About
Advocating faith, reason, revelation and progress

My mission is to educate the public on Abrahamic godliness, known in ancient Arabic as Hanīfiyyah. Through sensemaking, I simplify sophisticated Qur’anic narratives and holistic prophetic guidance to show how they persuasively address contemporary social, political and psychological human needs.

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Institute of Abrahamic Studies

Explore the fascinating tradition of Abraham and join the community

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The Gabriel Course

Learn the fundamentals with our premium flagship curriculum and world class instruction

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The  Solution 

Our social movement brings together like-minded people to revive the Qur'anic legacy of Abraham and mobilise believers with a shared godly social and political culture.

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Latest from the journal

Essays & Insights

Three current approaches to religion

3 min read Studying the variant approaches people take in their religion, on the ground and in my experience, there…


0 Comments4 Minutes

God engages humans rationally

4 min read Here are some fundamental positions (none of which should prove controversial) from which I speak about…


0 Comments5 Minutes

Maturing Beyond Sectarianism

It seems to be the growing sentiment of many Muslims that a maturation of Islamic thought that helps British Muslims…


2 Comments16 Minutes

The ‘threat’ of reactionary religion

The threat to "islam" (subservience to God) today is not simply the West or secular ideologies which actually have…


0 Comments7 Minutes

"Whoever responds to the people merely based on what has been related in books that differ from their customs, habits, their era, their social/political circumstances and the contextual variables at play, misguides others and is himself misguided. He injures the faith greater than a doctor who treats patients failing to consider their different customs, habits, era, circumstances and contextual variables, merely seeking to reflect what is in the general books of medicine. Such a doctor is an imbecile and such a jurist too is an imbecile; both are the most harmful they could possibly be to the people’s faith or their bodies – may God help us!"

– Abu Bakr b. al-Qayyim, Damascene theologian and legal philosopher, d. 1350

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