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{{short description|Religious studies of scriptures}}
'''Scriptural Reasoning''' ("SR") is one type of interdisciplinary, [[Interfaith dialogue|interfaith]] scriptural reading. It is an evolving practice of diverse methodologies in which [[Christians]], [[Jews]], [[Muslims]], [[Hindus]], [[Buddhists]], [[Sikhs]], [[Baháʼís]], and members of other faiths, meet in groups to study their sacred scriptures and [[oral
Theologians of different faiths have strongly challenged the claims made by some of Scriptural Reasoning's founder practitioners that they have requisite knowledge of ancient traditions of Islamic, Jewish and Christian exegesis and, on that basis, "not only the capacity, but also the authority to correct" or "repair" modernist binarist or fundamentalist interpretations of the [[Bible]] or [[Quran]]. Published
== Method ==
Scriptural Reasoning involves participants from multiple religious traditions<ref>It has been described as involving Jews, Christians and Muslims in its formative period ({{Harvnb |Ford|2006}}; {{Harvnb |Mudge|2008| p=33}}; {{Harvnb |Campbell|2001}}; {{Harvnb |Gaylord|2006| p=327}}; {{Harvnb |Burrell|2006| p=708}}; {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=28}}; and {{Harvnb |Hauerwas|2008| loc=p.19, n.43}}); for the inclusion of Hindus, see {{Harvnb |Heim|2004}}.</ref> meeting, very often in small groups, to read and discuss passages from their sacred texts and oral traditions (e.g., the [[Tanakh]], [[Talmud]], [[New Testament]], [[Vedas]], [[Qur'an]], [[Hadith]], or [[Guru Granth Sahib]]).<ref>{{Harvnb |Mudge|2008| pp=33, 123}}; {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=28}}.</ref> The texts will often relate to a common topic
▲Scriptural Reasoning involves participants from multiple religious traditions<ref>It has been described as involving Jews, Christians and Muslims in its formative period ({{Harvnb |Ford|2006}}; {{Harvnb |Mudge|2008| p=33}}; {{Harvnb |Campbell|2001}}; {{Harvnb |Gaylord|2006| p=327}}; {{Harvnb |Burrell|2006| p=708}}; {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=28}}; and {{Harvnb |Hauerwas|2008| loc=p.19, n.43}}); for the inclusion of Hindus, see {{Harvnb |Heim|2004}}.</ref> meeting, very often in small groups, to read and discuss passages from their sacred texts and oral traditions (e.g., the [[Tanakh]], [[Talmud]], [[New Testament]], [[Vedas]], [[Qur'an]], [[Hadith]] or [[Guru Granth Sahib]]).<ref>{{Harvnb |Mudge|2008| pp=33, 123}}; {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=28}}.</ref> The texts will often relate to a common topic - say, the figure of [[Abraham]], or consideration of legal and moral issues of property-holding.<ref>For the thematic nature of many SR discussions, see {{Harvnb |Mudge|2008| p=123}}. For collections of themed texts, see http://www.scripturalreasoning.org/text-packs.html and http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/texts.html. For collections of themed essays emerging from such discussions, see issues of the ''[https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/ Journal of Scriptural Reasoning]''.</ref> Participants discuss the content of the texts, and will often explore the variety of ways in which their religious communities have worked with them and continue to work with them, and the ways in which those texts might shape their understanding of and engagement with a range of contemporary issues.<ref>For SR’s engagement with contemporary issues, see {{Harvnb |Mudge|2008| p=124}}.</ref>
A participant from any one religious tradition might therefore:
* Discuss with the other participants his or her own readings of the texts from his or her own tradition
* Discuss with them ''their'' attempts to make sense of the texts from his or her own tradition
* In turn discuss with them the texts from their own traditions.<ref>{{Harvnb |Higton|Muers|2012|
===
Most forms of SR exhibit the following basic features:▼
* SR does not ask participants from different faith traditions to focus upon areas in which they are most nearly in agreement, or to bracket their commitments to the deepest sources of their traditions' distinct identities. SR allows participants to remain faithful to the deepest identity-forming practices and allegiances of their religious communities.<ref>See the section of {{Harvnb |Ford|2006 }} on 'Core Identities in Conversation'.</ref>▼
It is impossible to give a definitive or authoritative account of the purpose of SR. Scriptural Reasoning is first and foremost a practice, and individuals and communities may engage in a practice for many and various reasons, while furthermore the purposes or agendas in SR of some practitioners have been contested or rejected by others. Moreover, the actual effects of a practice may outstrip the intentions of its practitioners. Thus Scriptural Reasoners frequently emphasize that doing and experimenting with SR as a practice logically precedes theoretical accounts of its grounds or function. According to Nicholas Adams, 'Scriptural reasoning is a practice which can be theorised, not a theory which can be put into practice. More accurately, it is a variety of practices whose interrelations can be theorised to an extent, but not in any strong sense of fully explanatory theory.'<ref>{{Harvnb|Adams|2006|p=387}}</ref> Peter Ochs makes the same point with reference to a [[midrash]] on Exodus 24:7 in b. Shab. 88a:<blockquote>In the book of Exodus, when Moses tried to deliver the Ten Commandments for the second time, the Israelites respond with the declaration ''naaseh v'nishmah!'' Literally, their declaration means "We shall do it and understand it," but, it was more likely an idiomatic expression for "We are on the job!" or "Consider it done!" The later rabbinic sages offered a homiletic rereading: "We shall first act and then understand"...We have nurtured SR in the same fashion, seeking to experiment with many forms of practice before discovering the one that best fits our goals and working over many years to refine it. We proceeded through experimentation first and only later through theoretical reflection.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=2}}</ref></blockquote>▼
* SR provides a context in which the participants can discuss those commitments, and perhaps even become more self-aware about them. SR sessions therefore often highlight and explore differences and disagreements between religious tradition, and give rise to serious argument
* SR does not assume any consensus between the participants as to how they understand the nature, authority or proper interpretation of the texts in front of them. Participants do not have to assume, for instance, that the Bible fulfills the same role for Christians as does the Qur'an for Muslims or the Tanakh for Jews.<ref>{{Harvnb |Batnitzky|2008| p=484}}: ‘I do not mean to suggest that Ochs' view of scriptural reasoning requires a shared theology as a prerequisite for dialogue.’ David F. Ford gives the following maxim for SR: 'Acknowledge the sacredness of the others' scriptures to them (without having to acknowledge its authority for oneself)
