Ansar Al-'Adl
Jewel of LI
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That's your fault. How can you argue with me on a subject your ignorant of? You are unable to refute what has been recorded about the aqeedah of pre-islamic arabs because you don't understand the related sciences.tru_nigga said:Akhee i said find me proofs . Do not quote me religious literature i am not familiar with, i am not a religious scholars, i don't know the weak hadith from the sahih one.
You claim my sources may be unauthentic, yet you post from orientalists who always rely on unauthentic sources.
Jesus pbuh was a pious man yet Christians now claim that he is the son of God.A lot of what you said contradict each other, for one the koran says the three gods were daughters and you are saying they were men.
The same was true for the arabs, and the same is true for modern mushrikeen who glorify their "saints" to the position of objects of worship.
Anyways i got this from the minister of culture of the united arab emirates with a hisroric prrof found in an ancient coin:
One of the 'daughters of Allah' mentioned in Sura 53: 19-23 of the Holy Koran, Manat was a goddess of fate whose name appears, alongside that of Kahl, in an Aramaic inscription on a bronze tablet from Mileiha where she and Kahl are asked to curse anyone disturbing the grave of an individual named Wahbalât. The Semitic goddess Manat is attested as early as the third millennium BC in Mesopotamia and her worship spread as far afield as Hungary where she was worshipped by Palmyrene troops from Syria stationed there around 160 AD According to Ibn Al Kalbi's Book of Idols (Kitab al-Asnam), Manat was one of the three 'daughters of Allah', alongside Al Lat and Al 'Uzza. She was particularly venerated by the Al Khazraj and Al Aws tribes who lived between Mecca and Medina, but her worship is also attested in South Arabia and, by the Mileiha inscription, in the Emirates as well.
http://www.uaeinteract.com/history/e_walk/con_3/con3_22.asp
Lol, do you think the above paragraph is inscribed on the coin?! The only thing on the coin is the name "manat". The rest of the paragraph is based on the doubtful sources you quoted earlier.
Nor does this demonstrate anything about pre-islamic arab aqidah since it is discussing mesopotamia. This does not contradict anything I said, because I only mentioned that Manat was an idol revered by the aws and khazraj.
But the point that you were uunable to refute is that Sahih Bukhari proves that the arabs did not believe their gods had any power or control before Allah. They affirmed that Allah swt completely controlled their gods.
This is a sahih hadith from sahih bukhari.
