolish Grace

      Lessons from Abraham’s Tent

      Barbara Carnegie Campbell

      Forewords by Arif Humayun and Batya Podos

      Worldly Wisdom and Foolish Grace

      Lessons from Abraham’s Tent

      Copyright © 2020 Barbara Carnegie Campbell. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.

      Resource Publications

      An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers

      199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3

      Eugene, OR 97401

      www.wipfandstock.com

      paperback isbn: 978-1-7252-7021-3

      hardcover isbn: 978-1-7252-7020-6

      ebook isbn: 978-1-7252-7022-0

      Manufactured in the U.S.A. 09/17/15

      New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.

      Sacred Writings: The Tanakh, copyright © 1985 by The Jewish Publication Society.

      Introduction copyright © 1992 by Jaroslave Pelican. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

      The Study Quran, copyright © 2015 by Seyyed Hossein Nasr. Used as permitted. All right reserved.

      This study is dedicated to

      my Mom and Dad,

      Joyce and Orris Carnegie.

      Their memory is a blessing,

      for they lived community, courage, and compassion.

      Foreword

      Barbara Campbell’s approach to Comparative Religion—seeking similarities and not highlighting “differences” between Semitic faiths in a multicultural and multi-religious society—is commendable. Fortunately, we have moved beyond medieval times when religions and religious thoughts were evolving and the clergy adopted a defensive and exclusive approach through which they could monopolize salvation, condemning other faith traditions as inferior and evil. This exclusive approach was used to control people’s thought for power as well as financial and political gains.

      During this time, religiously motivated wars were justified and religious fervor was used as a motivator for people to fight in the cause of their faith which was “under threat”. These conflicting and, at times, contradictory beliefs of the various religions created a highly confused state in the human mind which can only be resolved by an objective understanding and unbiased analysis of the history, goals, and the teachings of different religions. The net result was that religious traditions prevented people from developing intellectually as they were confined to their respective dogmas.

      In the Christian tradition, for example, development in Europe occurred after the Renaissance (15th century) and Reformation (16th century), movements when Christians rejected the Catholic dogma and freed themselves of the clergy-imposed restrictions. This rejection gave birth to the Protestant Church and led to the Industrial Revolution which transformed Western societies and cultures. Similar movements occurred in the Jewish faith and continue to happen among Muslims, resulting in sectarian divisions.

      As industrial developments occurred in Europe, Europeans ventured out to other continents in search of raw materials and markets to satisfy the needs of their emerging industries. Technology evolved and Europeans developed and modernized their armies and naval fleets to battle the Muslim Empires (Ottoman, Mughal) who, as leading military and economic powers in the world, were unaware of the changes in Europe and did not feel the need to modernize like the Europeans.

      The Muslim Empires were eventually defeated, and their lands colonized. Rejecting rationality, the Muslim clergy filled the leadership vacuum in the colonized empires, citing God’s wrath as the cause of defeat and declared Islam to be in danger from the West; the politicized clergy led the Muslims towards dogma as they defined it for political expediency.

      This decline in rational thought among Muslims started earlier, in the 14th century; dogmatic control was completed after the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in 1924. Several orthodox Muslim sects and “reformers” have since appeared and attracted disenfranchised Muslims towards their dogma. Dogma-led religious groups, in all traditions, discourage free thinking and prohibit discussion and rationalization of their teachings, encouraging believers to accept simplistic and even illogical explanation as faith.

      Geopolitics, the cold war between the US and USSR, and the regional power struggle between Saudi Arabia and Iran have fueled and funded this dogmatic rivalry among Muslims. The 11 September 2001 terrorist attack has been a pivotal point in Muslims’ radical dogma; many Muslims are now attempting to find rational approaches to the issues at hand.

      Unfortunately, the Muslim dogma, initially developed in the 14th and 15th centuries and reinforced, relatively unchecked, for the next two centuries, was developed when the global economic system was agrarian. It has been difficult to transform the long-held, agrarian-era dogma with a rational understanding of the industrial era, especially in the light of low literacy levels and lack of economic development in the Muslim world. The only source of news, for many Muslims, is their local cleric or mosque who are often funded by some established sectarian and politicized entity who must defend their existence.

      Muslim political clergy discredit any reformer by labelling them as a puppet, a traitor, or non-Muslim! The average Muslim is not informed or bold enough to challenge the radicalized clergy in view of the blasphemy and apostasy legislations in many Muslim countries where people are lynched by mobs for such allegations; these “crimes” also carry mandatory capital punishment.

      People have thus evolved in “dogmatic silos” which Barbara Campbell is trying to break within the Semitic faiths by explaining the similarities in teachings of their scriptures—Old and New Testaments and the Qur’an—in chronological order. This is a sensible approach as the three Semitic faiths agree on their common origin—Prophet Abraham.

      Barbara’s idea of Abraham’s Tent—a summer camp to bring together school children from the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions—was a successful attempt to break these dogmatic silos by demonstrating the commonalities between these faiths to impressionable and inquisitive minds. Sadly, dogmatic differences among the faiths, and within each faith, may have prevented this idea from blossoming further than it did. Maybe, the idea was ahead of its time!

      There are two unintended consequences of growing within dogmatic silos: (1) the intellectual confusion when inquisitive minds fail to rationalize the major “differences” between faiths, and (2) the ease with which propaganda and hateful messages can grow in societies. Exiting these silos enables individuals to understand the big picture and empowers

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