* SR is said to rely upon the existence of honesty, openness and trust amongst the participants, and more generally upon the growth of friendship among the participants in order to provide an appropriate context for disagreement. It is therefore sometimes said that the key to SR is 'not consensus but friendship'.<ref>The phrase is coined in {{Harvnb |Adams|2006| p=243}}; for other examples of its use see {{Harvnb |Scriptural Reasoning Society|2007}} and {{Harvnb |Abernethy|2007}}. It builds on earlier claims such as that of {{Harvnb |Kepnes|2006| p=367}} that SR 'builds sociality among its practitioners'. Cf the claim in {{Harvnb |Society for Scriptural Reasoning|2006}}: 'After about three sessions of this kind, a successful group should begin to nurture a sense of friendship in study and an emergent sense of direction'. For a third-party description of the importance of friendship in SR, see {{Harvnb |Torrance|2009}}.</ref>▼
* In order to encourage these relationships, the practice of Scriptural Reasoning is often located geographically with a view to engendering mutual hospitality
=== Metaphors ===▼
Nevertheless, it is possible to distinguish three commonly-cited and not mutually-exclusive purposes.▼
To leave space for the variety of ways in which Scriptural Reasoning may be practiced and developed, SR practitioners often find it more fruitful to characterize SR open-endedly in terms of metaphors, often drawn from the Abrahamic traditions themselves.▼
Scriptural Reasoning has sometimes been described as a "tent of meeting"
<blockquote>Participants in SR practice come to it as both representatives of academic institutions and particular "houses" (churches, mosques, synagogues) of worship. SR meets, however, outside of these institutions and houses in special times and in separate spaces that are likened to Biblical "tents of meeting". Practitioners come together in these tents of meeting to read and reason with scriptures. They then return to their academic and religious institutions and to the world with renewed energy and wisdom for these institutions and the world.<ref>See {{Harvnb |Kepnes|2006| p=368}}. Note that various third party sources point to Kepnes’ handbook as a helpful description of SR. See, for example, {{Harvnb |Anglican Communion Network for Inter Faith Concerns (NIFCON)|2008| p=6}}, {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=252}}, and {{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=3n6}}.</ref></blockquote>▼
==== Hearth ====▼
Scriptural Reasoning has been compared to gathering around the warmth of a hearth, where
In this vein, James and Rashkover write:<blockquote>The same sacredness and life that rewards ''l'shma'' study can also be the cause of absolutism and violence when a community feels under threat. Scripture is ''powerful'': "Is not my word like fire, says the Lord?" (Jer. 23:29). The same fire that warms and gives life can also kill and destroy. Ochs discerns that the impulse to guard the sacredness of scripture, even violently, is often an index of the community's ''love'' of their sacred scriptures as a primal source of divine life. Rather than unleashing the destroying fire of scriptural passion, SR is a practice of offering a measure of scripture's warmth to others.<ref>{{Harvnb|James|Rashkover|2021|p=23}}, with reference to {{Harvnb|Ochs|2015|p=489}}.</ref></blockquote>More recently, Ochs has generalized his concept of scripture into that of a ''hearth,'' "those dimensions of life that members of a religion turn to in times of crisis, tension, or uncertainty in the hope of drawing nearer to the source of their deepest values and identities."<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=18}}. Ochs develops an extended account of a "hearth" in the same book.</ref> SR, in this view, becomes a prototype of a broader family of "hearth-to-hearth" engagements.▼
=== Purposes ===
=== 1. ''L'shma:'' For its own sake or for God's sake ===▼
▲It is impossible to give a definitive or authoritative account of the purpose of SR. Scriptural Reasoning is first and foremost a practice, and individuals and communities may engage in a practice for many and various reasons, while furthermore the purposes or agendas in SR of some practitioners have been contested or rejected by others.
▲Nevertheless, it is possible to distinguish three commonly-cited and not mutually-exclusive purposes.
According to David Ford, one should practice SR because studying scripture is intrinsically valuable. On this view, one practices SR for the same reasons and in the same spirit that most traditional Abrahamic readers have studied their scriptures. David Ford makes this point using the Hebrew term "''l'shma''":<blockquote>''This practice of shared reading could be done for its own
Under the heading of SR as study ''l'shma,'' we might include those who approach SR as a practice that promotes the development of "wisdom," a central theme of David Ford's work on SR.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ford|2007}}. See also {{Harvnb|Torrance|2009|p=128}} and {{Harvnb|James|Rashkover|2021}}.</ref> In the same vein Peter Ochs speaks of SR as "open[ing] unexpected levels of textual and hermeneutical inquiry...for its own sake," an opening made possible by the affective warmth of SR study circles.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|p=631}}</ref> Others frame SR as a kind of ritual practice or even something approaching an act of worship. Marianne Moyaert, for example, argues that SR can be characterized as a formative "ritualized practice."<ref>{{Harvnb|Moyaert|2019}}</ref>
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Study ''l'shma'' is motivated by desire, by love for the scriptures and/or for God. For this reason, by inviting participants to share ''l'shma'' study together, SR provides what Ochs calls "a venue for members of different traditions or modes of inquiry to share their affection for scripture." This affective aspect of SR, in turn, contributes to SR's capacity to form unexpected interreligious friendships.<blockquote>The most likely source of these friendships is that ''the style of Formational Scriptural Reasoning tempts participants (often unawares) to reveal at least a bit of the warmth and ingenuousness they display in intimate settings of scripture study among coreligionists at home.''<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|p=631}}</ref></blockquote>
===
