Jelek betul sih nggak seruan ini, tapi seruan urgen yang kudu dilansir
 pemikir Islam sebenarnya adalah seruan kepada orang Islam untuk
melakukan Reformasi...

Seruan untuk menyadari bahwa al-Mushaf itu adalah makhluk (yang
diciptakan) ...

Karena itulah kunci yang akan membuka pintu bagi orang Islam untuk
menyikapi al-Musahf itu sebagaimana adanya: sebuah teks dan tidak
lebih dari sebuah teks.

Teks yang kudu disikapi dengan kritis.



--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Merapi 08" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

World's future hinges on peace between faiths, Islamic scholars tell 
Pope

http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,,2188742,00.html

Inayat Bunglawala: The Challenge of Muhammad 

Riazat Butt, religious affairs correspondent and Martin Hodgson 
Thursday October 11, 2007
Guardian Unlimited 
       
The future of the world depends on peace between Muslims and 
Christians, Islamic scholars told the Pope today. 
In a letter addressed directly to Pope Benedict XVI and other 
Christian leaders including the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan 
Williams, 138 prominent Muslim scholars said that finding common 
ground between the world's biggest two religions was not "simply a 
matter for polite ecumenical dialogue". 

The letter, which is entitled A Common Word between Us and You, 
says: "Muslims and Christians together make up well over half of the 
world's population. Without peace and justice between these two 
religious communities, there can be no meaningful peace in the 
world. The future of the world depends on peace between Muslims and 
Christians." 

The 29-page document argues that the basis for this understanding 
can be found in the common principles of the religions: "Love of the 
one God, and love of the neighbour". 
Supporting their argument with quotations from both the Bible and 
the Qur'an, the signatories say that Mohammed was told the same 
truths that had already been revealed to previous Christian and 
Jewish prophets, including Jesus. 

But the scholars also stress that there is more at stake 
than "polite ecumenical dialogue" between religious leaders. 

"With the terrible weaponry of the modern world; with Muslims and 
Christians intertwined everywhere as never before, no side can 
unilaterally win a conflict between more than half of the world's 
inhabitants. Thus our common future is at stake. The very survival 
of the world itself is perhaps at stake," the letter says. 

It adds that the Qur'an entreats Muslims to treat Christians and 
Jews with particular friendship, though it also warns against 
aggression from Christians. 

"We say to Christians that we are not against them and that Islam is 
not against them - so long as they do not wage war against Muslims 
on account of their religion, oppress them and drive them out of 
their homes," the letter says. 

Organised by the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought, a 
non-governmental organisation based in Amman, Jordan, the document 
comes a year after another open letter to the Pope following a 
controversial speech in which he quoted a medieval text linking 
Islam and violence. 

The institute said: "This historic letter is intended by its 138 
signatories as an open invitation to Christians to unite with 
Muslims over the most essential aspects of their respective faiths - 
the principles of love of one God and love of the neighbour. 

"It is hoped that the recognition of this common ground will provide 
the followers of both faiths with a shared understanding that will 
serve to defuse tensions around the world." 

Many of the signatories are grand muftis who each have tens of 
millions of followers. There are four British supporters, including 
the Cambridge academic Shaykh Dr Abdul Hakim Murad Winter. 

At the letter's UK launch, Professor Dr Aref Ali Nayed, one of the 
British signatories, warned people not to get "too hung up" on 
expecting an answer from the pope. 

Dr Nayed, a senior adviser to Cambridge University's interfaith 
programme, said: "It has taken almost three years to build this 
momentum and consensus, it is unprecedented. Every person who 
extends his hand for a handshake would like something in return but 
we're offering this as free love. It's not a competition. It's not 
about reciprocity. 

"Islam calls upon us to do this." 

The Archbishop of Canterbury, one of the recipients, welcomed the 
pledge to further dialogue between the two faiths. 

"The theological basis of the letter and its call to respect each 
other, be fair, just and kind to another, are indicative of the kind 
of relationship for which we yearn in all parts of the world 
especially where Christians and Muslims live together. 

"It is particularly important in underlining the need for respect 
towards minorities in contexts where either Islam or Christianity is 
the majority presence." 

The common scriptural foundations for Jews, Christians and Muslims 
would be the basis for justice and peace in the world, he said. 

"The call should now be taken up by Christians and Muslims at all 
levels and in all countries and I shall endeavour in this country 
and internationally, to do my part in working for the righteousness 
which this letter proclaims as our common goal." 

A Common Word coincides with the end of Ramadan and comes just days 
after the Vatican's official Eid message, which urged Muslims to 
respect people of all faiths and not exclude them on the ground of 
religion, race or any other personal characteristic. 

Jean-Louis Cardinal Tauran, the newly appointed president of the 
Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue, has expressed 
concern about the treatment of Christians in Muslim-majority 
nations. 

In his Eid statement, he called for a "culture of peace and 
solidarity" and for religious believers to spread a teaching "which 
honours all human creatures".

--- End forwarded message ---




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