Re: Who is the Trinity to Christians & Muslims?
Thank you for your explanation. Based on what you say, though, it sounds, again, like no Muslim can have any real assurance that he will go to heaven before Allah pronounces that verdict after the judgment. There are indeed verses that seem to give some assurance of mercy and forgiveness, but, again, it seems to boil down to a person's life---how he lived it, or more correctly, how Allah sees the life and judges it ("Allah on the Day of Judgment will judge people according to what they did, [even things smaller than the atom, as it says in the Qur'an], according to what their hearts held" etc.). The problem, of course, is sin and how we get it forgiven and whether we can KNOW it's forgiven, now before we get to the judgment.
We all sin and have need of forgiveness, as we said, daily if not hourly. For the Christian who is saved (received God's gift of eternal life and assured of going to heaven), he still needs forgiveness for those sins committed before he dies, not because his sins will send him to hell (since they are already paid for at the cross), but because his fellowship with God is broken by such sin. The promise a Christian has for such forgiveness is found in 1 John 1:9, which says, in context:
1 John 1:
6. If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.
7. But if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.
8. If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.
9. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
10. If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.
I'm wondering if the Quran has something comparable, whereby there is a definite promise like that... if you do a..b..c.. then you have forgiveness (not hope to have, but really have, forgiveness NOW).
Peace
you see the thing in Islam, is that Allah swt does not point at us you go to heaven, you go to hell, but the thing with the Qur'an and Sunnah is that it shows you the signs, the traps, the chararistics of one who will go to Hell, and one who will go to Heaven.
for example we don't and usually avoid calling a muslim a munafiq (hypocrit), who posseses hypocrit's characteristics, but we know that if you do certain things, you become a munafiq, but we don't point with fingers. so we know what makes you a hypocrit, but we don't put a stamp on the paper, to confirm for someone that he is a hypocrit. same is with wether we go to hell or heaven. We know what makes you win heaven, and what makes you go to Hell, but we don't confirm things, bc we are not the ones who do that. cuz Allah is the one who decides, who knows . We don't have enough knowledge to know people's hearts. So Allah on the Day of Judgment will judge people according to what they did, (even things smaller than the atom, as it says in the Qur'an) , according to what their hearts held, and if they deserve mercy, Allah will give them mercy, if not , He will not give them mercy. And Allah swt knows who he gives mercy.
the thing is that a person may be a very good muslim, do all good deeds, avoid haram stuff but we don't say "He will go to heaven", bc then I am like confirming God's decision. and I shouldn't. That's why we don't know. bc we can't confirm it, we are not the one who confirm things. But Allah swt tells us in Qur'an in many places, that who will deserve to go to heaven and who to hell.
please read all the verses, so you can understand what i'm trying to say.
[verses read, but omitted here to keep the size of this shorter]
ok , now I just posted some of them, cuz there are plenty, but you do you what I am trying to say, Allah swt tells us the signs, that make you recieve his mercy, or the traps, the ditches, which make you go to Hell. But that's why we don't confirm, bc we can say "Ok, he is a good muslim, he prays 5 times a day, he pays zakat, he fasts, performs pilgrimage, does this and that...so he deserves Jannah", now the problem with this is that, we don't have authority to say about someone that he will enter paradise.
an example:
when you apply for job, they say, you need to:
Have skills on such things
Have knowledge on such things
Be good in communication,
Be nice with people ....etc etc. as you usually see on job market.
now, you know what are the things which you need to have, to get the job, but can you garantee and say I will get that job?? no you can't, so your dutie is to fulfill those requirements, and then if you do , if they want, they will accept you to take the job.
I tried my best to explain. may Allah forgive me if I made a mistake somewhere.
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Thank you for your explanation. Based on what you say, though, it sounds, again, like no Muslim can have any real assurance that he will go to heaven before Allah pronounces that verdict after the judgment. There are indeed verses that seem to give some assurance of mercy and forgiveness, but, again, it seems to boil down to a person's life---how he lived it, or more correctly, how Allah sees the life and judges it ("Allah on the Day of Judgment will judge people according to what they did, [even things smaller than the atom, as it says in the Qur'an], according to what their hearts held" etc.). The problem, of course, is sin and how we get it forgiven and whether we can KNOW it's forgiven, now before we get to the judgment.
We all sin and have need of forgiveness, as we said, daily if not hourly. For the Christian who is saved (received God's gift of eternal life and assured of going to heaven), he still needs forgiveness for those sins committed before he dies, not because his sins will send him to hell (since they are already paid for at the cross), but because his fellowship with God is broken by such sin. The promise a Christian has for such forgiveness is found in 1 John 1:9, which says, in context:
1 John 1:
6. If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.
7. But if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.
8. If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.
9. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
10. If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.
I'm wondering if the Quran has something comparable, whereby there is a definite promise like that... if you do a..b..c.. then you have forgiveness (not hope to have, but really have, forgiveness NOW).
Peace