As originally conceived, SR was an academic practice involving theologians, religious philosophers, and text scholars, and was said to be aimed at 'repairing' or 'correcting' patterns of modern philosophical and theological reasoning.<ref>{{Harvnb |Mudge|2008}}; {{Harvnb |Lamberth|2008| pp=460–461}}; {{Harvnb |Campbell|2001}}.</ref> These patterns of reasoning persist both in the Western academy and in religious traditions influenced by modernity. Thus according to Peter Ochs, SR was originally intended to repair academic methods of study and the habits of mind that they presuppose.<blockquote>For the founders of Scriptural Reasoning, the original purpose was to repair what they judged to be inadequate academic methods for teaching scripture and scripturally-based religions, such as the Abrahamic religions...Over time, both Scriptural Reasoning and Textual Reasoning acquired new purposes as participants discovered additional consequences of these practices.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|
SR also tends to repair the binarism that is a persistent feature of modern religious traditions.<blockquote>Scriptural Reasoning is stimulated by the perception, furthermore, that the religious institutions that reside in the modern West have tended to assimilate these binarist tendencies into their theological discourses. One result is that many movements labeled "[[fundamentalist]]" display tendencies to a modern Western-style binarism that has been written into the tissue of traditional religious practices and discourses.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2014|p=633}}. N.B. also his important caveat: "This is not to say that the various religions lack their own indigenous tendencies to nastiness, but only that binarist nastiness probably comes from the West."</ref></blockquote>
SR thus implies a distinction between fundamentalism and traditionalism: the former tends to apply when the indigenous logic of a religious tradition has been superseded by modern binarism. For this reason, SR can undermine fundamentalism without attacking religious tradition per se, and indeed, purporting to draw its repair from traditional texts and interpretive practices. SR, by contrast, undermines fundamentalism while adopting an optimistic posture towards religious tradition. "Liberal" religion itself tends to operate with the same modern logic; indeed, the opposition between "liberal" and "fundamentalist" forms of religion is plausible, in part, because both operate with similar logics. For this reason, as Kepnes says, SR is "neither Liberal nor Fundamentalist."<ref>{{Harvnb|Kepnes|2006}}.</ref> This is one reason that SR has often been described as a 'postliberal' or 'postcritical' theological or philosophical movement.<ref>For 'postliberal', see {{Harvnb |Pecknold|2006| p=339}}; {{Harvnb |Smith|2008| pp=469–472}} or {{Harvnb |Heim|2004}}; for 'postcritical', see {{Harvnb |Soulen|Soulen|2001| p=140}}; {{Harvnb |Mudge|2008}}; {{Harvnb |Lamberth|2008}}.</ref>
===
Its purpose is sometimes described as 'humbling and creative' interfaith encounter<ref>{{Harvnb |Anglican Communion Network for Inter Faith Concerns (NIFCON)|2008| p=6}}.</ref> or 'deeper mutual understanding'.<ref>{{Harvnb|Clooney|2008|p=28}}</ref>
▲Most forms of SR exhibit the following basic features:
▲* SR does not ask participants from different faith traditions to focus upon areas in which they are most nearly in agreement, or to bracket their commitments to the deepest sources of their traditions' distinct identities. SR allows participants to remain faithful to the deepest identity-forming practices and allegiances of their religious communities.<ref>See the section of {{Harvnb |Ford|2006 }} on 'Core Identities in Conversation'.</ref>
▲* SR provides a context in which the participants can discuss those commitments, and perhaps even become more self-aware about them. SR sessions therefore often highlight and explore differences and disagreements between religious tradition, and give rise to serious argument - in order to promote what has been called 'better quality disagreement'.<ref>"Unlike some other kinds of interfaith dialogue, we aim not to pretend a consensus between our often divergent religious teachings and practices, but rather we seek to understand our disagreements more deeply through scripture study - and build friendships out of that better quality disagreement." {{Harvnb |Scriptural Reasoning Society|n.d.}}. Cf {{Harvnb |Kepnes|2006| p=368}} - 'SR is about serious conversation between three religious traditions that preserves difference as it establishes relations.'</ref>
▲* SR does not assume any consensus between the participants as to how they understand the nature, authority or proper interpretation of the texts in front of them. Participants do not have to assume, for instance, that the Bible fulfills the same role for Christians as does the Qur'an for Muslims or the Tanakh for Jews.<ref>{{Harvnb |Batnitzky|2008| p=484}}: ‘I do not mean to suggest that Ochs' view of scriptural reasoning requires a shared theology as a prerequisite for dialogue.’ David F. Ford gives the following maxim for SR: 'Acknowledge the sacredness of the others' scriptures to them (without having to acknowledge its authority for oneself) - each believes ''in different ways'' (which can be discussed) that their scripture is in some sense from God and that the group is interpreting it before God, in God’s presence.' {{Harvnb |Ford|2006| p=349}}, emphasis added.)</ref>
▲* SR is said to rely upon the existence of honesty, openness and trust amongst the participants, and more generally upon the growth of friendship among the participants in order to provide an appropriate context for disagreement. It is therefore sometimes said that the key to SR is 'not consensus but friendship'.<ref>The phrase is coined in {{Harvnb |Adams|2006| p=243}}; for other examples of its use see {{Harvnb |Scriptural Reasoning Society|2007}} and {{Harvnb |Abernethy|2007}}. It builds on earlier claims such as that of {{Harvnb |Kepnes|2006| p=367}} that SR 'builds sociality among its practitioners'. Cf the claim in {{Harvnb |Society for Scriptural Reasoning|2006}}: 'After about three sessions of this kind, a successful group should begin to nurture a sense of friendship in study and an emergent sense of direction'. For a third-party description of the importance of friendship in SR, see {{Harvnb |Torrance|2009}}.</ref>
▲* In order to encourage these relationships, the practice of Scriptural Reasoning is often located geographically with a view to engendering mutual hospitality - for example, by meeting in neutral academic spaces such as universities, or by peripatetically rotating between the houses of worship of different faiths. SR groups try to preserve an ethos of ''mutual'' hospitality with each participant being both host and guest, and to ensure parity of leadership, oversight or ownership.<ref>See {{Harvnb |Scriptural Reasoning Society|2007| p=2}}: 'It may be appropriate for meetings of a Member Scriptural Reasoning Group to take place in rotation between different venues associated with different faiths, or for meetings to be hosted at a neutral venue such as a secular university or community centre.'</ref>
▲=== Metaphors ===
▲To leave space for the variety of ways in which Scriptural Reasoning may be practiced and developed, SR practitioners often find it more fruitful to characterize SR open-endedly in terms of metaphors, often drawn from the Abrahamic traditions themselves.
