I don't know what happened to my reply,
Take 2
Yeah, Islam and muslims are very widely defined. Every monotheist can be a muslim and not every muslim is a muslim...
But then, would Moses still be considered a muslim, if he believed there was no hell?
Depends on his knowledge,
Is it wrong for the Jews, who don't belive in hell and claim the same for Moses, to say he was not a muslim? Is it wrong for them to say Moses wasn't a muslim, because according to their faith he did not believe in the day of the Judgement?
I would consider it wrong because we are taking our source to provide evidence for a historical personality, if we cannot provide reasonable evidence to conclude that the sources are highly probable of being accurate then it is wrong for us to say such and such a person believed such and such.
Would you think it would be right for me to say to someone, Whatsthepoint said.... if I cannot show my sources are accurate? Would that not be a form of lieing upon a person?
...Some of whom claim that there are no less than 4 writers/compilers and a editor to the Torah, some claim it had 5 authors...some claim he never existed! I personally think the latter are closest to the truth.
That's probable, we would have to look at the evidences for all positions and asses the probability of all.
Even if 3 more people wrote the Torah, it is odd that Moses didn't say anything about the day of the judgement, hell etc in the parts he wrote.
Well we would have to see which interpretation of the evidence is most probable.
The evidence you have given is that the Torah does not speak of the day of Judgement, now the next step would be to interpret this evidence, various interpretations could be given, it could be that Moses never spoke about it, or that the authors left it out deliberately, or that the sources of the authors had left it out, or that it became lost in oral tradition etc.
We would have to view which interpretation is most probable.
And even if he did believe in those things and for some reason didn't write them down, it's up to muslims to prove he ahd knowledge of them. If you can't prove that clearly, it is a part of your faith. And your faith is no better than that of the Jews, who belive Moses was not a muslim.
Yes, muslims would have to show why they believe Moses believed in any tenets. And muslims would have to show that their sources are right and justified and accurate, right?
As for your statement that our faith is no better than the faith of the Jews than thats not right, because you have to check what the faith is based on.
Theories can be put into the same categories of theories, but it does not make them all the same strength. Faith can be put in a category of faith, but it does not mean all are of the same strengths!
Eesa