Some hadith are not very.....pleasent
Dawud :: Book 40 : Hadith 4588
Narrated AbuRafi':
The Prophet (peace_be_upon_him) said: Let me not find one of you reclining on his couch when he hears something regarding me which I have commanded or forbidden and saying: We do not know. What we found in Allah's Book we have followed.
Shaykh Yasir Qadhi said on the matter over at AlMaghrib Forums with regards to the "Submitters":But the point is if you deny an authentic Hadith, you're a kafir.
To disbelieve in even one hadith after it has been authenticated renders your Islam incomplete.Salaam Alaikum
Yes, this group that you mentioned (the "Submitters") are not Muslims, by unanimous consensus of the Ummah. They believe that the Sunnah is not a source of law, and thus reject the very concept of following it. They pray three times a day, with only ruku/sujood (i.e., only what the Quran says). They consider it shirk to follow the Prophet (saw).
Hence this group should be treated as non-Muslim
Wa Salaam
Yasir
Source
Why does the Qur'an tell us to accept what the Prophet pbuh gives and leave what he forbids? Why doesn't it say to accept and leave only what the Qur'an permits and forbids?
59:7 So take what the Messenger assigns to you, and deny yourselves that which he withholds from you. And fear Allah. for Allah is strict in Punishment.
It is not against our agreement.I hope me responding in this thread will not be going against the truce I have with Ansar-al-Adl as this thread is a debate thread.
Unfortunately for you, since you reject Ahâdîth, you lack any objective criterion as to what constitutes the 'correct' understanding' and what does not; it is no more than your thoughts since you yourself concede that you lack even a basic understanding of Mustalah Al-Hadith.and show how clearly the correct understanding should be, with the will of Allah, the Most Wise.
This ludicrous notion that Dhikr refers exclusively to the Qur'an is annihilated by SEVERAL verses in the Qur'an which use Dhikr to refer to many other revelations beside the Qur'an. Only one counterexample is necessary to refute such an assertion:First let us establish that the 'zikr' (reminder) refers exclusively to the Qur'an
This is a textbook example of the logical fallacy we call petitio principii or circular reasoning. You project your presupposed interpretation onto the verse and then cite it as evidence for that very same interpretation! Many of the references you cite are indeed references to the Qur'an. But it is inherently fallacious to evince from such a premise that the reference is exclusive to the Qur'an.The reminder (zikr) refers to the Qur'an, as we also see from other verses:
This is where some basic linguistics comes into play. The word mentioned in the ayat is لتبين meaning to provide البيانelucidation, clarification, explanation in order to make it clear. The notion that it refers to mere deliverance of the message is exploded in the following paragraph which I quote directly in arabic:( * ) tubayyina
Does this word mean give additional details?
The translation is established on the simple basis of the arabic language which is known to even the layman, and is in concordance with the Qur'an and Sunnah.The translation you give says 'explain', however we shall see that the Qur'anic translation [sic!!] of the word shows us that the english 'explain' is not an accurate translation.
THis verse actually constitutes a DECISIVE REFUTATION of your position! The People of the Book here are condemned for failing to pass the message to THEIR PEOPLE. It is not Prophets being referred to here who failed their duty. It is ordinary people. They were not concealing something that God had revealed by means of divine inspiration to their souls. NO, they were concealing the knowledge of their religion that they possesed, i.e. THE SCHOLARS. They failed to TEACH their people and concealed the KNOWLEDGE of the religion from them. Thus, the word here again refers to teaching and explaining the religious teachings.Let us look at another verse which uses the same word:
And God took the covenant of those who were given the Scripture: "You will make it clear (latubayyinunna) to the people and not conceal it (taktumuuna)." But they threw it behind their backs and purchased with it a cheap price. Miserable indeed is what they have purchased. [Qur'an 3:187]
In the above, Allah tells us how others who were given the Scripture and were entrusted 'to make it known' (tubayinah) to people what was given to them, and not conceal it (taktumuna). 'taktumuna' is used to mean 'to conceal and hide', and is used as a direct opposite to 'tubayyina'.