▲==== Tent of Meeting ====
▲Scriptural Reasoning has sometimes been described as a "tent of meeting" - a Biblical ''mishkan'' ([[Hebrew]]:ׁ משׁכן [[Arabic]]: مسكن) - a reference to the story of Genesis 18. Steven Kepnes, a Jewish philosopher, writes:
▲<blockquote>Participants in SR practice come to it as both representatives of academic institutions and particular "houses" (churches, mosques, synagogues) of worship. SR meets, however, outside of these institutions and houses in special times and in separate spaces that are likened to Biblical "tents of meeting". Practitioners come together in these tents of meeting to read and reason with scriptures. They then return to their academic and religious institutions and to the world with renewed energy and wisdom for these institutions and the world.<ref>See {{Harvnb |Kepnes|2006| p=368}}. Note that various third party sources point to Kepnes’ handbook as a helpful description of SR. See, for example, {{Harvnb |Anglican Communion Network for Inter Faith Concerns (NIFCON)|2008| p=6}}, {{Harvnb |Clooney|2008| p=252}}, and {{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=3n6}}.</ref></blockquote>
▲==== Hearth ====
▲Scriptural Reasoning has been compared to gathering around the warmth of a hearth, where - Ochs explains - the hearth represents "those dimensions of life that members of a religion turn to in times of crisis, tension, or uncertainty in the hope of drawing nearer to the source of their deepest values and identities."<ref>{{Cite book sfn|last=Ochs |first=Peter |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1129027890 |title=Religion without violence : the practice and philosophy of scriptural reasoning |date=2019 |others=David F. Ford |isbn=1-5326-3893-0 |___location=Eugene, Oregon |pagesp=18 |oclc=1129027890}}</ref> This metaphor builds on the rabbinic notion of Torah as a "fire," drawn from texts like Jeremiah 23:29--"Is not my word like fire, says the LORD?" and Deuteronomy 33:2, as interpreted midrashically by the rabbis. In ''Sifre Devarim'' 343, the editor concludes that "the words of Torah are compared to fire" before developing this comparison in various respects. Most relevant to SR is that, "Just as a person that is too close to a fire is burned and if he is too far coldness [results], so too with the words of the Torah. As long as a person is involved in them, they are life-giving, but when one removes himself from them, they kill him..."
▲In this vein, James and Rashkover write:<blockquote>The same sacredness and life that rewards ''l'shma'' study can also be the cause of absolutism and violence when a community feels under threat. Scripture is ''powerful'': "Is not my word like fire, says the Lord?" (Jer. 23:29). The same fire that warms and gives life can also kill and destroy. Ochs discerns that the impulse to guard the sacredness of scripture, even violently, is often an index of the community's ''love'' of their sacred scriptures as a primal source of divine life. Rather than unleashing the destroying fire of scriptural passion, SR is a practice of offering a measure of scripture's warmth to others.<ref>{{Harvnb|James|Rashkover|2021|p=23}}, with reference to {{Harvnb|Ochs|2015|p=489}}.</ref></blockquote>More recently, Ochs has generalized his concept of scripture into that of a ''hearth,'' "those dimensions of life that members of a religion turn to in times of crisis, tension, or uncertainty in the hope of drawing nearer to the source of their deepest values and identities."<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2019|p=18}}. Ochs develops an extended account of a "hearth" in the same book.</ref> SR, in this view, becomes a prototype of a broader family of "hearth-to-hearth" engagements.
== History ==
Scriptural Reasoning is just one type of inter-textual discussion of the sacred scriptures of different religions, something which have been practiced by many scholars over many centuries. In the case of SR, it began as an intra-faith practice of Textual Reasoning by Jewish academics of Jewish texts, before becoming an inter-faith activity of Scriptural Reasoning when the conversation was joined by members of other religions. Over time SR has been developed by different scholars in a variety of diverse and contrasting ways.
=== Origins: Textual Reasoning ===
Scriptural Reasoning has roots in a variety of classical practices of scriptural interpretation, particularly rabbinic ''midrash.'' Its proximate origins, however, lie in a related practice, "Textual Reasoning" ("TR"),<ref>See [http://etext.virginia.edu/journals/tr/ The Journal of Textual Reasoning]</ref> which involved Jewish philosophers reading Talmud in conversation with scholars of rabbinics.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2006|p=147, n.4}}, {{Harvnb|Ford|2006|p=3}}: 'Scriptural reasoning had its immediate origins in "textual reasoning" among a group of academic Jewish text scholars .... on the one hand, and philosophers and theologians, on the other hand....'. Lewis S. Mudge speaks of ‘a traditional Jewish practice being opened, as an act of hospitality, to others.’ {{Harv|Mudge|2008|p=123}}</ref> Peter Ochs was one of the leading participants in Textual Reasoning (TR).<ref>{{Harvnb|Ford|2006|pp=3–4}} describes the involvement of Ochs in Textual Reasoning. The fullest description of Textual Reasoning can be found in {{Harvnb|Ochs|2002a}} and {{Harvnb|Levene|2002}} (and in the rest of the book from which those essays come); for some of the ways in which TR relates to SR see {{Harvnb|Hardy|2002}}.</ref> As James and Rashkover say,<blockquote>Textual Reasoning (TR) emerged in the 1980s from conversations among Jewish philosophers disappointed by the failure of modern Western philosophy to provide principles of inquiry capable of addressing the pressing concerns of living Jewish communities. These philosophers developed a novel practice of Jewish text study rooted in the Jewish textual tradition itself which they aspired to activate as a source of communal repair. Textual Reasoning brought text scholars familiar with rabbinic reading practices together with Jewish philosophers skilled in illuminating logics of reading and reasoning.<ref>
