Saturday, December 23, 2006

The Muslim Mary

If you are looking for the religious text with the most references to Mary, the mother of Jesus, look no further than the Koran, Jennifer Green writes.

Jennifer Green, The Ottawa Citizen

Published: Thursday, December 21, 2006


Islam and Christianity revere Mary above all other women, a human divinely appointed to bear Jesus in a virgin birth. But the Koran mentions Mary 34 times, and names an entire chapter after her -- more than she gets in the Bible, according to Cruden's Complete Concordance. She is the only woman mentioned by name in the Koran, and some scholars say Muslims actually revere her more than Christians do.

"Without a doubt, she is the most spectacular female figure that appears in the whole of the Koran," says Bruce Lawrence, Islamic scholar and author of The Qur'an: A Biography. "That's quite something extra for Christians to have to deal with."

Robert Moynihan, editor of Inside the Vatican magazine, agrees. In one sense, "I would say Muslims have more veneration of Mary -- those who are believing Muslims -- than most Christians today. That's because of the decline of Marion veneration in Christianity. "

Pockets of worshippers around the world still pray extensively to Mary, especially among Catholics, but her influence has waned in the last generation. As women struggled to be heard, in church hierarchies and society at large, exhortations to follow Mary's example of chastity and acceptance of God's will started sounding like clerical spin designed to keep the ladies in line.

"She is not out of the picture, but she is not woven into the warp and woof of the faith," Mr. Moynihan said from his office in Rome. "That shattered with the confrontation with the modern world."

Muslim women are not as likely to have submitted Mary to this political litmus test, so they are still comfortable turning to her, he says.

Aynur Gunenc is a 37-year-old Ottawa native who commutes to Montreal every week to complete her master's degree in bioresource engineering at McGill University. She is also a practising Muslim and the mother of two sons.

Like many Muslim women, she looked to Mary while she was pregnant and when went into labour, reading Surah 19, the chapter in the Koran named for the virgin. She also ate dates as Mary did while giving birth to Jesus.

"It is supposed to help for an easy delivery." Did it work? "Yes."

"For us, Mary is a symbol of purity and patience, honesty and believing 100 per cent in God, even when things are difficult. I am full of respect and love for her. I cannot imagine, myself, keeping your faith when you have had a baby without a husband, close to people who disapprove. It would not be bearable.

"If there had been a woman prophet, it would have been Mary. She knew this life is temporary."

Christianity and Islam differ on the fundamental nature of Jesus. For Christians, he is God the Son; for Muslims, he is a prophet who was fully human.

But their accounts around his birth are startlingly similar. Both tell of an elderly couple beseeching God for a child.

In the Bible, Elizabeth and her husband, the temple priest Zachary, become parents to John the Baptist.

In the Koran, the elderly Zakariya pleads to God for a son, and his prayer is answered with the birth of "Yahya" -- John.

Mary's mother, Anna, offers her child-to-be to God, but she is surprised and dismayed to see that she has given birth to a girl, whom she names Mary, or Maryam. She offers the child to God anyway and brings her to the temple, where she comes under the protection of Zakariya.

Every day she has holy visions, and when Zakariya comes with food, he finds angels have already provided for the young girl -- details remarkably similar to the Proto Gospel of James, scripture that is not included in the Bible, but is considered credible by Roman and Eastern Orthodox Catholics.

In the Koran, the angel Gabriel comes to tell Mary she will bear a child, to which she says: "How shall I have a son, seeing that no man has touched me, and I am not unchaste?"

He said: "So (it will be): Thy Lord saith, 'that is easy for Me: and (We wish) to appoint him as a Sign unto men and a Mercy from Us': It is a matter (so) decreed.

"So she conceived him, and she retired with him to a remote place."

In the Koran, there is no Joseph to protect her reputation. Instead, Mary goes off to an unspecified location to bear the child. Once there, she cries out in pain and says she wishes she had died before this.

In response, God provides a stream for water, and dates from a tree above.

When she returns home with the babe in arms, the villagers are horrified. How could she have a child without a husband? Jesus himself speaks to them from her arms, even though he is only a few days old.

Mary is also a bridge between Islam and Christianity, something Pope Benedict XVI touched on in his recent trip to Turkey, where he celebrated Mass at Ephesus, the western town in which Mary is said to have lived her last days.

The Pope pointed to her as an explicit link between Islam and Christianity, stressing that a common devotion to Mary can help bind the two faiths.

Vatican expert and author John Allen also commented on the link: "It is true that Mary is actually referred to more often in the Koran than she is in the New Testament," he told reporters during the pope's visit.

"She has always been a figure of strong popular devotion for Muslims as well as Christians. And it would not at all be surprising if Benedict XVI were to want to build on that in some fashion."

