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Spiritual words from the koran (Read 14446 times)
Soren
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #45 - Aug 21st, 2009 at 9:36pm
 
Sprintcyclist wrote on Aug 21st, 2009 at 8:15am:
In all honesty, I have seen no spirituality here.



Who's surprised??!

There is no 'spirituality' in Islam. It is about obedience to an oriental potentate called Allan, not about the billowing, expanding spirit that recognises its own divine nature in the created world.

In Islam men are automatons. There is no free will and so there is no dialogue or relationship with the divine, there is no SHARING in the divine with Allan.


There is no spirituality in a creed that puts god so completely outside the world and removes him so completely from creatures. There is nothing in common between Allan and humans. Spirituality is not a word in Islam.


You are projecting, to speak like Freud for a moment.





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Soren
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #46 - Aug 21st, 2009 at 9:54pm
 
It is for incomprehending illiterates to imagine god as an Oriental potentate after he was imagined as a man.

The relationship, the politics,  between people is a reflection of how they comprehend god (even atheists have a comprehension of god), another word for universal order, purpose and meaning.

The 30 years war, the French revolution, first and second world wars were, for this reason, major spiritual crises for the Christian west.

Not any massacre, not the conquest of the Hindu Kush, not the Armenian bloodbath of 1915, nothing of any magnitude was ever a spiritual crisis for Islam.

Spint, you are looking for spirituality where it ain't.

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abu_rashid
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #47 - Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:09pm
 
Sprint, I provided you with quite a few rich spiritual quotes, as I guessed though you weren't interested in them sincerely. You merely opened the topic to invite flames and make claims  Islam is devoid of spirituality. Sure you play the innocent impartial referee of the thread, who quite clearly did ask people not to resort to such things, but you knew it was going to happen, and seem quite pleased with it.

Since your idea of spirituality is God having offspring, and hanging dead on a piece of wood... then for a surety you are not interested in anything Islam has to offer. It doesn't have fairytales, where you dupe yourself into thinking God can sacrifice himself (the omnipotent creator and sustainer of all existence sacrificing himself?).

In my estimation, words like "Nobody truly believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for his ownself" are the pinnacle of spirituality. What kind of purer heart can there be than the one which places the needs of his fellow man above his own? Sure we're going to hear the nonsensical rants about "This is only for fellow Muslims", likewise half of the 'spirituality' in the Bible is only for fellow Israelites, does that detract from it's spirituality though? And we both know that In practice Christians don't even manage to implement the lofty spiritual message of their book towards their own fellow Christians, let alone towards all of mankind.

Perhaps you could learn a thing or two from Muhammad's (pbuh) advice that "Whoever believes in God and the last day, should say what is good or keep silent"?? The number of times you've spoken ill of others, their religion and things they hold dear is uncountable. If you truly believe in God, and in a day of reckoning, then I think you definitely have a spiritual message to learn from these words of Muhammad (pbuh). One day, you _will_ be accounted for all you do here, for all you say, and for your treatment of others. Do you feel confident that your manner here is in line with the spiritual teachings of even your own book?

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Soren
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #48 - Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:27pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:09pm:
Sprint, I provided you with quite a few rich spiritual quotes, as I guessed though you weren't interested in them sincerely. You merely opened the topic to invite flames and make claims  Islam is devoid of spirituality. Sure you play the innocent impartial referee of the thread, who quite clearly did ask people not to resort to such things, but you knew it was going to happen, and seem quite pleased with it.

Since your idea of spirituality is God having offspring, and hanging dead on a piece of wood... then for a surety you are not interested in anything Islam has to offer. It doesn't have fairytales, where you dupe yourself into thinking God can sacrifice himself (the omnipotent creator and sustainer of all existence sacrificing himself?).

