czgibson
Account Disabled
- Messages
- 3,234
- Reaction score
- 481
- Gender
- Male
- Religion
- Atheism
Greetings,
Clearly a different case, because not being unjustly violent is not "the single thing that precisely defines a person as a" Muslim. Lots of people who are not Muslims are also not unjustly violent.
I'm interested in seeing how you justify what I see as a dangerous state of affairs. It's up to you if you want to carry on discussing it.
This is precisely my point. The verse in the Qur'an needs extra clarification, from ahadith or even centuries of tafseers.
Lots of people interpret Islam wrongly all the time. Islam left plenty of room for wrong interpretations.
Do you really think that I've managed to spend four years on an Islamic forum without being aware of this?
All of this seems to be directed against a claim I have not made. I'm not suggesting that there is one correct, total interpretation of the Qur'an, or that there could or should be. Still, everything you say only underlines the importance of clarity in a book that is used as ultimate guidance by millions of people. In fact, regardless of what it says, any book that claims to be the direct word of god (and which is taken seriously by many) is going to give people a level of certainty in their affairs that could potentially be used in a harmful way.
Why, thank you.
But the Qur'an is constantly being described as "clear" by Muslims!
If a person's wrong interpretation of the Qur'an causes harm, yes.
Since there are abundant examples of people whose wrong interpretations of Islam have caused harm, then clearly Islam has not closed the door to distortion and misinterpretation.
Perhaps you'd like to hear my thoughts on how succesful communism has been. Please don't mention Stalin, Mao or Pol Pot, though. Same logic, right?
I'm interested in trying to find out what can be done to help Muslims and non-Muslims understand each other. It's why I've been on this forum for so long. Given the current divide that exists between us in the world, I think it would be good if more people did the same. I'm not qualified to interpret Islamic scriptures, so anything I say about them is automatically suspect, and now I'm not allowed to talk about the actions of Muslims either.
How would you suggest I continue trying to understand Islam and Muslims?
Peace
I contest your usage of this fallacy in said context. From the wiki page you linked:
So, "any man who implements the teachings of Islam in his life, would not be violent to his wife or anyone else in the first place, and would know his limits", is okay, because not being unjustly violent is what defines a follower of Muhammad SAW. Just as not eating meat defines a vegetarian
Clearly a different case, because not being unjustly violent is not "the single thing that precisely defines a person as a" Muslim. Lots of people who are not Muslims are also not unjustly violent.
islamiclife said:There is no point discussing these fiqhi matters with you because you do not even believe in Allah. Since you do not believe in Him, you will never actually understand the shari rulings. And even if you do, it would still not make you believe in Allah. So what is the point?
I'm interested in seeing how you justify what I see as a dangerous state of affairs. It's up to you if you want to carry on discussing it.
this is simply your perception. Allah did not end it there, there is a ahadith to explain what we are really suppose to do.
This is precisely my point. The verse in the Qur'an needs extra clarification, from ahadith or even centuries of tafseers.
So Islam left no room for wrong interpretations and now if some people do it how can you blame Islam for it?
Lots of people interpret Islam wrongly all the time. Islam left plenty of room for wrong interpretations.
Your post shows that you know nothing about basic Islamic science. The Qur'an and sahih ahadith are two sources of Islam and the sahih ahadith are the second revelation from Allah. They go hand in hand when explaining Islam and the rulings are not limited to just one of the two sources
Do you really think that I've managed to spend four years on an Islamic forum without being aware of this?
Secondly, just because the source is divine, does not mean that the addressees are also divine. We are limited and everyone thinks differently. Have humans ever agreed upon one thing? They do not even agree upon who there Creator is let alone more issues. It is a fallacy in and of itself, knowing our limitations, to claim that all humans should understand the Qur'an in same way. There is no evidence that even if the Qur'an would have been revealed in simplest of forms we would have agreed upon it. What evidence do you have that if Allah used a different term then we all would have agreed over its meaning and implication? We would have still argued about it. Why: because we are HUMANS!
All of this seems to be directed against a claim I have not made. I'm not suggesting that there is one correct, total interpretation of the Qur'an, or that there could or should be. Still, everything you say only underlines the importance of clarity in a book that is used as ultimate guidance by millions of people. In fact, regardless of what it says, any book that claims to be the direct word of god (and which is taken seriously by many) is going to give people a level of certainty in their affairs that could potentially be used in a harmful way.
Lastly, you do not know what is best for us; the Lord knows what is best for us. All you can do is play guessing games with your limited understanding and corrupt perception of reality and what is truth.
Why, thank you.

so what if read by millions of people and no clear to them.
But the Qur'an is constantly being described as "clear" by Muslims!
All of these people are told in the Qur'an that if you do not have knowledge then refer to those who have knowledge. Is it Islam's fault that people do not do that, even though Islam closed the door to distortion and misinterpretation?
If a person's wrong interpretation of the Qur'an causes harm, yes.
Since there are abundant examples of people whose wrong interpretations of Islam have caused harm, then clearly Islam has not closed the door to distortion and misinterpretation.
Please talk about Islam and not the actions of people!
Perhaps you'd like to hear my thoughts on how succesful communism has been. Please don't mention Stalin, Mao or Pol Pot, though. Same logic, right?
I'm interested in trying to find out what can be done to help Muslims and non-Muslims understand each other. It's why I've been on this forum for so long. Given the current divide that exists between us in the world, I think it would be good if more people did the same. I'm not qualified to interpret Islamic scriptures, so anything I say about them is automatically suspect, and now I'm not allowed to talk about the actions of Muslims either.
How would you suggest I continue trying to understand Islam and Muslims?
Peace