A Critique and Analysis of Reasons for Illegitimacy of the Religious Government during the Occultation Era
Some believe that a religious government during the Occultation Era <br />does not have the necessary legitimacy. The proponents of the idea <br />have presented reasons most of which refer to the absence of the <br />twelfth Imam per se and the existence of narrations tha...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | fas |
Published: |
Qom Islamic Azad University
2014-12-01
|
Series: | سپهر سیاست |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://se.journal.qom-iau.ac.ir/article_540964_5ad2e3366e681a07779417e6b5e2e579.pdf |
Summary: | Some believe that a religious government during the Occultation Era <br />does not have the necessary legitimacy. The proponents of the idea <br />have presented reasons most of which refer to the absence of the <br />twelfth Imam per se and the existence of narrations that have <br />pictured any uprisings or restorative movements as useless, <br />inefficient and even illegitimate. The present study is aimed at <br />indicating that the absence of the twelfth Imam per se may not be a <br />reason for the illegitimacy of the religious government but a religious <br />government can set the stage for the messianic culture. It will also <br />show that despite the existence of narrations that reject the <br />legitimacy of an uprising during the Occultation Era, there are <br />genuine narrations in the narrative reference books that refer to the <br />legitimacy of the movement. By drawing a comparison between the <br />two categories of narrations, it may be concluded that some of those <br />uprisings, including Imam Khomeini’s uprising that led to an Islamic <br />government, were legitimate in case of having the conditions of an <br />uprising. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 2538-5674 2538-5674 |