WRONG. 'naba' is the word you are thinking of and that is why Prophets are Anbiya, sing. Nabi, because they announce, disclose, and make known to the people the impending day of judgement. The word tubayyina means to clarify, elucidate, explicate, explain something so that it is made clear. It is the Sunnah of the Prophet saws which clarifies the Qur'an in both his actions and sayings.We see from the above, that Qur'anic meaning of the word 'tubayyina' is to 'disclose' or 'let it be known' and not 'give additional details' as you are suggesting.
The problem is you're quoting selective lines from english-arabic translation dictionaries rather than quoting the full definition from the arabic lexicons as you should be; here is a short sample:The word has the root ba-ya-na. Which gives us the meanings:
"To be or become manifest, evident." - A Dictionary and Glosarry of the Koran by J.Penrice pp-21
"Be evident, render clear." - Arabic English Dictionary by F. Steingass pp-155
"Manifest, bring into view, disclose." - Al Mawrid Arabic English Dictionary pp-256
"To show, Manifest" - Al Asri Arabic English Dictionary pp 85
"To be or become plain, Evident, come out, visible, to announce." - Hans Wehr Arabic-Eng. Dictionary pp-87
Wrong. It is not to make something known, it is to make something CLEAR as we have witnessed above the Sunnah functions to clarify, elucidate and explain the Qur'an.It is saying that the reminder (the Qur'an) has been sent down so that the Messenger shall let it be known to all people (tubayyina), instead of keeping it to himself.
So you have CONCEDED the challenge and admitted that:A revealed scripture, such as the Qur'an, the Torah, or Injeel, do not have to be the only sort of inspiration to its respective messenger. We see that people of the past have received knowledge, or inspiration, yet those inspirations were not parts of any Scripture. Prophet Yusuf's father said:
He said: "I merely complain my grief and sorrow to God, and I know from God what you do not know." [Qur'an 12:86]
This knowledge he received was not part of a Scripture.
Prophet Yusuf was also given the 'knowledge' of intepreting dreams [12:6].
However this knowledge given to him was not part of a Scripture.
Maryam was met by an angel who spoke to her on behalf of Allah, however there is no indication that those words uttered by the angel were to be part of any scripture bieng revealed to Maryam. [19:16-21]
The Prophet may well have been given knowledge, such as the actions of his wives outside of the Qur'an, however that knowledge given by Allah, and the revelation of the verses of the Qur'an, are two very different things. That is because the Qur'an is a Scripture (kitab), consisting of revealed verses, these are revealed to be part of a complete guide (the Qur'an attests to it bieng a complete book of guide). However other knowledges to the Prophet may not be in the form of verses.
Ansar Al-'Adl said:The Prophet pbuh says in the above ayat that God informed him about what his wives had done (naba'aniyal aleem al-khabeer) : show me the ayat in the Qur'an where Allah swt disclosed this information. If you cannot then you must concede that the Prophet pbuh recieved other divine information not mentioned in the Qur'an.
So I guess you won't be celebrating Eid with us since it is not found in the Qur'an! It seems you will also be abandoning Salah, Zakat, Wudu, Fasting, Hajj, and for that matter every single Islamic practice since the Qur'an only gives the general directive to establish prayer but provides no details as to number of rakaa'a, arkaan, shuroot, etc. etc.The fact that the Prophet may have received knowledge outside of the Qur'an, does not do anything in the way to proove that we need any source other than the Qur'an, because the Qur'an tells us it is complete and fully detailed. Any other knowledge or inspiration to the Prophet, is not neccessary for guidance (which is why it is not in the Qur'an).
Why do some people completely reject hadith?
i am wondering why? they only go by what the Quran says. and conclude that all what the prophet said along from Bukhari and the rest as fabricated
salam,
you have just used the above verse to try and prove that the Hadith are a Divine source of Law and Guidance, alongside the Holy Qur'an, which all Muslims are obliged to follow.
