SyrianFellow
Senior Member
- Messages
- 93
- Reaction score
- 9
- Gender
- Male
- Religion
- Islam
Salam Alaikum,
My knowledge of Islam is very limited, and I tend to increase it daily.
I have had a small argument with a fellow friend and I am confused on what to reply,
I recently posted a video where a Christian converted to Islam called "How the Bible Led Me to Islam: The Story of a Former Christian Youth Minister - Joshua Evans" (I cant post direct links since I am new sorry)
and he replied with,
"A switch from Christianity to Islam would be analogous to a switch from Cocaine to Methamphetamine"
then I replied, knowing that he was an Atheist,
"If you don't believe in a God, try answering this,
A scholar, Bediuzzaman Said Nursi once said:
" Every village must have its headman; every needle must have its manufacturer and craftsman. And, as you know, every letter must be written by someone. How, then, can it be that so extremely well-ordered a kingdom should have no ruler?"" (Found the quote on this website)
Later he replied with,
"The scientific consensus on that question is immediately applicable - but why would I bring that up (this is the part where you critically think)?
Anyways, to which kingdom does Nursi refer? Is it just the Earth? If so, then his scope is not only limited, it's laughably dismissible. Does he refer to all of reality, which includes the universe? Then his question is meaningless and not worth considering (I apologize for not elaborating, but a quick example should suffice - any god that could create the universe, the entire universe, and still care about how people on a tiny mote of dust slept with each other, does not make sense; it would be like you creating life on a cell in some bacteria at the bottom of the ocean [given that the ocean itself is analogous to the universe] and caring, once back on land, about how that life behaved; utterly ludicrous, especially given that every god that humanity has created has been distinctly human in nature).
But let's not debate god's existence, because that's better left for the classroom. I am, as I should be, open to the idea of god. I was being facetious with my first comment, but of course I was serious in that I am against religion, the organized and public form of private faith. Don't jump from Islam/Christianity to god, because there is a distinction between religion and its protagonist."
Could anyone help me reply to his recent message?
Jazak Allahu Khairan.
My knowledge of Islam is very limited, and I tend to increase it daily.
I have had a small argument with a fellow friend and I am confused on what to reply,
I recently posted a video where a Christian converted to Islam called "How the Bible Led Me to Islam: The Story of a Former Christian Youth Minister - Joshua Evans" (I cant post direct links since I am new sorry)
and he replied with,
"A switch from Christianity to Islam would be analogous to a switch from Cocaine to Methamphetamine"
then I replied, knowing that he was an Atheist,
"If you don't believe in a God, try answering this,
A scholar, Bediuzzaman Said Nursi once said:
" Every village must have its headman; every needle must have its manufacturer and craftsman. And, as you know, every letter must be written by someone. How, then, can it be that so extremely well-ordered a kingdom should have no ruler?"" (Found the quote on this website)
Later he replied with,
"The scientific consensus on that question is immediately applicable - but why would I bring that up (this is the part where you critically think)?
Anyways, to which kingdom does Nursi refer? Is it just the Earth? If so, then his scope is not only limited, it's laughably dismissible. Does he refer to all of reality, which includes the universe? Then his question is meaningless and not worth considering (I apologize for not elaborating, but a quick example should suffice - any god that could create the universe, the entire universe, and still care about how people on a tiny mote of dust slept with each other, does not make sense; it would be like you creating life on a cell in some bacteria at the bottom of the ocean [given that the ocean itself is analogous to the universe] and caring, once back on land, about how that life behaved; utterly ludicrous, especially given that every god that humanity has created has been distinctly human in nature).
But let's not debate god's existence, because that's better left for the classroom. I am, as I should be, open to the idea of god. I was being facetious with my first comment, but of course I was serious in that I am against religion, the organized and public form of private faith. Don't jump from Islam/Christianity to god, because there is a distinction between religion and its protagonist."
Could anyone help me reply to his recent message?
Jazak Allahu Khairan.