The Children of Abraham: Judaism, Christianity, Islam (Princeton Classics, 83)

by Francis Edward Peters

Paperback, 2018

Status

Available

Call number

201.4

Collection

Publication

Princeton University Press (2018), Edition: 2, 264 pages

Description

F.E. Peters, a scholar without peer in the comparative study of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, revisits his pioneering work. Peters has rethought and thoroughly rewritten his classic The Children of Abraham for a new generation of readers-at a time when the understanding of these three religious traditions has taken on a new and critical urgency.He began writing about all three faiths in the 1970s, long before it was fashionable to treat Islam in the context of Judaism and Christianity, or to align all three for a family portrait. In this updated edition, he lays out the similarities and differences of the three religious siblings with great clarity and succinctness and with that same remarkable objectivity that is the hallmark of all the author's work.Peters traces the three faiths from the sixth century B.C., when the Jews returned to Palestine from exile in Babylonia, to the time in the Middle Ages when they approached their present form. He points out that all three faith groups, whom the Muslims themselves refer to as "People of the Book," share much common ground. Most notably, each embraces the practice of worshipping a God who intervenes in history on behalf of His people.The book's text is direct and accessible with thorough and nuanced discussions of each of the three religions. Footnotes provide the reader with expert guidance into the highly complex issues that lie between every line of this stunning edition of The Children of Abraham. Complete with a new preface by the author, this Princeton Classics edition presents this landmark study to a new generation of readers.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member bell7
Academic Peters takes a look at the history of Judaism, Christianity and Islam from their beginnings to about the Middle Ages and compares and contrasts them. He begins with a broad historic overview and then investigates what each religion believes about the worship of God, Scripture and
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tradition, and other topics.

This is the final book that I read for the series of book discussions I ran on the Muslim Journeys bookshelf grant that our library received this year. Unfortunately, I was disappointed. While it's extremely useful to be familiar with the parallels and differences between these three major world religions, and helpful to consider them together and the monotheistic believers, this was not the greatest book as an introduction to the topic. Peters writes on the one hand a short introduction and one that's necessarily oversimplified since he's talking about a great variety of believers in general terms. On the other, his text is dense and his vocabulary daunting for a layperson (I had no idea that "exilarch" refers to the leaders of the Jewish community in Babylon after their exile... why he couldn't just say that, I'm sure I don't know). I won't say don't read it, but I wouldn't recommend it as a starting point.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1982

Physical description

264 p.; 8.3 inches

ISBN

0691181039 / 9780691181035
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