Rintrah wrote on Nov 15
th, 2008 at 11:27pm:
All action, by all people, occurs within the scope of Allah (swt), shaitan is as much a servant of Allah (swt) as we all are, we just exist in different levels of acknoweledgement of this fact. That is why Imam Ghazzali defined the truest measure of disbelief as being whether or not an individual, when confronted with the evidence, called the Prophet (sws) a liar.
Mohammed (sws) was a perfect human being, not in that he had an absence of error, but that he had is possessing of no imperfection of intention, which in Islam is the measure of sin.
The above two are important ways in which Christianity and Islam differ. For Christians, many assume that God somehow does not control satan, and that the fall of humankind was a rebellion against God. For Muslims, a rebellion against God is impossible, for one cannot rebel against an all powerful being. We perform actions within the scope of Allah's (swt) creation, but not outside the Divine Will of God. Thus sin is willed by God (as shown in a hadith that refers to humankind being erased were it not to sin) as it is a reflection of one of His divine names: the Rahmen, as mercy cannot occur without action that deserves mercy.
The Christian conception of Christ is of a being without error and without sin, yet a being that questions his fate 'forsaken me', a 'part' of the 'one' that prays to himself.
The idea that God or Islam could be 'evil' is illogical. As 'evil' is not an 'objective' concept. If we accept that Allah (swt) is the one God, and the submission to this fact is the perfection of humanity, then it follows that what is not submission is evil, and what is, is good.
Similarly if one denies this fact, and creates his or her own gods and prophets, what is not alligned with that world view will be evil in turn. So yes, Islam could be 'evil' if 'evil' is defined as being that which a non Muslim is not.
So Islam is fatalistic? There is no free will? One cannot rebel against God, because that rebellion would have to be willed by God in the first place? I think this is a fundamentally different view of God.
Quote:That's because they know the Bible is full of monotheism
This just keeps getting more and more absurd. You argue that Christians are polytheists, but they don't believe in multiple gods because they know the bible is monotheistic?
Quote:You can try to rationalise it however you like, the fact is there's 3 distinct entities that they claim make up God.
I have two arms, two legs, a nose, a mouth etc. Does this make me many people?
Quote:I do, and they believe God is 3 entities... this is polytheism.
No. Polyehism is believing in many Gods.
Quote:The Trinity is a Christian doctrine, stating that God exists as three persons
Did you actually read that Abu? It says one God.
Quote:but all three persons are in themselves, coeternal and coequal; and so we must worship the Trinity in unity and the one God in three persons.
How many Gods again Abu?
Quote:So I do defer to them freediver
So you changed your mind? Christianity is about one God now?