https://ejournal.uinsaid.ac.id/index.php/dinika/issue/feed DINIKA : Academic Journal of Islamic Studies 2025-04-24T00:00:00+07:00 Muhammad Latif Fauzi [email protected] Open Journal Systems <p><strong>ISSN : <a href="https://portal.issn.org/resource/ISSN/2503-4219">2503-4219</a> (Print)<br />ISSN : <a href="https://portal.issn.org/resource/ISSN/2503-4227">2503-4227</a> (Online)</strong></p> <p><strong>DINIKA : Academic Journal of Islamic Studies</strong> is a peer-review journal in the field of Islamic studies, devoting to provide an intellectual niche of new Islamic trends in society and beyond, published twice a year (January-June and July-December) by UIN Raden Mas Said Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia.</p> <p>Two decades or more, in the global scheme, Islamic studies have been enforced to take broader paradigms from dogmatic-theology to popular-religious. Islamic studies is not merely discussing on sacred corpus only, but everyday life of Islam also. In academic space, this field has increasingly been an intersection -if not a contestation- across disciplines, such as political science, anthropology, sociology, history, economics, media and cultural studies.</p> <div style="text-align: justify;"><strong>DINIKA</strong> openly welcomes scholar, postgraduate students, and practitioners to submt their best research articles that correspond to the topics.</div> <div style="text-align: justify;"> </div> <div style="text-align: justify;">For futher aims and scope, please click <a href="https://ejournal.uinsaid.ac.id/index.php/dinika/focusandscope" target="_blank" rel="noopener">here.</a></div> https://ejournal.uinsaid.ac.id/index.php/dinika/article/view/10186 Digital Everyday Life as an Asset: Spiritual and Cultural Practices Among Retired Women in the Rewwin Residence Community 2024-12-24T00:02:43+07:00 Wahyu Ilaihi [email protected] Agoes Moh. Mufad [email protected] <p><em>In Indonesia, the lives of retired women and technology are often overlooked. They are a group that is vulnerable to the digital divide. This study explores the digital technology asset into the everyday lives of retired women living in the Rewwin Residence Community in Waru, Sidoarjo, Indonesia. This study aims to understand how digital devices and platforms support and enhance spiritual and cultural practices in this community. This study uses qualitative methodologies with the approach used in ABCD/Asset Base Community Development to find and utilize their assets. The findings highlight the digital assets’ sense of asset ownership, physical, social, and human assets, and the wealth of religious and spiritual content. Understanding asset ownership has bridged and facilitated access to religious content, strengthened and fostered a sense of togetherness and belonging among their community, and offers insights into how digital practices can complement and enrich traditional cultural and spiritual practices in their everyday life stages. This study contributes to a broader understanding of contemporary Indonesian society’s relationship between assets, technology, aging, and cultural sustainability.</em></p> 2025-02-04T00:00:00+07:00 Copyright (c) 2025 https://ejournal.uinsaid.ac.id/index.php/dinika/article/view/8610 Imran Nazar Hosein's Interpretation of the End Times: Rudolf Bultmann's Hermeneutical Analysis of Demythology 2024-08-22T19:30:00+07:00 Ulviana Ulviana [email protected] Fahruddin Faiz [email protected] Adriano da Silva Carvalho [email protected] <p>whether his interpretations are grounded in a coherent epistemological framework or primarily driven by intuitive reflection. The analysis draws on Rudolf Bultmann's hermeneutic theory of demythology as a comparative lens, given its focus on reinterpreting mythological elements to address existential concerns, particularly in the context of discussions about the future rather than historical facts. The research employs a literature-based approach, utilizing primary sources such as Hosein's works on eschatology and Bultmann's writings on demythology, alongside secondary sources from relevant academic literature. The findings reveal notable methodological parallels between Hosein’s interpretations and Bultmann’s demythologization, particularly in their shared use of hermeneutic techniques. However, a key distinction lies in their epistemological foundations: while Bultmann approaches the New Testament through a Christian existentialist lens, Hosein’s interpretations are deeply rooted in Sufi epistemology and his perspective as a Muslim scholar interpreting the Qur'an.</p> 2025-04-24T00:00:00+07:00 Copyright (c) 2025