If only we read the WHOLE verse altogether, it becomes abundantly clear just why you had to quote only a part of it (and not all of it) to try and make your point.
When we read the whole verse, we see that what the Muslims at the Prophet's time were being commanded here, is to only take the booties / spoils of war which are assigned to them by the Prophet, and not to be greedy about it - ie. not to take what they are forbidden by the Prophet:
" What Allah gave as booty to His Messenger from the people of the townships - it is for Allah, His Messenger, the kindred (of the Prophet), the orphans, Al-Masakin (the poor), and the wayfarer, in order that it may not become a fortune used by the rich among you. And whatsoever the Messenger gives you, take it, and whatsoever he forbids you, abstain (from it) , and fear Allah. Verily, Allah is Severe in punishment. " - (59:07)
So you see, in reality, this verse has nothing to do with following Hadith, but rather it is about dealing with the booties of war! Your interpretation, br. Ansar Al 'Adl, is clearly another decietful attempt to trick the Muslim world into believing that the Hadith have some Divine Authority from Allah to be followed like the Holy Qur'an.
wsalam
Salaam Al-Fateh,
I can't speak for all, but I can tell you personally why I have rejected hadiths.
There are a number of reasons of course.
For one thing I do not believe that the Quran tells us to follow hadiths. I also do not believe that God would leave us (human beings) to sort through all of the so called saying of the Messenger and leave it up to us to decide what is fabricated and what is not fabricated. Just don't believe that at all.
Also there are plenty of hadiths that contradict eachother... and many people have their own version of the same hadiths aswell. Also there are many hadiths that even contradict the Quran.
Also this is word of mouth. This is what people have said other people said about the Messenger... who are we to take their word for it?
But anyways, it all goes back to the Quran. I've never read of Buhkari in the Quran. I've never read that there are other books to be followed aswell. Nope, not at all. And you've never read of this in the Quran aswell.
salaam
Ähmed;525394 said:
It seems that way to most of us because we dont understand some of them. That is why the Hadith Rejectors reject. They come across a Hadith that doesnt make sense to them, so they say, "It doesnt make sense to me, therefore it has to be false". They are fooling themselves and speaking about which they have no knowledge and letting their ignorance decieve them.
They claim they follow the Quran, but they are the ones who are the furthest away from following it!
And the irony of the matter is that the Messenger of Allah told us in Hadiths that there will be people rejecting Hadiths and he forbade us from doing as they do.
Shaykh Yasir Qadhi said on the matter over at AlMaghrib Forums with regards to the "Submitters":
To disbelieve in even one hadith after it has been authenticated renders your Islam incomplete.
49: 1. O you who believe! Do not put (yourselves) forward before Allah and His Messenger (), and fear Allah. Verily! Allah is All-Hearing All-Knowing.![]()
One should say, when he doesnt understand a Hadith or is confronted with one that seemingly contradicts others that he will research into the matter more, and ask the scholors and not go with what he himself desires. One should not do as the Hadith rejectors do, and claim that the hadith is false. That is putting oneself forward before Allah and His Messenger.
To disbelieve in even one hadith after it has been authenticated renders your Islam incomplete.
Salam Alaikum
You said:
I have been reading into hadith recently, quite a lot. I even spent 4 hours one day continuously read Bukhari and Muslim Authentic hadith. There are many wonderful things in the Hadith, but to fully and unconditionally accept every single hadith will mean we have to accept the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) may have forced people to convert to Islam, stoned people and tortured someone by branding their eyes. These are not the qualities of the Mercy for Mankind, the near perfect character.
I dont reject hadith, I accept them. And I am very grateful to Imam Bukhari (and Muslim), after reading how extensively he authenticated the hadith and even prayed 2 rakat before recording every hadith, I understand it must have been difficult for him. God bless their soul. However, with some hadith, such as the ones i mentioned, which I am not sure over, i dont reject them outright but am a bit cautious on them.