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Principles of Macroeconomics: Introduction II

The National Income Accounts

Production Side
Consumption
+ Investment
+ Government Purchases of Goods & Services
+ Net Exports
= Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
+ Income earned abroad by citizen
- Earnings of foreign residents & firms
= Gross National Product (GNP)
- Depreciation
= Net National Product
- Indirect Taxes & Other
= National Income

Income Side
Compensation of Employees
+ Corporate profits
+ Proprietors' Income
+ Rental income of persons
+ Net Interest
= National Income
- Corporate profits tax payments, undistributed profits, valuation adjustment
- Contribution to Social Security
+ Transfer payments
+ Personal interest income
= Personal Income
- Personal taxes
= Personal Disposable Income (PDI)
- Personal consumption expenditure
- Interest paid to business
- Net personal transfer payments to foreigners
= Personal saving

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

"Now what I want is, Facts...


"Now what I want is, Facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else. You can only form the minds of reasoning animals upon Facts; nothing else will ever be of any service to them... Stick to the Facts, sir!"

Mr. Thomas Gradgrind, Coketown...

Charles Dickens, Hard Times (New York: Norton, 1996), p. 1.

On Delaying The Marriage Of A Young Woman & Man Until Completion Of School


Question:
There is a widespread custom of a young woman or her father refusing
those who propose to her until she has completed her high school or
university education, or so that she may study for a number of years.
What is the ruling on that? And what is your advice to those who do
so, so that the young women might reach the age of thirty or more
without marrying?

Answer: My advice to all young men and women is to marry without delay and to
hasten to it, if conditions permit, as the Prophet sallallaahu 'alayhi wasallam said:

`O you young men! Those among you who have the means and the ability
should marry, because it restrains the eyes (from evil glances) and
preserves the private parts (from immorality). And whoever is unable
to do so, should fast because it is a protection for him.'
(Al-Bukhari no. 5066 and Muslim no. 1400)

And he sallallaahu 'alayhi wasallam said:

`If one whose religion and character pleases you proposes to you, then
marry (your daughter to) him. If you do not do so, it will be a cause
of trial in the land and great corruption.'
(At-Tirmithi no. 1084)

Narrated by At-Tirmithi with a Hasan chain of narrators.

And he sallallaahu 'alayhi wasallam said:

`Marry productive, loving women, because I will have the largest
number of followers on the Day of Resurrection. '
(Abu Dawud no. 2050, An-Nasa'i no. 3229, Ahmad 3/158, 245 & Ibn Hibban no. 4028)

Narrated by Imaam Ahmad and authenticated by Ibn Hibban.

It is also necessary due to the many benefits indicated by the Prophet
sallallaahu 'alayhi wasallam, such as averting one's gaze, protecting
the private parts (from sin), increasing the size of the Muslim
community, and safety from great corruption and evil consequences. May
Allaah grant all of the Muslims success in attaining that wherein lies
righteousness in the matter of their religion and their earthly life.
Verily, He is All-Hearing, Near.

Shaykh `Abdul-`Azeez Bin Baz
Fatawa Islamiyyah, Darussalam, volume 5, pages 174/175

Macroeconomics War 1970s-1990s

As the interest in macroeconomics atracted more economists, many became unsatisfied with explanation of economic events and remedial policy prescribed by the established macroeconomic theory...

Pre-1930s
Classical Economics

1930s-1970s
Keynesian Economics

Challengers of Keynesian:
Monetarism
New Classical Economics

Counter-Challengers:
Real Business Cycle Theory (strong root in Classical)
New Keynesian Theory (strong root in Keynesian)

Check how each group proposed their own explanations on economic events from 1970s to the 1990s, abd remedial prescriptions.

Principles of Macroeconomics: Introduction I

Macroeconomics: The study of "ordinary business of life" in aggregate. In other words, the behavior of the economy is analyzed as a whole.


Key Variables: Total Output (GDP), Aggregate Price Level, Employment and Unemployment, Interest Rates, Wage Rates, Foreign Exchange Rates.

Subject Matter: Factors that affect these variables; static level and changes over time.

Note: Macroeconomics focus on policy-oriented part of economics, especially how government policies affect economy (as a whole, of course).

Definition of Economics: Alfred Marshall

What is Economics?

Alfred Marshall (1842-1924), one of the most influential economists during his lifetime, defined economics as the "study of mankind in the ordinary business of lie; it examines that part of individual and social action which is most closely connected with the attainment and with the use of the material requisites of well-being."

Principles of Economics, 8th ed. (New York, Macmillian, 1920), p.1.

To know more about Alfred Marshall, click the following links:
1. http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/bios/Marshall.html
2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Marshall
3. http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/marshall.htm