Interfaith Group
Related: About this forumEmerging Muslim movement embraces gay and interfaith marriages
http://sdgln.com/social/2014/08/15/emerging-muslim-movement-embraces-gay-and-interfaith-marriages#sthash.SEuUBhCm.dpbsGillian Flaccus - Associated Press
August 15th, 2014
Photo credit: www.rnw.nl Gay and Muslim march in Pride parade.
Omar Akersim of Los Angeles, California prays regularly and observes the dawn-to-dusk Ramadan fast. He is also openly gay.
Akersim, 26, is part of a small but growing number of American Muslims challenging the long-standing interpretations of Islam that defined their parents world. They believe that one can be gay and Muslim; that the sexes can pray shoulder-to-shoulder; that females can preach and that Muslim women can marry outside the faith and they point to Quran passages to back them up.
The shift comes as young American Muslims work to reshape the faith they grew up with so it fits better with their complex, dual identity, with one foot in the world of their parents immigrant beliefs and one foot in the ever-shifting cultural landscape of America. The result has been a growing internal dialogue about what it means to be Muslim, as well as a scholarly effort to re-examine the Quran for new interpretations that challenge rules that had seemed set in stone.
Islam in America is being forced to kind of change and to reevaluate its positions on things like homosexuality because of how were moving forward culturally as a nation. Its striving to make itself seen and known in the cultural fabric, and to do that, it does have to evolve, said Akersim, who leads a Los Angeles-based support group for gay Muslims. Ten or 15 years ago, this would have been impossible.
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CJCRANE
(18,184 posts)I believe in humanitarian, liberal and secular values. I can find material to back up my views in the scriptures of Christianity, Islam, Judaism etc. etc.
But someone who is an authoritarian conservative can find material that is the exact opposite to back up their views.
Particularly in the Abrahamic faiths there is an emphasis on Mercy and Wrath. Each person who follows one of those faiths usually picks a side, the side of compassion or the side of anger. However anger and judgment is usually reserved for God not humans.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)That's the beauty of a diverse society.
CJCRANE
(18,184 posts)What I mean is that we are all the same regardless of religion.
Compassionate people will choose a compassionate version of their religion. Angry people will choose to believe an angry version of religion.
I find a lot of comfort in reading religious and philosophical texts of various religions and practices. The message I find is the exact opposite of what the fundamentalists believe.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)What some religion offers to some people it certainly does not offer to others.
While some find their religious beliefs to be a central part of their life, others see absolutely no need for any of it.
You are right - people will use whatever they have to make the case for their compassion or their hatred.