That is why we have scholors. It is high time we go to them and ask what does such and such a hadith mean, then go to lay people who have no knowledge in hadith, who speak of their own desires and ask them what they think! The cure for our ignorance is asking the right people isnt it?It seems that way to most of us because we dont understand some of them.
:lol: Mashallah.This is proving to be too easy!![]()
This is why I continually urge you to educate yourself on the basics of Usûl al-Fiqh, brother. The specificity of the sabab does not enable takhsîs on the generality of the statement. In fact, even common sense is enough to expose the absurdity of the notion you are advancing! Is it logical to suggest that if the Prophet saws gives us directives regarding war booty we are religiously obligated to obey, yet when he provides us with any other instructions we can disobey the Messenger of Allah?!If only we read the WHOLE verse altogether, it becomes abundantly clear just why you had to quote only a part of it (and not all of it) to try and make your point.
When we read the whole verse, we see that what the Muslims at the Prophet's time were being commanded here, is to only take the booties / spoils of war which are assigned to them by the Prophet, and not to be greedy about it - ie. not to take what they are forbidden by the Prophet
Actually, the Sahâba, may Allah swt be pleased with him, had the correct understanding of this verse:So you see, in reality, this verse has nothing to do with following Hadith, but rather it is about dealing with the booties of war!
Funny that you should accuse the Sahâba, those closest to the Prophet saws and those whom he praised continuosly, of deceit!!Your interpretation, br. Ansar Al 'Adl, is clearly another decietful attempt
This is exactly what happens with hadith-rejectors. They are not scholars but lay people who come across some Ahâdîth they find troubling and instead of going to the scholars for explanations and understanding, they allow the doubts to fester inside them and they begin to reject these hadith. The renowned scholar of Hadith, Sufyan Ibn Uyaynah said, "al-hadith madilla illa li’l-‘ulama’: ‘the hadith are a pitfall, except for the scholars."Goku said:I have been reading into hadith recently, quite a lot. I even spent 4 hours one day continuously read Bukhari and Muslim Authentic hadith. There are many wonderful things in the Hadith, but to fully and unconditionally accept every single hadith will mean we have to accept the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) may have forced people to convert to Islam, stoned people and tortured someone by branding their eyes. These are not the qualities of the Mercy for Mankind, the near perfect character.
This is why I continually urge you to educate yourself on the basics of Usûl al-Fiqh, brother. The specificity of the sabab does not enable takhsîs on the generality of the statement. In fact, even common sense is enough to expose the absurdity of the notion you are advancing! Is it logical to suggest that if the Prophet saws gives us directives regarding war booty we are religiously obligated to obey, yet when he provides us with any other instructions we can disobey the Messenger of Allah?!
Actually, the Sahâba, may Allah swt be pleased with him, had the correct understanding of this verse:
Once ‘Abdullah ibn Mas`ud quoted this saying of the Prophet while he was delivering a sermon: “May God curse the women who tattoo their bodies and those who pluck their eyebrows; those who separate their teeth to make them look more pretty and those who try to change the creation of God.” A woman named Umm Ya`qub from the tribe of Banu Asad came to know of these words. She approached Ibn Mas`ud and said, “O Abu ‘Abdur-Rahman! It was reported to me that you have cursed such and such women.” He said, “Why should I not curse those whom the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) cursed and who are cursed in the Book of God as well?” She said, “I have read whatever is contained between the two covers (i.e., the whole Qur’an).” He replied, “Had you been a good reader, you would have discovered it. Did you not read the following verse? [So take whatever the Messenger gives you and keep away from what he forbids you](Al-Hashr 59:7).”Funny that you should accuse the Sahâba, those closest to the Prophet saws and those whom he praised continuosly, of deceit!!
