Understanding
Islam
By Frithjof Schuon, Translated from the French, Fwd by Annemarie
Schimmel
Pub Date: 1990
Publisher: Jason Aronson, Inc.
Binding: Paper, 177pp.
ISBN: 0876689284
Our Price $30.00
Related Books: Islam
and Sufism
Related Audio/Video: Lings, Frithjof
Schuon and Rene Guenon
"Islam is the meeting between God as such and man as such.... Islam
confronts what is immutable in God with what is permanent in man."
These are the opening words of what has become a classic work on Islam,
perhaps the most misunderstood of the great Revelations. And yet the
purpose of this book "is not so much to give a description of Islam
as to explain . . . why Moslems believe in it." Both Westerners
unfamiliar with Islam and Moslems seeking a deeper understanding of the
basis of faith will be struck by Schuon's masterful elucidation of the
spiritual world of Islam.
Schuon's foundation is always the intrinsic nature of things rather than
any confessional point of view. This perspective opens up new avenues of
approach and surprising insights into the "five pillars" of
faith, the Quran, the Sunna, the Prophet and the esoteric dimension
which is the kernel of Moslem spirituality. A hallmark of the author's
perspective is an intellectual universality, which in examining a given
religious framework readily draws upon parallels and concepts from other
traditions, especially that of the Vedanta. For "what is needed in
our time, and indeed in every age remote from the origins of Revelation,
is . . . to rediscover the truths written in an eternal script in the
very substance of man's spirit."
Contents