Ansar Al-'Adl
Jewel of LI
- Messages
- 4,681
- Reaction score
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- Religion
- Islam
Islamic scholars?! These people have secular degrees from secular institutes in the west; they do not even qualify as students of knowledge, let alone scholars. Just to be considered Al-Hâfidh, you need to have memorized the entire Qur'an and 100 000 Ahâdith with their chains of narration. Let us take a look at the first person on your list:You deemed the authors in my bibliography to be secularists, when they are Islamic scholars
Asma Barlas - no religious education at all. Her degrees are in English Literature and Philosophy from Kinnaird College for Women in Lahore Pakistan; Journalism from the University of the Punjab, Lahore Pakistan; and International Studies from University of Denver, Colorado. She does not posses even a single qualification in ANY branch of Shari'ah yet you advance her as an Islamic scholar??
This is a sad joke. None of the people you mentioned are Islamic scholars. Their only education is from secular institutes, their understanding of Islamic law is severely limited, and yet, you want me to throw out real Islamic scholarship of the past 14 centuries for the opinions of a handful of secularists? No, thank you.
Nonsense. Anyone who has studied the Shari'ah knows the scientific basis for scholarly Ijma' and its extension to all major religious issues. Provide the name of even ONE distinguished jurist in Islamic history who has differed from the consensus.And only someone with an extremely narrow view of Islamic intellectual traditions could ever say that there has been a "unanimous consensus of Muslim scholars for 14 centuries" on anything beyond the absolute essentials, e.g. the Qur'an as Divine Discourse.
Extremely narrow view? I think the extremely narrow view is the one held by those who seek to dispose of the Sunnah, the understanding of the Salaf, and the scholarly consensus for over a millenia because it is not in-tune with the current fancies of a handful of western-educated secularists.
A Muslim should be willing to fully submit to the Creator and follow Islam as it was revealed by Him in the Qur'an, implemented by the Prophet in the Sunnah and as it was understood by the immediate recipients of the message. If you have a misunderstanding about Islamic law you can have that clarified for you, but there is no need to change the religion.