In my estimation, words like "Nobody truly believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for his ownself" are the pinnacle of spirituality. What kind of purer heart can there be than the one which places the needs of his fellow man above his own? Sure we're going to hear the nonsensical rants about "This is only for fellow Muslims", likewise half of the 'spirituality' in the Bible is only for fellow Israelites, does that detract from it's spirituality though? And we both know that In practice Christians don't even manage to implement the lofty spiritual message of their book towards their own fellow Christians, let alone towards all of mankind.

Perhaps you could learn a thing or two from Muhammad's (pbuh) advice that "Whoever believes in God and the last day, should say what is good or keep silent"?? The number of times you've spoken ill of others, their religion and things they hold dear is uncountable. If you truly believe in God, and in a day of reckoning, then I think you definitely have a spiritual message to learn from these words of Muhammad (pbuh). One day, you _will_ be accounted for all you do here, for all you say, and for your treatment of others. Do you feel confident that your manner here is in line with the spiritual teachings of even your own book?




Oh please!!!


Tell us what is new in Islam that is not evil and destructive and then we can learn something from it.

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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #49 - Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:29pm
 
ROTFLMAO

Once again Aboo all you do is attack and once again it is Christianity you target.

Yet your ignorance of the religion is again unbelievable.

I'm Christian yet I don't believe in the Trinity.  You don't even understand the concept of the Trinity.
You don't understand the importance of Christ or His nature.

As for...  "Nobody truly believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for his ownself"  if I was a Muslim fundamentalist that might mean being a martyr.  No thanks.

You cannot truthfully expect anyone to believe that Muslims do not give preferential treatment to fellow Muslims.  You may say this is NOT so but it is a reality.

As for this... "And we both know that In practice Christians don't even manage to implement the lofty spiritual message of their book towards their own fellow Christians, let alone towards all of mankind."

Puhlease remove the mote from your own eye first.

As for Moe's secresy act...  "Whoever believes in God and the last day, should say what is good or keep silent"  no wonder we have problems with Muslim terrorists etc...  everyone is silent.  FFS...  try this instead.
Whoever believes in God and the last day, should tell the truth"

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abu_rashid
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #50 - Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:53pm
 
soren,

Quote:
Tell us what is new in Islam that is not evil and destructive and then we can learn something from it.


When you bring me Islamic texts that claim God said "Show no mercy, have no pity, kill the old, the young, the children" etc. then you can speak. Until then, anything that exudes from your mouth is nothing but utter bovine faeces.

Grendel,

Quote:
I'm Christian yet I don't believe in the Trinity.


Then you're not really a Christian, according to almost all denominations of Christianity. The trinity is part of the fundamental creed that every mainstream branch of Christianity holds as it's core belief.

If you don't believe in the trinity, then my beliefs about Christ (and that of all Muslims) are probably closer to Christianity than yours.

Quote:
You don't even understand the concept of the Trinity.


I think I understand it quite well, i just don't believe in it, that's all. God the 'father', God the 'son' and God the 'spirit' make up a 'unified Godhead' in which God exists as 3 exppressions of oneness. It is "Clayton's monotheism", the monotheism you have when you're being a polytheist. The hindus and many other polytheists actually subscribe to a similar kind of belief. Practicing polytheism, but claiming it's really just an expression of monotheism. In the one breath recognising the fidelity of monotheism, yet completely sweeping it aside to practice polytheism.

Regardless, the trinity wasn't even mentioned, and since you claim you don't even believe in it, then what's it got to do with our discussion? Whether I understand it or not?

Quote:
You don't understand the importance of Christ or His nature.


You're right, I don't understand the importance Christians attach to him, nor the nature they claim he has. I think it's blasphemous, and I don't know how any human could lower themselves to believe in such things.

Quote:
if I was a Muslim fundamentalist that might mean being a martyr.  No thanks


And likewise if I was a Christian fundamentalist, then "Do unto your neighbour as you'd have him do unto you" could mean burning down the abortion clinic next to my house... no thanks.

Quote:
You cannot truthfully expect anyone to believe that Muslims do not give preferential treatment to fellow Muslims.  You may say this is NOT so but it is a reality.