This is exactly what happens with hadith-rejectors. They are not scholars but lay people who come across some Ahâdîth they find troubling and instead of going to the scholars for explanations and understanding, they allow the doubts to fester inside them and they begin to reject these hadith. The renowned scholar of Hadith, Sufyan Ibn Uyaynah said, "al-hadith madilla illa li’l-‘ulama’: ‘the hadith are a pitfall, except for the scholars."
Actually bro, the hadith you are referring to was explained in my article here:
http://www.load-islam.com/artical_d...ection=wel_islam&subsection=Misconceptions#18
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Ähmed;519062 said:Its clear but it doesnt prove your point in the least.
53:3 Nor does he speak of (his own) desire.
53: 4. It is only an Inspiration that is inspired.
These verses prove that whatever the Prophet said was an inspiration from Allah. Or are you saying that when the Prophet spoke he spoke only the Quran and nothing else?!
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We shall now look at the following, by the will of Allah:
Anybody who picks up the Qur'an and reads this Surah, with an unprejudiced mind, shall see instantly as clear as daylight, that this verse is refering to the Mighty Qur'an.
We shall now look at the two verses in context by looking at its surrounding verses, please read attentively:
[53:1] As the star collapsed.
[53:2] Your friend was not astray, nor was he deceived.
[53:3] Nor does he speak from personal desire.
[53:4] It is a divine inspiration.
[53:5] He has been taught by One mighty in power.
[53:6] Free from any defect, he became stable.
[53:7] While he was at the highest horizon.
[53:8] Then he drew nearer by moving down.
[53:9] Until he became as near as two bow-lengths or nearer.
[53:10] He then conveyed the inspiration to His servant what was to be revealed.
[53:11] The heart did not invent what it saw.
[53:12] Do you doubt him in what he saw?
[53:13] And indeed, he saw him in another descent.
[53:14] By the lote-tree of the utmost boundary,
[53:15] Near it is the eternal Paradise.
[53:16] When that which shroudeth did enshroud the lote-tree,
[53:17] his eye-sight turned not aside, neither did it wander:
[53:18] and he saw some of the greatest signs of his Lord.
- Qur'an 53:1-18
Nothing further is needed to clarify that this is referring to the Qur’anic revelation. We can tell more so because the Qur’an is giving us the setting in which the Prophet found himself in. One with an unprejudiced mind would imagine how these verses could be taken to refer to anything other then the Qur’an. However we shall add further to our argument.
No word is there that indicates that is exclusively referring to the Quran. Do you not understand the translation?This is a textbook example of the logical fallacy we call petitio principii or circular reasoning. You project your presupposed interpretation onto the verse and then cite it as evidence for that very same interpretation!
You refuted yourself. You admit that there is something other than the Quran. Or are you saying the Prophet used to lie and what is in the Quran is the only truth he spoke?!The Prophet Muhammad was a messenger as well as a human. We cannot say everything he said was ‘wahi’ (divine inspiration), since he made mistakes as a human being. We find the following in the Qur’an, where the Prophet is admonished for his dealings with those who were reluctant to struggle for Allah’s cause:
God forgive you [Prophet]! Why did you give them permission to stay at home before it had become clear to you which of them spoke the truth and which were liars? [Qur’an 9:43]
If everything the Prophet said was ‘wahi’, then he would not have made errors as he had done there, he would have been infallible. And the above Qur’anic verse would not have gone against the Prophet’s speech.
You project your presupposed interpretation onto the verse and then cite it as evidence for that very same interpretation!
And who said the Ahadith and the Quran contradict each other? This is an evidence of your ignorance about the Ahadith.In another verse of the Qur’an, we are told how the Prophet prohibited something on himself when Allah had made it permissible:
O you prophet, why do you prohibit what God has made lawful for you, seeking to please your wives? God is Forgiver, Merciful. [Qur’an 66:1]
Again, if everything the Prophet uttered was divine inspiration (wahi), then why does this Qur’anic verse admonish the Prophet the way it does? If the Qur’an is wahi and the Prophets normal speech was wahi too, surely they would not contradict each other.