Textual Reasoning already displayed many features of what would become SR. According to Ochs, these include a tendency to pursue text study "for its own sake"; to both seek the plain sense of a text ''and'' to go explore various other dimensions of meaning; to value intense individual thought and group dialogue; and a combination of scholarly discipline with humor and laughter.<ref>{{Harvnb |Ochs|2019|
=== Beginnings of SR ===
According to James and Rashkover, "Textual Reasoning gave birth to Scriptural Reasoning (SR) as early Textual Reasoners developed friendships with Christian and Muslim scholars and began to experiment with reading scripture together."<ref>{{Harvnb | James | Rashkover |2021 | p=21}}
=== Developments ===
Scriptural Reasoning began as an academic practice and expanded rapidly in academic circles. SR scholars formed an "additional meeting group" at the [[American Academy of Religion]] which later became the official Scriptural Reasoning Program Unit.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|p=627}}. See also {{Harvnb|Mudge|2008|p=33}} and {{Harvnb|Clooney|2008|p=28}}.</ref>
They began a Scriptural Reasoning Theory Group at [[Cambridge University]], in partnership with the [https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/ Cambridge Interfaith Program]. It was renamed the Scriptural Reasoning in the University group in 2007 and continued meeting through 2020.<ref>{{Harvnb|Ochs|2013|p=627}}. See also {{Harvnb |Society for Scriptural Reasoning|2005}}.</ref>) This group focused on applying Scriptural Reasoning in academia and producing original scholarship about SR.<ref>For an example of this work, see the essays {{Harvnb|James|2017}}, {{Harvnb|Rashkover|2017}}, and {{Harvnb|Weiss|2017}} in the 2017 issue of the ''Journal of Scriptural Reasoning''.</ref> Out of this group emerged the [https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/research/scriptureandviolence Scripture & Violence Project], which has published academic work on the relationship between violence and the Abrahamic scriptures and makes available resources for laypeople to engage with these issues.<ref>An initial publication of the Scripture and Violence project was {{Harvnb|
Other academic developments of SR include a Scriptural Reasoning project at the [
Scriptural Reasoning has also become a "civic practice" in the community, examples of which include the [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/journals/abraham/cvsrg.html Central Virginia Scriptural Reasoning Group] sponsored by [[Eastern Mennonite University]], at [http://www.stethelburgas.org/ St Ethelburga's Centre for Reconciliation and Peace] at [[St Ethelburga's Bishopsgate]], the SR Camden and SR Westminster groups of the Scriptural Reasoning Society sponsored by Camden Faith Communities Partnership, [[Liberal Judaism (United Kingdom)]] and different places of worship in London.
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Civic developments from Scriptural Reasoning carrying different names, include the Faith and Citizenship programme of [[London Metropolitan University]], and the [[Three Faiths Forum]], which develops modes of scriptural study for young people in schools and local communities.
One early fruit of Scriptural Reasoning was ''[[Dabru Emet]],'' a document on Jewish-Christian relations published in 2000 in ''[[The New York Times]].''<ref>The full text is available [https://www.ccjr.us/dialogika-resources/documents-and-statements/jewish/dabru-emet here], at the Council of Centers on Jewish-Christian Relations.</ref> This document, authored by four Jewish scholars
In 2007, independent Islamic authorities in London issued a [[fatwa]]<ref>{{Harvnb|Fatahllah|Al-ansari|Al-Salamoni|2007}}</ref> advising Muslims about participation in the practice of Scriptural Reasoning.<ref>'...groups are now welcomed in major UK mosques
The [http://www.rosecastlefoundation.org/?hsLang=en Rose Castle Foundation] was founded in 2014 to equip leaders for peace and reconciliation work between the Abrahamic religions, with Scriptural Reasoning being central to its training. The Rose Castle Foundation also maintains a database of SR groups around the world.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Scriptural Reasoning|url=http://www.rosecastlefoundation.org/scriptural-reasoning|access-date=2022-02-13|website=www.rosecastlefoundation.org|language=en}}</ref>
== Criticisms ==
Criticisms of Scriptural Reasoning which have been made by academics from different traditions address some of its founding practitioners' claims to their having requisite knowledge of ancient traditions of Islamic, Jewish and Christian exegesis and, on that basis, the purported authority to "correct" or "repair" binarist or fundamentalist interpretations of Scripture.
=== Christian ===
Theologian Adrian Thatcher has questioned whether Scriptural Reasoning flattens theological differences in the way the three traditions approach their respective Scriptures, arguing that "Christian people are not the people of a book, even a very holy book. They are people of a Savior, the One who reveals a loving God who, by God’s Spirit, remakes and renews humankind in the image of the Son...Its danger lies in the implication that the relation between believers and their respective sacred texts lies along an axis of similarity". He notes "the paucity of references to Jesus Christ" in the essays in ''The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning'' (see, e.g., Ford and Pecknold 2006), and asking whether this "may indicate … the further erosion of Christocentric biblical interpretation."<ref>See {{Harvnb |Thatcher|2008| pp=193–4, n.1}}.</ref>
Christian theologian, [[James Gustafson|James M. Gustafson]], questions the claim implied by Peter Ochs' descriptions of Scriptural Reasoning that it "has not only the capacity, but also the authority to correct 'modernist reason'"
Christina Grenholm and [[Daniel Patte]] critique Scriptural Reasoning's presuppositions of Christian self-understanding and context for biblical interpretation.
Catholic theologian, [[Gavin D'Costa]] offers a
<blockquote>"Ford's tent insinuates (and nothing stronger can be said here) the logic of liberalism:
D'Costa moreover argues that "SR seems to eschew any canopy over the project, but the metaphysics of Christian scriptural reading generates precisely such a canopy".
