EBOOK

Confronting the Rigidist Current
Returning to Knowledge, Mercy, and the Balanced Sunni Path
Walid Abdurrahim(0)
About
Confronting the Rigidist Current is a defence of mainstream Sunni Islam against a current of religious harshness that narrows the inherited tradition and presents severity as authenticity.
Drawing on the Qur'an, hadith, the four legal schools, Ash'ari and Maturidi theology, and the disciplined path of tasawwuf, Walid Abdurrahim addresses issues often misrepresented by rigidist discourse: divine transcendence, following the madhhabs, bid'a, tawassul, ziyara, tabarruk, the Mawlid, dhikr, outward appearance, and love of the Prophet Muhammad and his household.
The book argues that Sunni Islam is not a religion of suspicion and accusation, but a path of knowledge, mercy, reverence, lawful devotion, and disciplined spiritual life. It invites English-speaking Muslims to return with confidence to the breadth, beauty, and balance of the inherited Sunni tradition.
This work is written for Muslims seeking clarity in an age of fragmented religious learning, online polemics, and sectarian rigidity. It is also for readers who have been told that the mainstream Sunni inheritance is compromise, innovation, or deviation, and who wish to understand how the scholars of Ahl al-Sunna preserved creed, law, devotion, and spiritual refinement across the centuries.
Drawing on the Qur'an, hadith, the four legal schools, Ash'ari and Maturidi theology, and the disciplined path of tasawwuf, Walid Abdurrahim addresses issues often misrepresented by rigidist discourse: divine transcendence, following the madhhabs, bid'a, tawassul, ziyara, tabarruk, the Mawlid, dhikr, outward appearance, and love of the Prophet Muhammad and his household.
The book argues that Sunni Islam is not a religion of suspicion and accusation, but a path of knowledge, mercy, reverence, lawful devotion, and disciplined spiritual life. It invites English-speaking Muslims to return with confidence to the breadth, beauty, and balance of the inherited Sunni tradition.
This work is written for Muslims seeking clarity in an age of fragmented religious learning, online polemics, and sectarian rigidity. It is also for readers who have been told that the mainstream Sunni inheritance is compromise, innovation, or deviation, and who wish to understand how the scholars of Ahl al-Sunna preserved creed, law, devotion, and spiritual refinement across the centuries.