So, when the Prophet gave rulings to his companions on how to pray, how many rakats, which is not mentioned in the Quran it was fallible? Was he telling his companions something he made up? You have failed to answer my questions. Here they are for you again:Now, we have first read the two Qur’anic verses [53:2-3] in context in that which it is in. We then have seen by way of other Qur’anic verses, that not everything the Prophet said could be ‘wahi’. The Prophet had a distinct self where he spoke as a fallible human being, he then had a wahi which was infallible. This infallible ‘wahi’, is none other then the Glorious Qur’an.
Using the Qur'an tell me how mank rak'ah in each salat, what must be recited in salah, how do we shorten our salat when travelling?
The Quran tells you to cut off the hand of the theif. Will you cut it off of children? An insane man? Or a person that was starving to death so he had to steal food? The Quran mentions some rulings regarding Prayer, i.e shortening of it when traveling but it does not tell you HOW this is to be done. The same applies to fasting and the same applies to Zakat.
Same thing AGAIN! You are citing your [mis]interpetations and assuming it is fact![53:2] Your friend was not astray, nor was he deceived.
[53:3] Nor does he speak from personal desire.
[53:4] It is a divine inspiration.
[53:5] He has been taught by One mighty in power.
- Qur'an 53:2-5
The following verse prooves to us that the 'wahi' is the Qur'an:
So perhaps you wish to ignore some of what has been inspired to you (ma yooha ilayka), and you are depressed by it, because they Say: "If only a treasure was sent down with him, or an Angel had come with him!" You are but a warner, and God is caretaker over all things. Or do they Say: "He invented it!" Say: "Bring ten invented chapters like it, (biAAashri suwarin mithlihi) and call on whom you can besides God if you are truthful." [Qur'an 11:12-13]
In the above verse, reference is made to 'wahi'. This wahi is refered to the Surah's ('Bring ten surahs like it), and we know that the Qur'an is composed of surahs. The Prophet's normal speach is not included in this 'wahi', which the disblievers are challenged to emulate.
You project your presupposed interpretation onto the verse and then cite it as evidence for that very same interpretation!
No such conclusion has been made. In fact, the verse is referring to everything that the Prophet said that had to with religion and religious matters. Everything that he told us regarding the religion was from Allah and MOST of the details and rulings of the religion are in the Ahadith which NECCISITATES that they be preserved, few being in the Quran and those being general.We therefore conclude that Qur'anic 53:2-3 refers solely to the Qur'an. It is saying that the Qur'an's source is not the Prophet's personal desire, rather it has been taught to him by the One mighty in power.
You are proceeding on to another topic to espouse further erroneous views though you have neglected entirely my detailed refutation of your last claims. Am I to take your silence on those issues as an acknowledgement of defeat on your part? If not, I would like to see your response to my refutation before moving on to new claims.We shall now look at the following, by the will of Allah:
Now this is rather amusing. You encourage anyone to just pick up the Qur'an and give tafseer - it seems when you said 'unprejudiced mind' you really were referring to an 'uneducated mind'!!Anybody who picks up the Qur'an and reads this Surah, with an unprejudiced mind
As it stands there is no argument, only unsubstantiated assertions. You attempt to restrict the generality of the statment using neither internal nor external evidence, but only your 'imagination'. I'm afraid your 'imagination' falls short under the standard of objectivity.One with an unprejudiced mind [read: UNEDUCATED mind!] would imagine [The hadith-rejectors substitute the directives of the Prophet for imagination!!!] how these verses could be taken to refer to anything other then the Qur’an. However we shall add further to our argument.
