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7458 Muslims and Modernity: An 
introduction to the issues and debates By 
Clinton Bennett 
Continuum £18.99 (0-8264-5482-8) 
Church Times Bookshop £17.10 
Reviewed with: 
Islam in Britain: The British Muslim community in February 2005 
The Institute for the Study of Islam and Christianity £5.99 
(0-9547835-5-7)
Kissing Cousins? Christians and Muslims face to face 
Bill Musk 
Monarch Books £10.99 
(1-85424-675-5) 
Church Times Bookshop 
£9.90
SINCE the attacks of September 2001 in the United States, a vast outpouring 
of new publications on Islam has reflected interest in that faith in the West. 
These three works show the diverse approaches to Islam among Christian scholars 
today.
The works concerned have quite different aims and formats. Bennett’s 
functions as a textbook for undergraduate students, as is reflected in the 
discussion questions at various points. The ISIC volume is a research report, 
designed to raise awareness among both Church and government about the issues in 
focus. Bill Musk’s book, in contrast, is a personal reflection by an established 
Christian scholar in Islam who seeks to discover "parallels . . . about how the 
two faiths have actually found expression on earth". In doing so, he conducts a 
vast survey of Islamic history and theology with a parallel examination of these 
features of Christianity.
These different aims result in different writing styles. Bennett adopts a 
high scholarly style, while the ISIC report is more mid-scholarly, aiming to be 
accessible to an educated but non-specialist audience. Musk’s style is more 
popular, with frequent first-person reference, and aims to be accessible to 
non-specialist readers in the Churches.
Interestingly, Bennett aims to be a "virtual insider", allowing Muslim voices 
to speak for themselves without intermediate interpreter. The ISIC work takes an 
outsider’s perspective, looking into Islam and analysing what it sees in diverse 
Muslim statements and actions. Musk sits between the two, observing Islam as an 
outsider, but responding as an insider Christian in his discussion of themes 
within both faiths.
All three works demonstrate a detailed knowledge of the Islamic faith, and 
all recognise considerable diversity in the way Muslims relate to their sacred 
texts and the world around them. All three include discussion of the British 
context, though in the books by Bennett and Musk it is a passing discussion. The 
ISIC book is primarily an analysis of the British scene.
For criticism of Islam and Muslims, the ISIC volume stands apart. Presenting 
evidence of plans by some Muslims to take Britain for Islam through Islamic 
outreach and penetration of public institutions, it quotes Muslim writings; and 
it presents statistics to show increasing Islamic influence. It also discusses 
the phenomenon of Westophobia, or vitriolic anti-Western statements in Muslim 
publications.
Musk and Bennett are much more eirenic in their engagement with Islam. Musk 
says that "for most Muslims in Britain, da’wa [outreach] was never their 
motivation for coming to this country." Bennett acknowledges planning for 
takeover by some Muslim groups, but sees them as on the fringe of the broader 
Muslim community.
Musk and Bennett both include criticism of the West. In discussing the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Musk presents Muslim perspectives of Western, 
especially American, one-sidedness, but he does not test the validity of such 
views. Bennett, in line with his stated aims, presents a Muslim-insider view 
that puts primary responsibility for Christian-Muslim problems on the West.
Another area where the three works diverge is in their impact on the reader. 
A sense of alarm is likely to arise from reading the ISIC volume, whereas 
Bennett’s volume will probably induce a sense that problems in the 
Christian-Muslim relationship are not insurmountable, and that we can move ahead 
with measured confidence. This might be true of the Musk volume also.
It is imperative that Christians and Muslims find ways of living together in 
friendship and peace. All three books would probably agree with that. What is 
the best way of preparing them for this hard work? 
Some would argue that books such as the ISIC report should be hidden away, 
because of the bad news they bring. But this is the ostrich view. The ISIC 
report should be widely read, as it demands response from government and Church. 
But we must read not only that report. More reassuring works, such as those 
by Bennett and Musk, provide tools with which to respond to issues raised by 
ISIC.
Dr Peter G. Riddell is Professor and Director of the Centre for Islamic 
Studies and Muslim-Christian Relations at the London School of Theology. 
Islam in Britain is available from the publishers at The Old Rectory, River 
Street, Pewsey, Wiltshire SN9 5DB, for £5.99 plus 95p p. & p.
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