Obtenez 3 mois à 0,99 $/mois + 20 $ de crédit Audible

OFFRE D'UNE DURÉE LIMITÉE
Page de couverture de Imamate: The Living Bridge

Imamate: The Living Bridge

Imamate: The Living Bridge

Écouter gratuitement

Voir les détails du balado

À propos de cet audio

The Living Bridge

If prophecy is the sun, Imamate is the dawn that keeps its light from fading. This episode explores the Shiʿa understanding of Imamate as the divinely appointed continuation of prophetic guidance — not a new scripture, not mere politics, but the living preservation and interpretation of the Prophet’s knowledge, character, and moral authority.

  • The Living Bridge

    If prophecy is the sun, Imamate is the dawn that keeps its light from fading. This episode explores the Shiʿa understanding of Imamate as the divinely appointed continuation of prophetic guidance — not a new scripture, not mere politics, but the living preservation and interpretation of the Prophet’s knowledge, character, and moral authority.

    What this episode covers A clear, sympathetic exposition of core ideas: the Imam as the divinely chosen successor; the difference between receiving revelation and safeguarding its meaning; the Qur’anic and narrated foundations that frame Imamate as ongoing guidance; and how Imamate upholds divine justice by ensuring humanity is not left unguided after the Prophet.

    Key themes and moments

    • The central metaphor: sun (prophecy) and dawn (Imamate)
    • Scriptural touchstones that locate guidance beyond the close of waḥy
    • The Imam’s role as guardian, interpreter, and moral conscience
    • Reflection on presence and continuity: how the Prophet’s light "still breathes" through the Imam

    • Why it matters This episode offers listeners a concise theological map for understanding why, within Shiʿism, spiritual authority continues after the end of formal revelation. It connects doctrinal claims to ethical and existential consequences: guidance as active, justice as ongoing, and leadership as inward purity and divine selection rather than mere lineage or politics.

    • Who should listen Curious listeners seeking an accessible introduction to Imamate; students of Islamic theology; people wanting a thoughtful, non-polemical account of how religious authority, continuity, and conscience are conceived in Shiʿa thought.
    • Listening notes Expect a blend of poetic metaphor and careful explanation: evocative language to open the imagination, followed by grounded theological points and a short reflective close that invites the listener to consider where the Prophet’s legacy lives in their own time.

    Join us for a measured, illuminating conversation that treats Imamate not as a relic of doctrine but as the living bridge between revelation and humanity.

Pas encore de commentaire