Aref Nayed Speaks At the University of Virginia on Weaponizing Scripture

31/03/2015

Religious communities have frequently appealed to their scriptures in contexts of conflict. Sacred texts play a role in defining communal boundaries and in furthering their own formative and institutional goals. Conversely, individuals and groups who are antagonistic towards particular traditions deploy those traditions’ scriptures against them. Political and military leaders, resistance movements, and minority groups may all cite scripture as a warrant for action.

In this lecture, Nayed addresses three fundamental questions:

  • When does scripture serve as a resource for or against the communities that are formed by it?
  • How is it instrumentalized for formational, popular, political, and/or polemical agendas?
  • How does scripture transform the character of the debates and purposes for which it is deployed?