I'm an agnostic now

  • Thread starter Thread starter The-Deist
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 363
  • Views Views 51K
Status
Not open for further replies.
That's because you're lazy. You don't want to commit to religion because you think it's a "burden". Now you're free of all these obligations and restrictions Islam has put on you so go listen to that music garbage and feel free to go dating. That's what you wanted anyway. Allah knows how long you'll last. You're most definitely going to feel like trash and then you're going to go back to "looking for the truth".

There's no easy way out of this life unless you're willing to go to hell. You're well aware of all this. What do you think's gonna happen after you die? Rot in your grave for all eternity? Or do you think God is going to send you to heaven because your belief in him was just enough? Well it's not. Period.

Apologies for my harshness, but you honestly don't know how upset i am right now. You were gifted with Islam. You were shown the truth. You know what the outcome of an apostate/kaafir is. Yet you're willing to perish in you're afterlife for what? For your desires and friendship in this world. Pitiful.

Allahu musta'aan.
 
Hi StrivingForDeen,

The biggest trap spiritually is a person believing in that what he likes and disbelieving in what he dislikes.
One has to figure out if they want the truth even if its is bitter or believe what they like and blind themselves.
You have a journey ahead should you at some point want the truth instead of what you like or dislike. We all do. This is a trap almost everyone falls in at some level for some issue.




Anyways I am someone who prefers to live with no religion but a belief. And my thoughts are not only influenced by Islam.
 
Dr. Gary Miller

The City of Iram
The Qur'an mentions a city by the name of Iram (89:7). The city of Iram has been unknown to history, so unknown that even some Muslim commentators, out of embarrassment for feeling apologetic for their religion, have commented on this mention of the city in the Qur'an as being perhaps figurative, that Iram was possibly a man and not a city.
In 1973 the excavation in Syria at the site of the ancient city of Eblus uncovered the largest collection of cuneiform writings on clay tablets ever assembles. In fact, the library discovered in Eblus contains more clay tablets that are more that four thousand years old than all other tablets combined from all the other sites.
Interestingly enough, you will find the details in the National Geographic of 1978 which confirms that in those tablets the city of Iram is mentioned. The people of Eblus used to do business with the people of Iram. So here in these comes confirmation of the fact that, after all, there really was an ancient city by that name, wherever it was. How did it find its way into the Qur'an, we might ask?
Those Muslims who may have offered their commentary trying to explain away this reference that they were uncomfortable with, were outsmarted by the author of the Qur'an. They would attempt it. Primarily their actions would involve trying to produce evidence that the author of this book had a primitive understanding of the world around us.
 
Very wierd. Since I became a kaffir my Dads and me relationship took a toll. I don't even want to visit him. He's a committed muslim so it's annoying to be in the same house where a religion that you are not committed to in any way practised to the fullest.
 
Again shows you left islam as you dislike it. When I was an atheist, my parents practice of islam did not bother me. I just had no proof. So I did not believe in it nor did i practice it. I asked them i will believe if you give me proof. no one had the answers.

Its not reasonable that just because you dont believe in islam you should be bothered by your fathers practice. Unless you have some serious dislike for it.

You are not looking for the truth. You are looking for what you like and dislike. That is not going to get you to the truth.

Almost all cases of people I know who converted from islam to other religons do so because they dislike or hate some part of islam. I have never heard even a half baked logical reason for going from islam to another religion. Always people running after their desires and emotions not anyone looking for the truth.



Very wierd. Since I became a kaffir my Dads and me relationship took a toll. I don't even want to visit him. He's a committed muslim so it's annoying to be in the same house where a religion that you are not committed to in any way practised to the fullest.
 
Even the devil believes in One God. Belief in God is worthless unless you worship him. Until you figure out what that word (Worship) really mean, you will never even know what God really means.

If you figure out what worship really means and what monotheism really mean by comparing various forms of monotheism, you will find the true religion of God.

Until then you may believe in One God, just as much as Iblis also believes in One God.


Anyways I am someone who prefers to live with no religion but a belief. And my thoughts are not only influenced by Islam.
 
Last edited:
It's the fact that my fathers practise of Islam seems a little forced.
 
It's never too late. Back then I was just like you too. I feel emptiness has darkened my eyes and I also helplessly beg for my life to end, but all of that changed when I put my faith in Allah(swt) and trusted him in all and whatever affairs I have in life.
 
That is good news. If you invoke Allah's(swt) help, he will send you 1000 angels in succession so don't feel empty anymore. The love of Allah(swt) to his slaves is eternal and is the greatest love of all. Alhamdullilah. Inshaallah I hope we all reach jannah. :D
 
Dude......

Just accept Islam say the shahadah, and that is it.

Better to be a Muslim than a Kafir. The Quran is pure monotheistic. How can anyone doubt Islam's purity? I know you don't.

I have problems too... But know Allah is Most Merciful, so He SWT won't overburden you. If you feel overburdened, then relieve yourself of that which overburdens you, but don't leave the deen!

2 minutes to do wudhu, 5 minutes to pray. 7 x 5 = 35 minutes.

Bang.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Similar Threads

Back
Top