This doubt is actually incinerated in Ma'âriful-Qur'ân, which I quote as follows:The Prophet Muhammad was a messenger as well as a human. We cannot say everything he said was ‘wahi’ (divine inspiration), since he made mistakes as a human being. We find the following in the Qur’an, where the Prophet is admonished for his dealings with those who were reluctant to struggle for Allah’s cause
Actually, it is your view that expressly contradicts the Qur'an which states that the Prophet saws never speaks in accordance with his own desire, yet you insist that he has spoken from his own desire. This doubt is refuted in what has preceded from Ma'âriful-Qur'ân.And the above Qur’anic verse would not have gone against the Prophet’s speech.
Again, fallacious reasoning at its climax! The use of 'wahi' to refer to the Qur'an does not in any way prove that it refers exclusively to the Qur'an. We know that Allah swt uses the word 'wahy' to refer to all types of divine inspiration in the Qur'an.The following verse prooves to us that the 'wahi' is the Qur'an:
It is not against our agreement.
Unfortunately for you, since you reject Ahâdîth, you lack any objective criterion as to what constitutes the 'correct' understanding' and what does not; it is no more than your thoughts since you yourself concede that you lack even a basic understanding of Mustalah Al-Hadith.
This ludicrous notion that Dhikr refers exclusively to the Qur'an is annihilated by SEVERAL verses in the Qur'an which use Dhikr to refer to many other revelations beside the Qur'an. Only one counterexample is necessary to refute such an assertion:
21:48 And We had already given Moses and Aaron the criterion and a light and a DHIKR for the righteous.
There are many other verses which refute the claim that Dhikr refers exclusively to the Qur'an such as 77:5, 21:105, 18:70, 21:7, etc. etc. All of this DEMOLISHES your ridiculous assertion that Dhikr refers exclusively to the Qur'an. Thus, you have no argument whatsoever against the use of Dhikr to encompass all of Allah's revelation, whether wahy matluw or ghayr matluw.
This is a textbook example of the logical fallacy we call petitio principii or circular reasoning. You project your presupposed interpretation onto the verse and then cite it as evidence for that very same interpretation! Many of the references you cite are indeed references to the Qur'an. But it is inherently fallacious to evince from such a premise that the reference is exclusive to the Qur'an.
Ähmed;527477 said:
No, you can tell because you are making up your own interpretation. You are doing the same thing here, as you did to the word "zikr" and Br. Ansar annihalated your fallacy:
No word is there that indicates that is exclusively referring to the Quran. Do you not understand the translation?
003.031
YUSUFALI: Say: "If ye do love Allah, Follow me: Allah will love you and forgive you your sins: For Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful."
PICKTHAL: Say, (O Muhammad, to mankind): If ye love Allah, follow me; Allah will love you and forgive you your sins. Allah is Forgiving, Merciful.
SHAKIR: Say: If you love Allah, then follow me, Allah will love you and forgive you your faults, and Allah is Forgiving, MercifuL
003.032
YUSUFALI: Say: "Obey Allah and His Messenger": But if they turn back, Allah loveth not those who reject Faith.
PICKTHAL: Say: Obey Allah and the messenger. But if they turn away, lo! Allah loveth not the disbelievers (in His guidance).
SHAKIR: Say: Obey Allah and the Messenger; but if they turn back, then surely Allah does not love the unbelievers.
003.132
YUSUFALI: And obey Allah and the Messenger; that ye may obtain mercy.
PICKTHAL: And obey Allah and the messenger, that ye may find mercy.
SHAKIR: And obey Allah and the Messenger, that you may be shown mercy.
003.164
YUSUFALI: Allah did confer a great favour on the believers when He sent among them a messenger from among themselves, rehearsing unto them the Signs of Allah, sanctifying them, and instructing them in Scripture and Wisdom, while, before that, they had been in manifest error.
PICKTHAL: Allah verily hath shown grace to the believers by sending unto them a messenger of their own who reciteth unto them His revelations, and causeth them to grow, and teacheth them the Scripture and wisdom; although before (he came to them) they were in flagrant error.
SHAKIR: Certainly Allah conferred a benefit upon the believers when He raised among them a Messenger from among themselves, reciting to them His communications and purifying them, and teaching them the Book and the wisdom, although before that they were surely in manifest error.
