The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (1205 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
12.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Kal
m
(Arab.,
kalima
, ‘word, discourse’). The science (
‘ilm
) of theology in Islam, developed in parallel with ‘ilm ul-
fiqh
(and was originally called
al-fiqh al-akbar
, the greater fiqh). Its roots lie in early attempts to deal with rational questions prompted (or provoked) by
Qur-’
n
—e.g., how can the
qadar
(determining power) of
All
h
be reconciled with the freedom and accountability of humans? The earliest group to bring reason to bear on such issues were the
Mu‘tazilites
. But that inclination to give primacy to reason seemed to others to subordinate the Qur‘
n. Kal
m, therefore, for
al-Ash‘ar
and
al-M
tur
d
became the elucidation and application of the Qur’
n as the absolute (and uncreated) Word of God. The dangers of Kal
m to the uninitiated were signalled by
al-Ghaz(z)
l
, whose reconciliation of philosophy, theology, and simple faith in effect put an end to theological exploration. Those who study theology are known as
mutakallimun
.

Other books

The Bungalow Mystery by Carolyn Keene
Ladd Fortune by Dianne Venetta
Distant Myles by Mae, Mandee
The Tamarack Murders by Patrick F. McManus
Letter from Paris by Thérèse
Recipe for Treason by Andrea Penrose
Lead-Pipe Cinch by Evans, Christy
Prey by Stefan Petrucha