illumination
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What is Islams stance on gaining entry into heaven?
What is Islams stance on gaining entry into heaven?
Could I ask the obvious point why Gd in his infinite wisdom cares whether you believe in "all" of the prophets?
That you'd need to believe in monotheism, and that you'd need to live a just life, following a moral code is one thing, but why on earth he follows which of the prophets you believe in or not doesn't exactly follow.
To then say but we believe in God is irrelevant. You can't pick and choose what you like about God and what you don't, what you accept from God and what you don't.
As you've presented through your message (the story and raison d'être of Islam) it is a "universal" message, as Christianity is.
That a sceptic would wonder, well is there as a stipulation by its theologians to justify the place of Islam above the other religions,
Hence why this condition seems to me almost like a party line: get behind it or else.
and why ultimately everyone, including the ahl-al-kitab need to convert and not stick to their old ways? Rather than having multiple ways towards salvation.
Especially when you're not of that generation that apparently "rejected" them when clearly if it had been true, you would have had more reason to believe it if the signs were there.
Christianity is not universal. It did not exist before Christ (peace be upon him). Different story that current day Christianity is not what Christ (peace be on him) preached. Islam is what always was, and has always been, the true and natural religion, the only message. Submission and surrender to Allah, and obeying His commands and guidance sent to us through His messengers. It is what Noah (peace be upon him) preached, what all the prophets and messengers preached, culminating in the last messenger Muhammad (may the peace, salutations and blessings of Allah be upon him), who was sent not just for a specific people at a specific time, but for the whole world, for all time to come.
No, this is not a stipulation originated from theologians. This is from God Himself, as He has stated/commanded many times in the Qur'an, though I have only picked very few quotes here for brevity, and through the Prophet (peace be upon him), as taught to him by God through angel Gabriel (peace be upon him),and recorded in the hadeeth.
Belief in all the prophets and messengers, is a part of the Islamic creed. Disbelief in one prophet, immediately takes one outside the fold of Islam. This is not a party line, or a line of Muslims only, but of all, who at their time obeyed their messengers, be that at the time of Noah, or Moses, or Jesus or Muhammad (peace be on them all). It is God's line, not ours.
Also, to point out, that ultimately, salvation is through Allah's mercy.
The Quran addresses verses directly to the Children of Israil, beginning them, "O Children of Israil". And some verses are about them, so that we do not repeat the same mistakes. In some verses, they are chastised for their killing and rejection of some of the Prophets.
You may not be of that generation, but you are here, here and now, and you are responsible for your own belief, and for the choices you make with regard to that. Some of your ancestors in faith were guilty of open rebellion against God and his messengers. But you don't have to be. The next natural step, is to accept Islam. The Qur'an states that it confirms the Torah, and the Injeel given to Jesus (Peace be upon him), and to believe in all the scriptures that God revealed, including the Torah and Injeel, is part of our articles of faith, even if we weren't around at the time those books were in their unadulterated original forms. Moses (peace be upon him) is the most mentioned Prophet in the Qur'an. You will feel like you have come home.
The fundamental thing that I gather from this is that Islam is about faith and not just practice.
I understand your position, but it is "universal" in the sense that it bases itself on a message that is for all mankind, and that all mankind should cling to to achieve salvation.
It is every bit as universalist in its presentation of complete package that is necessary condition for acceptance by the Almighty by "replacing" the previous messages.
I'd still respectfully disagree. The way I see it, a universal message from God has to be applicable to all times, all people and all places. If we take Christianity as it is today, it is about God begetting Christ (peace be upon him) and Christ (peace be upon him) being saviour. Did Noah (peace be upon him) preach that? No. Did Abraham (peace be upon him) preach that? No. Does God change his mind about the essential message for humanity? No. As for it being for all mankind, in the Bible, there is a statement attributed to Jesus (peace be upon him) saying, "And I was sent not but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." (Matthew 15:24) He is also said to have instructed the disciples : "These twelve Jesus sent out, instructing them, “Go nowhere among the Gentiles and enter no town of the Samaritans, but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." (Matthew 10:5-6)
Jesus's mission was not as a messenger to all mankind, as Prophet Muhammad peace be on him was, but to the Children of Israel.
