Idea
This claim presents Qur’anic Islam as a free faith, chosen out of conviction rather than submission imposed from outside. Entry into this religious frame is understood here not as a response to political coercion, but as a voluntary commitment that opens a new relationship between the human being and meaning. Faith thus becomes an act of acceptance and responsibility, not merely an imposed belonging.
Concise Formulation
Qur’anic Islam: free, voluntary faith
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This claim aligns with the book’s argument, which seeks a return to the original meaning before the formation of authoritarian readings. Qur’anic Islam is presented as a normative point against which later transformations are measured. Through this definition, the book distinguishes religion as an internal relationship from religion as a public identity administered from outside by the state or the institution.
Why It Matters
This claim becomes more important because it places freedom at the center of understanding faith. This helps read Arkoun as attempting to recover the human dimension in religious experience. It also prevents the reader from equating Qur’anic Islam with all that has accumulated around it in the forms of coercion and conformity.
Brief Evidence
This claim presents Qur’anic Islam as a free faith, chosen out of conviction rather than submission imposed from outside. Entry into this religious frame is understood here not as a response to political coercion, but as a voluntary commitment that opens a new relationship between the human being and meaning. Faith thus becomes an act of acceptance and responsibility, not merely an imposed belonging.
Reading Questions
- What does describing faith as free and voluntary add to the meaning of religious belonging?
- How does this definition change our relationship to readings that link religion to coercion?
Documentation Level
High: the claim appears in a clear location in the book’s material.