Islam

20.0 Islam Module 20: Islam vs Judaism vs Christianity

Module 20 compares Islam, Judaism, and Christianity by showing that they share important roots but also differ in major theological ways. It explains that Islam has strong similarities with Judaism in areas such as strict monotheism, law-centered religious life, prophecy, and rejection of idolatry. It also shows that Islam shares important similarities with Christianity, including belief in one Creator God, revelation, judgment, moral accountability, and reverence for figures such as Abraham, Mary, and Jesus.

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19.2 Religious Freedom, Blasphemy Laws, and Women’s Roles

Muslim-majority countries vary widely in how they handle rights, freedoms, and religious expression. Some are relatively open and pluralistic, allowing different religions to practice publicly, women to participate broadly in education and work, and citizens to debate political and religious ideas. Others are much more restrictive, limiting religious minorities, punishing criticism of Islam, controlling women’s public lives, or treating religious identity as part of state loyalty.

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19.1 Regional Expressions of Islam

Islam is a global religion, but it is not lived out in exactly the same way everywhere. A Muslim in Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Turkey, Nigeria, Pakistan, or Morocco may share core beliefs with other Muslims, such as belief in one God, reverence for the Qur’an, and the importance of prayer, fasting, charity, and pilgrimage. But the way Islam appears in public life, family life, clothing, holidays, politics, education, and social customs can vary greatly from region to region.

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19.0 Islam Module 19: Islam in Muslim-Majority Countries

Module 19 explains that Islam in Muslim-majority countries is both unified and diverse. Muslims around the world share core beliefs and practices, but Islam is expressed differently across regions because it is shaped by local culture, language, history, politics, and social customs. The module emphasizes that Muslim-majority societies are not all the same: some are more secular, some are more religiously conservative, and some blend Islam with national, cultural, and legal traditions in very different ways.

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