Nowhere did I state such a thing. It's a clear fact Muslims give preferential treatment to fellow Muslims. Don't you give preferential treatment to your family? If so, then you can understand the preferential treatment between Muslims.

Quote:
"Whoever believes in God and the last day, should say what is good or keep silent"  no wonder we have problems with Muslim terrorists etc...  everyone is silent.  FFS...  try this instead.


It's about speaking good, kind words, not about concealing the truth. Only someone as twisted as you could make that out of those words.
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #51 - Aug 22nd, 2009 at 10:06am
 
LOL

I am really a Christian  Roll Eyes  
That's the problem people keep telling you things and you live in denial.

To be a Christian you only have to believe in Christ and his teachings  Roll Eyes

Actually the Trinity has only one God not 3...  the "expressions"  as you put it are descriptions of aspects of God's character/nature.  I don't believe in the Trinity doctrine either.  Catholics do.  You keep referring to Catholicism as Christianity.  All the churches that accept the Trinity doctrine have slightly different variations of it.  Just as Islam has different variations/interpretations within it.

If you understood the Trinity you wouldn't make the stupid statements you make about it.

Quote:
Regardless, the trinity wasn't even mentioned,

Quote:
Since your idea of spirituality is God having offspring, and hanging dead on a piece of wood... then for a surety you are not interested in anything Islam has to offer. It doesn't have fairytales, where you dupe yourself into thinking God can sacrifice himself (the omnipotent creator and sustainer of all existence sacrificing himself?).

Liar liar pantaloons on fire.  
Clearly you don't understand Christ, Christianity or the concept of the Trinity.

Quote:
And likewise if I was a Christian fundamentalist, then "Do unto your neighbour as you'd have him do unto you" could mean burning down the abortion clinic next to my house... no thanks.


LoL well I expected that...  another pathetic example...  yes some Christians do wrong.  That is the nature of man.  But in Christian society those people are punished by the law...  not heralded as heroes of the faith as was just witnessed in Libya.  Kill hundreds of infidels and become a hero.

Under Islam becoming a martyr by killing innocents is acceptable under Christianity killing innocents is not. Killing anyone is not.  Muslims go to great lengths to justify why their victims are not innocent and they even look to fellow Muslims as acceptable collateral damage.  There's a special place in heaven for them.

Oh and no... I didn't twist anyone's words... you are brainwashed and in denial of the Truth.

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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #52 - Aug 24th, 2009 at 12:08pm
 
Grendel wrote on Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:29pm:
ROTFLMAO

Once again Aboo all you do is attack and once again it is Christianity you target.

Yet your ignorance of the religion is again unbelievable.

I'm Christian yet I don't believe in the Trinity.  You don't even understand the concept of the Trinity.
You don't understand the importance of Christ or His nature.




I'm 100% with you on this Grendel.






As an analogy ppl, think of God as H2O.

If H2O were God, is a raindrop NOT God?

Is a river NOT God?

Are clouds NOT God?

Is one tiny sea, among the collection of vast oceans, NOT God?

Is a puddle of water outside my house, NOT God?

If H2O were God, all of these manifestations of H2O would still be God, and God would still be one.

If H2O were God, all manifestations of H2O, would still be God.


John 3:6
That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.
7  Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again.
The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit.
9  Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be?
10  Jesus answered and said unto him, Art thou a master of Israel, and knowest not these things?
11  Verily, verily, I say unto thee, We speak that we do know, and testify that we have seen; and ye receive not our witness.
12  If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye believe, if I tell you of heavenly things?


God, is spirit.

And we, are spirit, within flesh.

So, where is God???

I'll let you ponder the answer to that question yourself.




In the KJV Bible, a search of the phrase "LORD of hosts", gets 245 hits.

Meditate on that fact.

Our bodies, are the hosts, for God's spirit.

1 Corinthians 3:17
If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are.i

Quote:
As for...  "Nobody truly believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for his ownself"  if I was a Muslim fundamentalist that might mean being a martyr.  No thanks.

