| 2 years ago :: Apr 12, 2011 - 11:58AM #1 | |
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Islam, Peace and Tolerance, pp. 11-14
2. Freedom of Religion in Islam It is intended to show here that Islam recognizes complete freedom of belief for every human being, and that, consistently with this principle, it does not prescribe any punishment whatsoever for a person who leaves the religion of Islam to adopt some other faith. (1) No Compulsion in Religion The Holy Qur’an altogether excludes compulsion from the sphere of religion. It lays down in the clearest words: “There is no compulsion in religion – the right way is indeed clearly distinct from error.” – 2:256 In fact, the Holy Qur’an is full of statements showing that belief in this or that religion is a person’s own concern, and that he is given the choice of adopting one way or another. If he accepts the truth, it is for his own good, and that if he sticks to error, it is to his own detriment. Some quotations to this effect are given below: 1. “The Truth is from your Lord; so let him who please believe and let him who please disbelieve.” – 18:29 2. “We have truly shown him (man) the way; he may be thankful or unthankful.” – 76:3 3. “Clear proofs have indeed come to you from your Lord: so whoever sees, it is for his own good; and whoever is blind, it is to his own harm. And I am not a keeper over you.” – 6:104 4. “If you do good, you do it for your own souls. And if you do evil, it is for them.” –17:7 The duty of the Messenger of Allah and, following him, the duty of every Muslim, is only to deliver the message of truth and no more. This is indicated in the Holy Quran in passages such as the following: 1. “If they accept Islam, then indeed they follow the right way; and if they turn back, your duty (O Prophet) is only to deliver the message.” – 3:20 2. “And obey Allah and obey the Messenger, but if you turn away, the duty of Our Messenger is only to deliver the message clearly.” – 64:12; see also 5:92 3. “Say (to people): Obey Allah and obey the Messenger. But if you turn away, he is responsible for the duty imposed on him, and you are responsible for the duty imposed on you. And if you obey him, you go aright. And the Messenger’s duty is only to deliver (the message) plainly.” – 24:54 4. “O people the truth has indeed come to you from your Lord; so whoever goes aright, goes aright only for the good of his own soul; and whoever goes astray, goes astray only to its detriment. And I am not a custodian over you.” – 10:108 5. “Surely We have revealed to you (O Prophet) the Book with truth for people. So whoever goes aright, it is for the good of his own soul, and whoever goes astray, goes astray only to its detriment. And you are not a custodian over them.” –39:41 6. “We have not appointed you (O Prophet) a keeper over them, and you are not placed in charge of them.” – 6:107 7. “Your duty (O Prophet) is only the delivery of the message, and Ours (God’s) is to call (people) to account.” – 13:40 8. “And your people (O Prophet) call it (the message) a lie while it is the truth. Say (to them): I am not put in charge of you” – 6:66 9. “And those who keep their duty (i.e., Muslims) are not accountable for them (i.e., the unbelievers) in any way, but their duty is only to remind; perhaps they (the unbelievers) may become devout.” – 6:69 10. “And you (O Prophet) are not one to compel them. So remind by means of the Quran him who fears my warning.” – 50:45 The Quran tells us that it is the natural order of things that while some people believe, others do not, and no human being should apply compulsion to others in this regard. The Holy Prophet Muhammad is told: “And if your Lord had pleased, all those who are in the earth would have believed, all of them. Will you then force people till they are believers?” —10:99 The above verse refers to the deep anxiety felt by the Holy Prophet that people should embrace the message brought by him. Elsewhere his feelings of pain are expressed as follows: “Then perhaps you will kill yourself with grief, sorrowing after them, if they do not believe in this message.” – 18:6 As the Holy Prophet was grieving and sorrowing over the fallen state of his deniers and their rejection of his message, and pleading day and night before God that the Almighty may bring them to the right guidance, he could not even conceive of resorting to coercion to compel them to accept him. A passage which recognizes that different people follow different religions is as below. It tells the whole of mankind: “for everyone of you We appointed a law and a way. And if Allah had pleased He would have made you one religious community, but He wishes to try you in what He has given you. So vie with one another in virtuous deeds. To Allah you will all return, and He will then tell you about your differences.” – 5:48 We deal with this passage further in Section 9, p. 73. (1) This Section and Section 4 benefit from the following authoritative writings by Maulana Muhammad Ali, and expand upon the material in these sources: 1. The English Translation of the Holy Quran with commentary, in particular the section Liberal View of Other Religions in the Introduction, 1951. 2. The book The Religion of Islam, chapter Jihad, 1936. 3. Bayan-ul-Quran, the Urdu commentary of the Holy Quran, under relevant verses 1922-1924. [cont'd] |
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 12, 2011 - 11:58AM #2 | |
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Christians pray in Holy Prophet’s mosque |
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 12, 2011 - 12:55PM #3 | |
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perhaps it would help if you could define for us... what is Islam... in your words?
