ABSTRACT

This conclusion presents some closing thoughts on the key concepts covered in the preceding chapters of this book. The book explains the mujdilah is a source of values not only for Muslim women, but Jewish and Christian women with a common language and divine example to speak out against injustice in their respective communities and engage with others for common causes. The mujdilah is the scriptures that retained a remnant theology of doing community in spite of the often overwhelming traditions of exclusion. Despite feminist criticism's highlighting of divisions in feminist thinking, this feminist exposition of the mujdilah describes an interfeminist dialogue, which may promote ethical behaviour. The Quran's figure of the woman who disputes showed how the divine word, or Logos, is personalized in sacred moments through women's interlocution between God and the male agents of Islam, Judaism, and Christianity.