You cannot truthfully expect anyone to believe that Muslims do not give preferential treatment to fellow Muslims.
  You may say this is NOT so but it is a reality.

As for this... "And we both know that In practice Christians don't even manage to implement the lofty spiritual message of their book towards their own fellow Christians, let alone towards all of mankind."

Puhlease remove the mote from your own eye first.

As for Moe's secresy act...  "Whoever believes in God and the last day, should say what is good or keep silent"  no wonder we have problems with Muslim terrorists etc...  everyone is silent.  FFS...  try this instead.
Whoever believes in God and the last day, should tell the truth"




Yes he can, because abu is a moslem.

And we, are not.




Where is the concept of universal humanity
unambiguously
expressed within ISLAM?

It is not.

ISLAMIC foundational scripture itself, screams of the prejudice moslems must exhibit against 'unbelievers'.

Yet moslems, to your face, will deny it.

Because all good moslems are liars, and deceivers [of those outside their ranks].



EXAMPLES FROM THE KORAN,

"....take not the Jews and the Christians for your friends....
......he amongst you that turns to them (for friendship) is of them."

http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/engagement/resources/texts/muslim/quran/...
[i.e. those 'moslems' who make sincere friendships with unbelievers,
ARE unbelievers
]



"Let not the believers Take for friends or helpers Unbelievers rather than believers: if any do that, in nothing will there be help from Allah:"

http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/engagement/resources/texts/muslim/quran/...




"O ye who believe! Take not for friends unbelievers rather than believers: Do ye wish to offer Allah an open proof against yourselves?"

http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/engagement/resources/texts/muslim/quran/...



And how are all 'unbelievers' to be treated by good moslems?


"O ye who believe! Fight those of the disbelievers who are near to you, and let them find harshness in you, and know that Allah is with those who keep their duty (unto Him)."

http://www.usc.edu/schools/college/crcc/engagement/resources/texts/muslim/quran/...



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« Last Edit: Aug 24th, 2009 at 12:54pm by Yadda »  

"....And he said unto him, If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead."
Luke 16:31
 
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abu_rashid
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #53 - Aug 24th, 2009 at 12:56pm
 
Grendel,

Quote:
I am really a Christian


Don't get me wrong. If you don't believe in the trinity, then I think you are more of a follower of Christ than the trinitarians are, since they ascribe something to God which is just ridiculous. So if you are indeed not trinitarian, then I applaud you for that.

Quote:
Actually the Trinity has only one God not 3...  the "expressions"  as you put it


Hence the reason I used the term 'expressions'.

It's still a form of polytheism though. Just like the Hindus believing all their idols are expressions of the divine being, is also polytheism. Or the Zoroastrians believing their dualistic God are just the two expressions of the one divine being, is also polytheism... and so on. 2, 3, 3000, they all fall short, even if only slightly of recognising the absolute oneness of God.

Quote:
Catholics do.  You keep referring to Catholicism as Christianity.


Perhaps because they are Christians? In fact the largest and most historical group of Christians? Besides, Orthodox and most Protestant groups also believe in the trinity, which we've been through before.

Quote:
All the churches that accept the Trinity doctrine have slightly different variations of it


The vast majority follow the Nicean declaration, which we've been through before.

Quote:
Just as Islam has different variations/interpretations within it.


Not on central matter like that. All Muslims unanimously agree that God is absolute oneness, having no co-gods, no co-expressions, no co-beings of any form, shape or description whatsoever. Anyone who does not believe this, is not a Muslim.

Quote:
If you understood the Trinity you wouldn't make the stupid statements you make about it.


For someone who doesn't believe in it... you sure seem to want to defend it. As I said, I understand it, I just still think it's polytheism. Anything other than belief in absolute unadulterated oneness, is polytheism. No matter how minor, abstract or esoteric it is, it's still polytheism. Jesus (pbuh) worshipped God, and trinitarians worship him. Therefore they place an intermediary between themselves and their creator. The fact they claim he is God, makes no difference, in fact that just clearly exposes their polytheistic beliefs. A true monotheist does not worship something which itself worships something, he worships only the one who worships no other.