=== Muslim ===
Under the title, ''The Broken Promise of Scriptural Reasoning'', Muslim theologian, Muhammad Al-Hussaini, presents a critique of David Ford's Anglican-led Scriptural Reasoning initiatives, which he argues lack parity between participant religions, have been characterised by colonialist politics of control, and which he categorises as '''amalīyya fāsida'' ([[Arabic]]: عملية فاسدة), "corrupt practice".<ref>{{Harvnb|Al-Hussaini|2022| p=xviii}}: 'This was followed up with the written proposal from St Ethelburga’s that David Ford chair a “Scriptural Reasoning Reference Group” which would thereon exercise authority in relation to the proper usage and handling in SR of sacred Islamic and Jewish
▲Under the title, ''The Broken Promise of Scriptural Reasoning'', Muslim theologian, Muhammad Al-Hussaini, presents a critique of David Ford's Anglican-led Scriptural Reasoning initiatives, which he argues lack parity between participant religions, have been characterised by colonialist politics of control, and which he categorises as '''amalīyya fāsida'' ([[Arabic]]: عملية فاسدة), "corrupt practice".<ref>{{Harvnb|Al-Hussaini|2022| p=xviii}}: 'This was followed up with the written proposal from St Ethelburga’s that David Ford chair a “Scriptural Reasoning Reference Group” which would thereon exercise authority in relation to the proper usage and handling in SR of sacred Islamic and Jewish texts—matters which for centuries have been the sovereign and autonomous prerogative of jurists respectively of Islamic ''<nowiki/>sharī'a'' and Jewish ''<nowiki/>halakhāh'' alone'.</ref> He states that Fordian Scriptural Reasoning has "No ''minhag/minhaj'', no timeless established Judaeo-Islamic discipline of dialectical ''exegesis traditionis'', of thickly-reading holy books using instruments of philology, grammar, received oral tradition and sensitive exposition of concentric layers of literal through to allegorical readings of a verse". He contends, "Instead, Ford’s Anglican-led SR becomes merely a poor kind of inter-faith Protestant Bible study fashioned within the competency limitations of its self-appointed leadership". He expresses concern at what he suggests "appeared to be SR’s failure to respect indigenous ways of reading Islamic Scripture, namely alongside [[hadith]] and classical commentaries", and further asserts, "Over time I became increasingly offended at the instrumentalising of biblical and Quranic materials for political and funding agendas".<ref>{{Harvnb|Al-Hussaini|2020}}: 'In my protesting such fraudulent behaviour with respect to sacred texts of God [alleged financial dishonesty], I was instructed that, far from democratic parity of control in the project between the three participating faith houses, there was instead what David Ford claimed as “the asymmetries of hospitality” arising out of Anglican hosting and ownership in this initiative'.</ref>
Muslim theologian, [[Timothy Winter]], argues that the presuppositions and motivations of Scriptural Reasoning are alien to the Islamic context.
Muslim theologian, Mohamed Elsharkawy, positively contrasts practices of Scriptural Reasoning in different contexts but sees SR in the United Kingdom as particularly "heavily contaminated with a Church of England Orientalism and a state counter-extremism agenda".
<blockquote>The monied UK interfaith agenda exists in part to give credibility to a declining Church of England, and David Ford's Scriptural Reasoning openly admits its Anglican origins and dominant polity.
He asserts that from the early days of SR there has been exclusion and bullying of some Christian theologians and later Muslim scholars who have raised concerns about alleged malfeasance within Scriptural Reasoning projects, and he proposes a "Reform of Scriptural Reasoning" through repentance, engagement with SR's critics and an end to what he calls "the endless uncritical self-marketing of Scriptural Reasoning by a dominant clique".
Elsharkawy asserts, "There are serious issues of the scholarly integrity of Scriptural Reasoning when so much of the allegedly 'independent academic literature' advocating for it is published in journals like [[Modern Theology (journal)|''Modern Theology'']], the ''Journal of Scriptural Reasoning'' and other publications on whose editorial boards sit [[David F. Ford|David Ford]], [[Peter W. Ochs|Peter Ochs]] and other SR promoters themselves! How are these independent reliable sources? Have they ever had the honesty to publish work by the opponents of SR? Rather, along with its colonialism, the defining characteristics of Scriptural Reasoning in some contexts have been the gatekeepers and minders of the 'brand', the vigorous and expensive marketing of SR, 'invitation-only' tactics for some events, and the excluding and in some cases harming the academic lives of some of its Christian and Muslim critics. So much for 'better quality disagreement'".
== Footnotes ==
Line 118 ⟶ 115:
== References ==
* {{Citation | last = Abernethy | first = Bob | title = Scriptural Reasoning (interview with David Ford, Rumee Achmed and Peter Ochs | magazine = Religion and Ethics News Weekly | date = October 12, 2007 | url = https://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/
▲* {{Citation | last = Abernethy | first = Bob | title = Scriptural Reasoning (interview with David Ford, Rumee Achmed and Peter Ochs | magazine = Religion and Ethics News Weekly | date = October 12, 2007 | url = https://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/episodes/by-topic/worshipliturgy/cover-scriptural-reasoning/1026/}}
* {{Citation | last = Adams | first = Nicholas | title = Habermas and Theology | place = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2006a | isbn = 978-0-521-68114-8 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=BvbJdgZgNJcC }}
* {{Citation | last=Adams|first=Nicholas|date=July 2006|title=Making Deep Reasonings Public|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00324.x|journal=[[Modern Theology]]|volume=22|issue=3|pages=385–401|doi=10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00324.x|issn=0266-7177|url-access=subscription}}
* {{Citation | last = Afzaal | first = Ahmed | title = Rendezvous in Orlando | journal = The Qu'ranic Horizons: Quarterly Journal of the Qu'
* {{Citation | last = Al-Hussaini | first = Muhammad | contribution = The Broken Promise of Scriptural Reasoning: The Politics of Colonialism and Abuse in Anglican-led Inter-religious Engagement | title = Faith in Unions: Racism and Religious Discrimination in the Faith Workers Branch of Unite the Union | editor-last = Isiorho | editor-first = David | pages = ix–xxi | place = Eugene, OR | publisher = Wipf and Stock | year = 2022 | isbn = 978-
* {{Citation | last = Al-Hussaini | first = Muhammad | title = Is Anglican hospitality too one-sided? | magazine = Church of England Newspaper | date = July 3, 2020 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/church_of_england_newspaper_3_july_2020.pdf}}
* {{Citation | last = Anglican Communion Network for Inter Faith Concerns (NIFCON) | author-link = Anglican Communion | title = Generous Love: The Truth of the Gospel and the Call to Dialogue; An Anglican Theology of Inter Faith Relations | place = London | publisher = [[Anglican Consultative Council]] | year = 2008 | url = http://nifcon.anglicancommunion.org/resources/documents/generous_love_A4_with_foreward.pdf | isbn = 9780955826108 | access-date = 2009-03-19 }}
