Gairdner, a seminal figure in Christian-Muslim relations, was equipped with singular gifts of imagination and pastoral energy. The son of a distinguished professor of medicine at the University of Glasgow, Gairdner came to evangelical faith and missionary vocation at Oxford. Cairo was his sphere of service from 1899-1928, except for brief periods of study leave at the Edinburgh World Missionary Conference of 1910 (on which he wrote a telling report) and at Hartford Seminary, where his mentor was Duncan Black Macdonald. Despite administrative duties and the loss of Douglas Thornton, his early colleague, Gairdner “fulfilled the gospel” in sustained ventures of mind and pen. Tireless in conversation, he grew steadily more perceptive about communication with the Muslim community. The journal Orient and Occident was his lively forum. Against much opposition, he pioneered the use of drama and he wrote plays on biblical themes and Arabic commentaries in the style of the Muslim exegete Al-Baidawi (1226-1260). Applying his musical skills, he combined Egyptian lyrics and Christian hymnology. After his death at the height of his powers, the Church of Jesus, Light of the World was built and dedicated to his memory in Old Cairo.

Tarihi Bir Kanıt Olarak Rabbin Sofrası

  Müslüman kardeşlerimizin İsa Mesih’in ölmüş olması gerçeğini ve ölümüyle gelen bereketleri anlayıp, kabul etmeyi reddetme konusundaki kararlılıkları kadar yürek burkan bir şey yoktur Tarihi bir Kanıt Olarak Rabbin Sofrası Müslüman kardeşlerimizin İsa Mesih’in ölmüş olması gerçeğini ve ölümüyle gelen bereketleri anlayıp, kabul etmeyi reddetme konusundaki kararlılıkları kadar yürek burkan bir şey yoktur. Sıklıkla ve…