American Journal of Islam and Society (Oct 2017)
Theologies and Ethics of Justice
Abstract
The Summer Institute for Scholars 2017, held at the IIIT headquarters in Herndon, VA, from July 26-29, brought together a group of scholars to address “Theologies and Ethics of Justice: New Directions for Islamic Thought in the 21st Century.” To present as many of their ideas as possible, the wideranging and thought-provoking comments of the chairs and discussants are not recounted The event began with welcoming remarks by Ermin Sinanović (program director and director of research, IIIT), Abubaker al-Shingieti (executive director, IIIT) and Hisham Altalib (president, IIIT). The participating scholars, students, and special guests were introduced and viewed a film on IIIT. The special panel on “Justice in Islamic Thought” was addressed by Ramon Harvey (Ebrahim College, London) and Jonathan A.C. Brown (Georgetown University; via Skype). Ramon Harvey’s paper, “The Qur’an and the Just Society: An Enquiry into Scriptural Theology, Ethics, and Hermeneutics,” introduced the theoretical framework of his forthcoming book, The Qur’an and the Just Society. He presented the basic underlying enquiry: the search for the meaning of societal justice within the Qur’anic worldview. His argument proceeded in three steps: (1) justice in the Qur’an must be situated within the broader “moral narrative” about the spiritual journey of souls and societies and from which an implicit moral theology can be detected; (2) that it is possible to build on such Qur’anic indications to articulate a theological and ethical system that models it; and (3) that such a system gives a meaningful epistemological foundation for a hermeneutics to discover the Qur’an’s basic principles of justice when contextualized within the initial Muslim community led by Prophet Muhammad ...