* {{Citation | first = Jeffrey W. | last = Bailey | title = Sacred Book Club: Reading Scriptures Across Interfaith Lines | journal = [[The Christian Century]] | date = September 5, 2006 | url = http://www.christiancentury.org/article.lasso?id=2332}}
* {{Citation | last = Batnitzky | first = Leora. | title = Pragmatism and Biblical Hermeneutics: Some Comments on the Work of Peter Ochs | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 24 | issue = 3 | pages = 479–485 | date = July 2008 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2008.00470.x}}
* {{Citation | last = Burrell | first = David B. | title = Review of David Novak, ''Talking with Christians: Musings of a Jewish Theologian'' (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2005) and Michael Wyschogrod, ''Abraham's Promise: Judaism and Jewish-Christian Relations'' (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004) | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 4 | pages = 705–709 | date = October 2006 | url = http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118602410/abstract | archive-url = https://archive.today/20130105202119/http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118602410/abstract | url-status = dead | archive-date = 2013-01-05 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00344.x| url-access = subscription }}
* {{Citation | last = Campbell | first = William S. | title = Jewish Responses to the Revised Understanding of Judaism and of Self-understanding in Christianity | journal = Journal of Beliefs and Values | volume = 22 | issue = 2 | pages = 123–131 | date = October 2001 | doi = 10.1080/13617670120079532 | s2cid = 170472616 }}
* {{Citation | last = Campbell | first = William S.. | title = Paul and the Creation of Christian Identity | place = New York | publisher = Continuum | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-0-567-04434-1 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=06OsR5_KC5sC }}
* {{Citation | last = Clooney | first = Francis Xavier | title = Beyond Compare: St Francis De Sales and Vedanta Desika on Loving Surrender to God | place = Washington DC | publisher = Georgetown University Press | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-1-58901-211-0 }}
* {{Citation | last = D'Costa | first = Gavin | contribution = Catholics Reading the Scripture of Other Religions: Some Reflexions | title = Mission in Dialogue: Essays in Honour of Michael L. Fitzgerald | editor-last = Belo | editor-first = Catarina | editor2-last = Pérennès | editor2-first = Jean-Jacques | pages =
* {{Citation | last = Donnelly | first = Phillip J. | title = Milton's Scriptural Reasoning: Narrative and Protestant Toleration | place = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2009 | isbn = 978-0-521-50973-2}}
* {{Citation | last = Elsharkawy | first = Mohamed | title = Holy Word: Scriptural Encounters Between Muslims and Christians | place = Cairo | publisher = Al-Arabi | year = 2022}}
* {{Citation | last1 = Fatahllah | first1 = Muhammad | last2 = Al-ansari | first2 = Salah | last3 = Al-Salamoni | first3 = Muhammad | title = Fatwa on Scriptural Reasoning (English) | date = 17 July 2007 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/fatwa_english.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20}}; also in Arabic: {{Citation | last1 = Fatahllah | first1 = Muhammad | last2 = Al-ansari | first2 = Salah | last3 = Al-Salamoni | first3 = Muhammad | title = Fatwa on Scriptural Reasoning (Arabic) | date = 17 July 2007 | url = http://scripturalreasoning.org.uk/fatwa_arabic.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = An Interfaith Wisdom: Scriptural Reasoning Between Jews, Christians and Muslims | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 345–366 | date = June 2006 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00322.x}}
** Also published as {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | contribution = An Interfaith Wisdom: Scriptural Reasoning Between Jews, Christians and Muslims | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = 1–22 | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = Christian Wisdom: Desiring God and Learning in Love | place = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2007 | isbn = 978-0-521-87545-5 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1Z6L9U35ZhcC }}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = Jews, Christians, and Muslims meet around their Scriptures: An Interfaith Practice for the 21st Century | date = 10 October 2014 | url = https://www.interfaith.cam.ac.uk/resources/lecturespapersandspeeches/jewschristiansandmuslimsmeetaroundtheirscriptures}}
* {{Citation | last = Ford | first = David F. | author-link = David F. Ford | title = Scriptural Reasoning: Its Anglican Origins, its Development, Practice, and Significance | date = 2013 | journal = [[Journal of Anglican Studies]] | volume = 11 | issue = 2 | pages = 147–165 | doi = 10.1017/S1740355313000132| s2cid = 144724377 }}
* {{Citation | editor-last = Frymer-Kensky | editor-first = Tikva | editor-last2 = Novak | editor-first2 = David | editor-last3 = Ochs | editor-first3 = Peter | editor-last4 = Sandmel | editor-first4 = David | editor-last5 = Signer | editor-first5 = Michael | year = 2002 | title = Christianity in Jewish Terms | publisher = Basic Books | isbn = 978-0-813-36572-5}}
* {{Citation | last = Gaylord | first = Alan T. | title = Reflections on D. W. Robertson, Jr., and "Exegetical Criticism" | journal = [[The Chaucer Review]] | volume = 40 | issue = 3 | pages = 311–333 | year = 2006 | url = http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/chaucer_review/toc/cr40.3.html | issn = 0009-2002 | doi=10.1353/cr.2006.0003| s2cid = 171039996 | url-access = subscription }}
* {{Citation | last1 = Grenholm | last2 = Patte | first2 = Daniel | contribution = Introduction | editor-last = Grenholm | first1 = Christina. | editor2-last = Patte | editor2-first = Daniel | title = Gender, Tradition and Romans | place = New York | publisher = Continuum | year = 2005 | pages = 1–18 | isbn = 978-0-567-02911-9 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=_3Q87QQzX1cC }}
* {{Citation | last = Gustafson | first = James F. | title = An Examined Faith: The Grace of Self-Doubt | place = Minneapolis, MN | publisher = Fortress Press | year = 2004 | isbn = 978-0-8006-3628-9 }}
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* {{Citation | last = James | first = Mark Randall | date = July 2017 | title = Scriptural Reasoning as Communal Thinking |url=https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/volume-16-no-1-june-2017-recent-reflections-on-scriptural-reasoning/scriptural-reasoning-as-communal-thinking/| journal = The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning | volume = 16 | issue = 1}}
* {{Citation | last1=James | first1=Mark Randall | last2 = Rashkover | first2 = Randi |contribution = The Wisdom of Peter Ochs: From Common Sensism to Scriptural Pragmatism|title=Signs of Salvation: A Festschrift for Peter Ochs | editor-last = James | editor-first = Mark Randall| editor-last2 = Rashkover | editor-first2 = Randi |pages=1–36 | publisher=Cascade|year=2021|isbn=978-1-7252-6168-6|___location=Eugene, OR}}