Quote:
LoL well I expected that...  another pathetic example...  yes some Christians do wrong.  That is the nature of man.


Nature of man, or nature of Christians? When Muslims do wrong, you seem to think it's about the religion, and not about the flawed human being... Bit hypocritical fi you ask me..

Either way, I merely wrote that, to indicate how childishly stupid yuor comment was. Think about it.

Quote:
But in Christian society those people are punished by the law...  not heralded as heroes of the faith as was just witnessed in Libya.  Kill hundreds of infidels and become a hero.


When Western soldiers return home, after having killed, raped and pillaged Muslims, they get hero's welcomes too.. So nothing really uneven there.

Besides, the poor guy is dying, the Scots are indeed a merciful and noble people.

Quote:
Under Islam becoming a martyr by killing innocents is acceptable under Christianity killing innocents is not.


This simply isn't true. Islam specifically forbids killing of non-combatants. Muhammad (pbuh) clearly forbade it in his sayings. Those who do so don't do it because they're flawed humans though right? It's because they're Muslims.. only Christians are afforded such a dispensation.

Actually Christianity doesn't say anyhting about killing of innocents, neither forbids nor condones... but the OT certainly does condone.
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Soren
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #54 - Aug 24th, 2009 at 10:16pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Aug 21st, 2009 at 11:53pm:
soren,

Quote:
Tell us what is new in Islam that is not evil and destructive and then we can learn something from it.


When you bring me Islamic texts that claim God said "Show no mercy, have no pity, kill the old, the young, the children" etc. then you can speak. Until then, anything that exudes from your mouth is nothing but utter bovine faeces.




Faulks, who turned to the Koran while researching his latest novel, said: 'It’s a depressing book. It really is. It’s just the rantings of a schizophrenic. It’s very one-dimensional, and people talk about the beauty of the Arabic and so on, but the English translation I read was, from a literary point of view, very disappointing.

'There is also the barrenness of the message,' he told The Sunday Times. 'I mean, there are some bits about diet, you know, the equivalent of the Old Testament, which is also crazy.

'But the great thing about the Old Testament is that it does have these incredible stories. Of the 100 greatest stories ever told, 99 are probably in the Old Testament and the other is in Homer.

'With the Koran there are no stories. And it has no ethical dimension like the New Testament, no new plan for life. It says ‘the Jews and the Christians were along the right tracks, but actually, they were wrong and I’m right, and if you don’t believe me, tough — you’ll burn for ever'. That’s basically the message of the book.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1208629/Author-Sebastian-Faulks-risks-Mu...

“Jesus, unlike Muhammad, had interesting things to say,” Faulks said.

“He proposed a revolutionary way of looking at the world: love your neighbour; love your enemy; the meek shall inherit the earth. Muhammad had nothing to say to the world other than, ‘If you don’t believe in God you will burn for ever’.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article6806488.ece


ANd waddaya know, the imam's rolled out with the usual nonsense:

Ajmal Masroor, an imam and spokesman for the Islamic Society of Britain said Faulk's statements ran the risk of stirring religious hatred against Muslims.
'Attacks on Islam are nothing new, but the danger is this will have a 'drip, drip' effect. People don't seem to understand the consequences of saying things like this could be quite severe. History tells us it can encourage hatred.'



Yeah, hatred BY Muslims. Can't be critical of Islam, or god forbid, dislike it or find it tedious and empty. That's an attack. "Ve haf vays to make youse love us, inshallan."


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« Last Edit: Aug 24th, 2009 at 10:33pm by Soren »  
 
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abu_rashid
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #55 - Aug 24th, 2009 at 10:26pm
 
As I said, utter bovine faeces.

Come on, literary reviews from trashy tabloids? Lift your standards a little soren.