does Islam exist on earth? where does it exist? can you name an Islamic country?
the law of the land? ya, you know... what E Howard Hunt spent his life defending. oh right, executive orders as signed by the president, gotcha!. try telling me Northwoods doesn't ring of 911 with a straight face.
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 13, 2011 - 2:13AM #4 | |
Yep, I'd also be curious to see the answers to this. I'd also like to know whether Muslims are required to regard the ahadith as authoritative.
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 13, 2011 - 5:45PM #5 | |
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To Aka_me and Kinky.christian, |
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 13, 2011 - 7:19PM #6 | |
thank you for the reply. I can understand and respect the effort and sincerity that went into it. what I am hearing, is that it is an idea, or ideal. a goal, and not an object.
what I find frustrating... is how the majority of Muslim believers do nothing to protect the reputation of Islam. by allowing the smallest minority of Muslims to do bad things, in harming innocent people... it appears that the majority are actually condoning the injustice. the Will of God, is justice among humanity. what better starting point than having Muslims fixing the injustices created by Islam?
the law of the land? ya, you know... what E Howard Hunt spent his life defending. oh right, executive orders as signed by the president, gotcha!. try telling me Northwoods doesn't ring of 911 with a straight face.
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 14, 2011 - 10:50AM #7 | |
>>>>>>>>> Yes this "Smallest minority" often causes misunderstanding about Islam. Even between Muslims!! However historically that is how every faith groups have been tested. "Smallest minorities" put others in trouble. It is WRONG to think no one is doing nothing about it. But Muslims are working to change it and it has gotten much better. Majority Muslims are not confused by fanatics anymore. They are looked up as fanatics!! Recent democratic movement by the mass shown the world that our aspirations for freedom and democracy is no different than universal aspirations of humanity. They are literally giving lives to establish peace, democracy and rule of law. Hope you are watching....
>>>>>>>> As I said democratic movement among Muslims has shown they are not condoning any injustice but they were not in a position to do anything about it. Now they are doing their best to make it a better world for all of us.
>>>>>>>>>> Correction. Islam does NOT promote injustice. Rather it has been very vocal against injustice. Justice is a cornerstone of Islam. I welcome you to learn more about Islam for a better understanding. It always helps to have a nice discussion if you have some idea about authentic Islam. Islam is percfect ( IN my biased opinion), Muslims are not!)
O ye who believe! stand out firmly for Allah, as witnesses to fair dealing, and let not the hatred of others to you make you swerve to wrong and depart from justice. Be just: that is next to piety: and fear Allah. For Allah is well-acquainted with all that ye do. [ Source: Al Qur'an 5:8] |
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| 2 years ago :: Apr 14, 2011 - 1:42PM #8 | |
thank you, I do consider myself to be a Muslim (in addition to a Zoroastrian, Jew, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, culminating in the sum total of Baha'i). I believe Muhammad (pbuh) was the prophet of Allah. I believe the revelation of Muhammad was perfect. it perfectly fit the time, place, and audience it was revealed for. however we are living in a new dispensation, with global scale problems that did not exist during Muhammad's time, for which previous revelation is not complete enough to CONTINUE being perfect. humans are imperfect. and humans, through their imperfections, will never be able to improve God's revelation. therefore humans cannot improve the state of Islam as it exists today. one missing piece... is an authoritative body in charge of defining "what is Islam". the suicide bombers have just as much right and authority to define "what is Islam"... as the posters here have.
the law of the land? ya, you know... what E Howard Hunt spent his life defending. oh right, executive orders as signed by the president, gotcha!. try telling me Northwoods doesn't ring of 911 with a straight face.
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