* {{Citation | last = Kepnes | first = Steven | title = A Handbook for Scriptural Reasoning | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 367–383 | date = June 2006 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00323.x}}
** Also published as {{Citation | last = Kepnes | first = Steven | contribution = A Handbook for Scriptural Reasoning | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = 23–39 | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Lamberth | first = David C. | title = Assessing Peter Ochs through ''Peirce, Pragmatism and the Logic of Scripture'' | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 24 | issue = 3 | pages = 459–467 | date = July 2008 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2008.00468.x}}
* {{Citation | last = Levene | first = Nancy | author-link = Peter Ochs | contribution = Introduction | title = Textual Reasonings: Jewish Philosophy and Text Study at the End of the Twentieth Century | editor-last = Ochs | editor-first = Peter | editor2-last = Levene | editor2-first = Nancy | pages = 15–27 | place = Grand Rapids, MI | publisher = Eerdmans | year = 2002 | isbn = 0-8028-3997-5}}
* {{Citation | last = Moyaert | first = Marianne | year = 2019 | contribution = Scriptural Reasoning as a Ritualized Practice | editor-last = Moyaert | editor-first = Marianne | title = Interreligious Relations and the Negotiation of Ritual Boundaries | series = Interreligious Studies in Theory and Practice | pages = 87–106 | publisher = Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. | doi = 10.1007/978-3-030-05701-5_6| s2cid = 201459671 | url = https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783030057008 | hdl = 1871.1/acecd7d6-1489-491d-a10b-ec96fce443cc | isbn = 978-3-030-05700-8 | hdl-access = free }}
* {{Citation | last = Mudge | first = Lewis S. | title = The Gift of Responsibility: The Promise of Dialogue Among Christians, Jews and Muslims | place = New York | publisher = Continuum | year = 2008 | isbn = 978-0-8264-2839-4}}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | contribution = Introduction | title = Textual Reasonings: Jewish Philosophy and Text Study at the End of the Twentieth Century | editor-last = Ochs | editor-first = Peter | editor2-last = Levene | editor2-first = Nancy | pages = 2–14 | place = Grand Rapids, MI | publisher = Eerdmans | year = 2002a | isbn = 0-8028-3997-5}}
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* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2015 | contribution = The Possibilities and Limits of Inter-religious Dialogue | title = The Oxford Handbook of Religion, Conflict, and Peacebuilding | editor-last = Omer | editor-first = Atalia | editor-last2 = Appleby | editor-first2 = R. Scott | editor-last3 = Little | editor-first3 = David | place = New York | publisher = Oxford University Press | pages =488–515}}
* {{Citation | last = Ochs | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Ochs | year = 2019 | title = Religion Without Violence: The Practice and Philosophy of Scriptural Reasoning | place = Eugene, OR | publisher = Cascade | isbn = 978-1-5326-3893-0 | oclc = 1265089093}}
* {{Citation | last = Pecknold | first = C.C. | title = Preface: The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | journal = [[Modern Theology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 339–343 | date = June 2006 | doi = 10.1111/j.1468-0025.2006.00321.x}}
** Also published as {{Citation | last = Pecknold | first = C.C. | contribution = Preface: The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages = vii–xi | place = Malden, MI / Oxford | publisher = Blackwell | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-1-4051-4630-2 |ref=none}}
* {{Citation | last = Rashkover | first = Randi | date = July 2017 | title = Scriptural Reasoning: From Text Study to Inquiry |url=https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/volume-16-no-1-june-2017-recent-reflections-on-scriptural-reasoning/scriptural-reasoning-from-text-study-to-inquiry/| journal = The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning | volume = 16 | issue = 1}}
* {{Citation | last = Rashkover | first = Randi | url = http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1zjg23m | title = Nature and Norm: Judaism, Christianity, and the Theopolitical Problem |date = 2020 | place = Brookline, MA | publisher = Academic Studies Press | doi = 10.2307/j.ctv1zjg23m | isbn = 978-1-64469-510-4| url-access = subscription }}
* {{Citation | last = Rosen | first = David | year = 2021 | title = Dabru Emet: Its Significance for the Jewish-Christian Dialogue | url = https://www.bc.edu/content/dam/files/research_sites/cjl/texts/cjrelations/resources/articles/rosen.htm | access-date = 2020-02-13}}
* {{Citation | last = Sarisky | first = Darren | title = Religious Commitment in Scriptural Reasoning: A Critical Engagement with Gavin D'Costa's
* {{Citation | last = scripturalreasoning.org | title = Guidelines for Scriptural Reasoning | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org/guidelines-for-scriptural-reasoning.html | access-date = 2020-02-14}}
* {{Citation | last = Scriptural Reasoning Society | title = The Scriptural Reasoning Society
* {{Citation | last = Scriptural Reasoning Society | title = The Community Ethic of the Scriptural Reasoning Society: The 'Oxford Ethic' | year = 2007 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/oxford_ethic.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20}}
* {{Citation | last = Scriptural Reasoning Society | title = The Scriptural Reasoning Covenant | year = 2008 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/scriptural_reasoning_covenant.pdf | access-date = 2009-03-20}}
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* {{Citation | last = Weiss | first = Daniel | date = July 2017 | title = Scriptural Reasoning in the Academy: The Uses and Disadvantages of Expertise and Impartiality |url=https://jsr.shanti.virginia.edu/back-issues/volume-16-no-1-june-2017-recent-reflections-on-scriptural-reasoning/scriptural-reasoning-in-the-academy-the-uses-and-disadvantages-o-expertise-and-impartiality/| journal = The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning | volume = 16 | issue = 1}}
* {{Citation | last = Williams | first = Jenny | title = Sense and Spirituality | magazine = The Baptist Times | date = March 12, 2009 | url = http://www.scripturalreasoning.org.uk/the_baptist_times_12_march_2009.pdf}}
* {{Citation | last = Winter | first = Tim | contribution = Qurānic reasoning as an academic practice | title = The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning | editor-last = Pecknold | editor-first = C.C. | editor2-last = Ford | editor2-first = David F. | pages =
== External links ==
Line 194 ⟶ 190:
* [http://www.scripturalreasoning.co.uk Islamic ''fatwa'' on Scriptural Reasoning]
* [http://www.rosecastlefoundation.org/rcf/scriptural-reasoning Rose Castle Foundation]
* [http://www.scripturesindialogue.org/ Scriptures in Dialogue Programme
[[Category:Interfaith dialogue]]
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