For every Faulk, there's thousands who've read the Qur'an (even in the insuffient English translations) and have been so touched and moved by it, have embraced Islam. Too bad you can only hear the Faulks of this world... otherwise you might get a more objective view.
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #56 - Aug 24th, 2009 at 10:42pm
 

The book is empty and boring. There is nothing in it except what Faulks summarised above. It is astonishingly repetitive, disjointed, it is a rambling mish-mash and a rant. Most Muslims have never read it. If they dip into it they soon prefer to learn it by heart in archaic Arabic, a language they do not understand, than to read it in the language they do. It is, as I said, inexplicably and astonishingly disjointed, repetitive and pointless . 
And there is nothing new in it. Nothing.
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #57 - Aug 25th, 2009 at 12:12am
 
Quote:
The book is empty and boring. There is nothing in it except what Faulks summarised above. It is astonishingly repetitive, disjointed, it is a rambling mish-mash and a rant


So I take it you've read it? After all, who would give such an authoritative review without actually having read it... Other than a complete dolt.

And I mean read it, not just come across a few selective quotes on jihadwatch...

Quote:
Most Muslims have never read it


I have read it, and continue to read it daily. And compared to most Muslims I know, I'd consider myself fairly slack..

Quote:
If they dip into it they soon prefer to learn it by heart in archaic Arabic, a language they do not understand


I do prefer to read it in Arabic, not because I don't understand it, but because it's meaning is so much more intense in Arabic. There are very few archaic terms in the Qur'an. Most of the vocab used in the Qur'an, can be heard on al-Jazeerah or any other daily news channel.

Quote:
than to read it in the language they do. It is, as I said, inexplicably and astonishingly disjointed, repetitive and pointless


As to those who reject Faith, it is the same to them whether thou warn them or do not warn them; they will not believe. Allah hath set a seal on their hearts and on their hearing, and on their eyes is a veil; great is the penalty they (incur).

Your eyes and heart are sealed, so it's not surprising it does not reach you. You are not interested in hearing what the Qur'an or Islam has to say from the outset, and made up your mind, probably long before you even heard a single verse of the Qur'an.

Quote:
And there is nothing new in it. Nothing.


I'm sure any book you can lay your hands on has something new in it. This statement just indicates how blinded you are by your absolutism. So when the Qur'an predicted the battle between the Romans and the Persians, in which the Romans won, that was not new? Was already known? When it explained the stages of foetal development that was already known? When it said the universe was expanding, that was already known? When it predicted the sun will one day collapse in on itself, that was already known/? I think not. I think you are indeed someone with a diseased heart. Consumed and overwhelmed by your own hatred and prejudice, so as to suspend all reason and logic from penetrating your view of Islam. I pity you.
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #58 - Aug 25th, 2009 at 12:37am
 
Be careful not to over-egg the cake, Abu. There are other spiritual texts which make predictions about the fate of the world... A Buddhist belief that the earth will be consumed by fire from the sun for example... You could stretch that to say the enlightened ones foresaw the sun becoming a red giant, destroying the earth, before it collapses. Even the (embarrassing) Book of Revelations dabbles in futurism... Without even mentioning non-religious futurist writers like Nostradamus.

Every now and then futurist writers jag one or two.
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Re: Spiritual words from the koran
Reply #59 - Aug 25th, 2009 at 2:26am
 
Quote:
As to those who reject Faith, it is the same to them whether thou warn them or do not warn them; they will not believe. Allah hath set a seal on their hearts and on their hearing, and on their eyes is a veil; great is the penalty they (incur).

Your eyes and heart are sealed, so it's not surprising it does not reach you. You are not interested in hearing what the Qur'an or Islam has to say from the outset, and made up your mind, probably long before you even heard a single verse of the Qur'an.


Well there is a paradox at play if you really believe that Abu.
That god could seal someone off from exploring new ideas, for that is the very thing that all religions demand from their faithful, and a profound reason why many thereby reject all religions as merely dogmatism.
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OOPS!!! My Karma, ran over your Dogma!
 
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