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    Shared Stories, Rival Tellings: Early Encounters of Jews, Christians, and Muslims

    Posted By: arundhati
    Shared Stories, Rival Tellings: Early Encounters of Jews, Christians, and Muslims

    Robert C. Gregg, "Shared Stories, Rival Tellings: Early Encounters of Jews, Christians, and Muslims"
    English | ISBN: 0190231491 | 2015 | 752 pages | PDF | 115 MB

    Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are considered kindred religions-holding ancestral heritages and monotheistic belief in common-but there are definitive distinctions between these "Abrahamic" peoples. Shared Stories, Rival Tellings explores the early exchanges of Jews, Christians, and
    Muslims, and argues that their interactions were dominated by debates over the meanings of certain stories sacred to all three communities.

    Robert C. Gregg shows how Jewish, Christian, and Muslim interpreters–artists as well as authors–developed their unique and particular understandings of narratives present in the two Bibles and the Qur'an. Gregg focuses on five stories: Cain and Abel, Sarah and Hagar, Joseph and Potiphar's Wife,
    Jonah and the Whale, and Mary the Mother of Jesus. As he guides us through the often intentional variations introduced into these shared stories, Gregg exposes major issues under contention and the social-intellectual forces that contributed to spirited, and sometimes combative, exchanges among
    Jews, Christians, and Muslims.

    Offering deeper insight into these historical moments and their implications for contemporary relations among the three religions, will inspire readers to consider–and reconsider–the dynamics of traditional and current social-religious competition.
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