033.021
YUSUFALI: Ye have indeed in the Messenger of Allah a beautiful pattern (of conduct) for any one whose hope is in Allah and the Final Day, and who engages much in the Praise of Allah.
PICKTHAL: Verily in the messenger of Allah ye have a good example for him who looketh unto Allah and the Last Day, and remembereth Allah much.
SHAKIR: Certainly you have in the Messenger of Allah an excellent exemplar for him who hopes in Allah and the latter day and remembers Allah much.
033.045
YUSUFALI: O Prophet! Truly We have sent thee as a Witness, a Bearer of Glad Tidings, and Warner,-
PICKTHAL: O Prophet! Lo! We have sent thee as a witness and a bringer of good tidings and a warner.
SHAKIR: O Prophet! surely We have sent you as a witness, and as a bearer of good news and as a warner,
033.046
YUSUFALI: And as one who invites to Allah's (grace) by His leave, and as a lamp spreading light.
PICKTHAL: And as a summoner unto Allah by His permission, and as a lamp that giveth light.
SHAKIR: And as one inviting to Allah by His permission, and as a light-giving torch.
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YUSUFALI: We sent thee not, but as a Mercy for all creatures.
PICKTHAL: We sent thee not save as a mercy for the peoples.
SHAKIR: And We have not sent you but as a mercy to the worlds.
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YUSUFALI: It is He Who has sent amongst the Unlettered a messenger from among themselves, to rehearse to them His Signs, to sanctify them, and to instruct them in Scripture and Wisdom,- although they had been, before, in manifest error;-
PICKTHAL: He it is Who hath sent among the unlettered ones a messenger of their own, to recite unto them His revelations and to make them grow, and to teach them the Scripture and wisdom, though heretofore they were indeed in error manifest,
SHAKIR: He it is Who raised among the inhabitants of Mecca an Messenger from among themselves, who recites to them His communications and purifies them, and teaches them the Book and the Wisdom, although they were before certainly in clear error,
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YUSUFALI: After this it is ye, the same people, who slay among yourselves, and banish a party of you from their homes; assist (Their enemies) against them, in guilt and rancour; and if they come to you as captives, ye ransom them, though it was not lawful for you to banish them. Then is it only a part of the Book that ye believe in, and do ye reject the rest? but what is the reward for those among you who behave like this but disgrace in this life?- and on the Day of Judgment they shall be consigned to the most grievous penalty. For Allah is not unmindful of what ye do.
PICKTHAL: Yet ye it is who slay each other and drive out a party of your people from their homes, supporting one another against them by sin and transgression? - and if they came to you as captives ye would ransom them, whereas their expulsion was itself unlawful for you - Believe ye in part of the Scripture and disbelieve ye in part thereof? And what is the reward of those who do so save ignominy in the life of the world, and on the Day of Resurrection they will be consigned to the most grievous doom. For Allah is not unaware of what ye do.
SHAKIR: Yet you it is who slay your people and turn a party from among you out of their homes, backing each other up against them unlawfully and exceeding the limits; and if they should come to you, as captives you would ransom them-- while their very turning out was unlawful for you. Do you then believe in a part of the Book and disbelieve in the other? What then is the re ward of such among you as do this but disgrace in the life of this world, and on the day of resurrection they shall be sent back to the most grievous chastisement, and Allah is not at all heedless of what you do.
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Firstly it is not right to claim to follow the Quran, while rejecting sunnah of Rasoolulah (saw), because the Quran directly commands this, in Surah Aal-Imran (3) verses: 31,32,132.
Also refer to verse 164 of the same Surah (3), Surah al-Ahzab (33) verses: 45,46,21 as well as Surah al-Anbiyah (21) verse: 107. And Surah al-Jumu'ah (62) verse: 2.
Furthermore the Quran isn't something to pick and choose from, taking bits which you like and rejecting others: Surah al-Baqarah (2) verse: 85.
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