Ok, so as someone who does not follow a particular religion very closely, the reasoning behind certain behaviors in all religions kind of eludes me.
I've spending a little bit of time reading other posts on these boards and notice all of the practices that Muslims follow in their daily lives.
What strikes me as strange though, is if God/Allah is an immortal being that knows all and knows what's in your heart (and some would argue that he also knows your fate and where you'll be spending your days when you die), then why are the ritualistic practices necessary?
This applies to ppl of all religions and I don't mean to offend with my terminology. For example, praying 5 times a day. I'm assuming it's in the Qu'ran, but WHY is it in there? Doesn't God already know the he is loved and praised? Or he should at least already know (whether your pray or not) whether what you feel in your heart for him is genuine.
It seems that the major religions are fundamentally similar. All of them lead people to strive to be better people. To give to charity, to live wholesome lives, to praise God. It seems that the only differences are how people go about doing these things. Different rituals, different methods. Jews don't eat pork, fast on Yom Kippur and don't eat bread during passover. Christians go to Midnight Mass and eat communion, (and bunnies lay eggs on Easter). And Muslims fast on Ramadan, pray 5 times a day and all this other stuff. But all those things are different methods of achieving the same ultimate goal. Is it all really necessary?
I've spending a little bit of time reading other posts on these boards and notice all of the practices that Muslims follow in their daily lives.
What strikes me as strange though, is if God/Allah is an immortal being that knows all and knows what's in your heart (and some would argue that he also knows your fate and where you'll be spending your days when you die), then why are the ritualistic practices necessary?
This applies to ppl of all religions and I don't mean to offend with my terminology. For example, praying 5 times a day. I'm assuming it's in the Qu'ran, but WHY is it in there? Doesn't God already know the he is loved and praised? Or he should at least already know (whether your pray or not) whether what you feel in your heart for him is genuine.
It seems that the major religions are fundamentally similar. All of them lead people to strive to be better people. To give to charity, to live wholesome lives, to praise God. It seems that the only differences are how people go about doing these things. Different rituals, different methods. Jews don't eat pork, fast on Yom Kippur and don't eat bread during passover. Christians go to Midnight Mass and eat communion, (and bunnies lay eggs on Easter). And Muslims fast on Ramadan, pray 5 times a day and all this other stuff. But all those things are different methods of achieving the same ultimate goal. Is it all really necessary?