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Photo of Charles Kimball

Dr. Charles Kimball is Presidential Professor and Director of Religious Studies at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, OK. Between 1996 and 2008, he served as Chair of the Department of Religion and the Divinity School at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, NC. During the 2006 fall term, Dr. Kimball was the Rita and William Bell Visiting Professor at the University of Tulsa. He is a graduate of Oklahoma State University and holds the M.Div. degree from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. An ordained Baptist minister, he received his Th.D. from Harvard University in comparative religion with specialization in Islamic studies.
Dr. Kimball's courses at OU include "Introduction to Religious Studies," "Comparative Religion," "Conceptions of the Afterlife," and "Islam." He is a frequent lecturer in universities and church-related settings as well as an expert analyst on issues related to the Middle East, Islam, Jewish-Christian-Muslim relations, and the intersection of religion and politics in the United States.
Dr. Kimball taught for six years at Furman University where he also served as the Director for International Education. From 1983-1990 he was the Director of the Middle East Office at the National Council of Churches, based in New York. He lived in Egypt in 1977-78, has made more than 35 visits to the Middle East and worked closely with Congress, the White House and the State Department during the past 25 years.
His articles have appeared in a number of publications, including Sojourners, The Christian Century, The Los Angeles Times, The Christian Science Monitor, and The Boston Globe. He is the author of four books, including When Religion Becomes Evil (HarperOne, rev. ed. 2008). When Religion Becomes Evil was named one of the "Top 15 Books on Religion" by Publishers Weekly and one of the top ten books of the year by the Association of Parish clergy. It has been published in Swedish, Indonesian, Korean, and Danish translations. His three other books are: Striving Together: A Way Forward in Christian-Muslim Relations (Orbis Books), Religion, Politics and Oil: The Volatile Mix in the Middle East (Abingdon Press), and Angle of Vision: Christians and the Middle East (Friendship Press).
Since the Sept. 11th terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, Dr. Kimball has been interviewed by more than 500 TV and radio stations as well as major newspapers and broadcast outlets throughout the U.S., Canada, Great Britain, France, Sweden, Australia and South Africa.

Islam and the West After 9/11

October 7-10, 2009
at Oklahoma Christian University

The multifaceted role that Islam has come to play in today’s globalized and religiously pluralistic world is of crucial importance. The attacks carried out on U.S. soil by radical Islamist terrorists on September 11, 2001, and subsequent developments have brought heightened attention to bear on the complex interaction between religion and politics in the Middle East and their worldwide ramifications. This course will enable students to apply their background and training in a variety of disciplines to this timely topic, through an array of readings, faculty lectures, class discussions, student oral presentations, a research paper, a panel of religious leaders representing both Christian and non-Christian traditions, and a field trip to Oklahoma City’s largest mosque.

Click here for syllabus

The Class Reading List: (These books and articles supplied by OSLEP)
  • Engaging the Muslim World by Juan Cole
  • The New Turkish Republic: Turkey as a Pivotal State in the Muslim World by Graham Fuller
  • When Religion Becomes Evil by Charles Kimball
  • Hidden Iran: Paradox and Power in the Islamic Republic by Ray Takeyh
  • Additional articles, book chapters, and documents