Indeed, those who disbelieve in Allah and His messengers and wish to discriminate between Allah and His messengers and say, "We believe in some and disbelieve in others," and wish to adopt a way in between - They are in truth disbelievers. And We have prepared for the disbelievers a humiliating torment. But they who believe in Allah and His messengers and do not discriminate between any of them - to those He is going to give their rewards. And ever is Allah Forgiving and Merciful. (4:150-152
To reiterate, rejection of any Prophet, is rebellion against God who sent that Prophet, and rebellion against God's guidance and instruction. And since they all came with the same essential message, and based on the above verse, rejection of one is rejection of them all, no matter how much you may claim to accept and follow others. It is a very serious matter. We don't need to have been witness at a material time to see if such and such a prophet really existed or what the circumstances were or if there were any signs. We know it to be true, because we have the unchanged word of God.
From their characters and the message they brought, it was not difficult for righteous people at their respective times to know that they were true prophets from God. You still have a chance to accept all the Prophets that God sent, and say, yes, I believe in all the honoured messengers God sent, without rejecting or discriminating against any of them, culminating in Muhammad (peace be on him).
Say, "We have believed in Allah and in what was revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, and the Descendants, and in what was given to Moses and Jesus and to the prophets from their Lord. We make no distinction between any of them, and we are Muslims [submitting] to Him." And whoever desires other than Islam as religion - never will it be accepted from him, and he, in the Hereafter, will be among the losers. (3:84-85)
This perhaps may explain in some ways, my logical discomfort with the insistence that only those who follow the full line, nomatter their good deeds, their good character, their sound faith in the One Gd, still have no hope for salvation.
Jesus however, I assume alongside some others, was sent just to the Children of Israel, not to everyone else. Why exactly?
Why wait so long for a final one, while constantly sending ones that are only meant for one particular people, with a message particular for them? Or was the Jewish people special in this?
According to Islamic teaching then, every nation was sent a prophet (all of which I assume were unsuccesful), before finally sending Mohammed who was for all of mankind.
Jesus however, I assume alongside some others, was sent just to the Children of Israel, not to everyone else. Why exactly?
Why wait so long for a final one, while constantly sending ones that are only meant for one particular people, with a message particular for them? Or was the Jewish people special in this?
It's blind faith though.
Also blind faith to assume that at that particular time it was a black and white division of the righteous that recognized them and that none of those that didn't were righteous, particularly the closer one gets to the present day.
Equally, except for the Islamic stipulation that there will be no other prophet following Mohammed, what would make you or not make you believe a certain person in your time and place who claimed prophesy? Would it be the person's popularity, his message, some flukes?
This quote needs a little comment, I think. Gurufabbes, you know, there is not a single serious Islamic scholar of whom I'm aware who would state that anyone has no hope of salvation (or I would say: God's Mercy), unless God Himself has Revealed that that particular person has no hope. Frankly, the question of who is destined for Paradise, and who for Hell, is not for us humans to say. We can give the general outlines that God had Given us, and the interpretations we make of these guidelines, but in the end, we do not know. Only God truly Knows.
(smile) But I still invite you to continue opening this door of dialogue with Muslims. Because whatever you understand from these conversations, would you agree that the more we humans struggle and try to understand His Will and get close to Him (and considering these things with others, and examining ourselves through others, is part of this struggle), the better it is for us, both in this life and the Next?
Why do you assume this? (smile) And indeed, it is not a correct assumption. We actually don't know for sure the identity of all of the prophets. But those few of whom we are aware (those specified in the Qur'an and ahadith), at least some prophets had small followings who believed, and one (Yunus, or Jonah (Peace be on him)) was definitely successful in preaching to the whole community of people to whom he was sent.
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