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Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind: Light and luminous being in Islamic theology
Author(s) -
Christian Lange
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
critical research on religion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.218
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2050-3040
pISSN - 2050-3032
DOI - 10.1177/2050303220986975
Subject(s) - islam , afterlife , philosophy , narrative , eschatology , literature , theology , art
For theologians, to conceive of God in terms of light has some undeniable advantages, allowing a middle-of-the road position between the two extremes of thinking about God in terms of a purely disembodied, unfathomable, unsensible being, and of crediting Him with a body, possibly even a human(oid) body. This paper first reviews the reasons why God, in early medieval Islam, was never fully theorized in terms of light. It then proceeds to discuss light-related narratives in two major, late-medieval compilations of hadiths about the afterlife, by al-Suyuti (Ash’ari, Egypt, d. 1505) and al-Majlisi (Persia, d. 1699), suggesting that eschatology was the area in which God’s light continued to shine in Islam, and the backdoor through which a theology of light, in the thought of al-Suhrawardi (Syria, d. 1191) and his followers, made a triumphant re-entry into Islamic thought.

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