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islam and human sacrifice (Read 11231 times)
Soren
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #90 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 12:55pm
 
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 11:29am:
Moses, I don't think any of your quotes actually mean what you've said. Take this one:

Quote:
qur'an 8.67: It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made a great slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.


Muhammed is advising his followers not to kill prisoners of war.

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 9.20: Those who believe, and have left their homes and striven with their wealth and their lives in Allah's cause are of much greater worth in Allah's sight. These are they who are triumphant.


How does this translate into Jihad and Islamic slaughter?

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 61.4: Truly Allah loves those who fight in His Cause in battle array, as if they were a solid cemented structure.


It's about banding together and being a strong team.

Academics have argued that the Koran contains two separate things: instructions on a spiritual path; and the attempt to lay down a social order in a time of unrest (including the rules of war).

The difficulty in the Koran is that these two purposes can conflict.

Allah is uanble to come up with divine guidance for both the spirit and society?? The eternal, unchangable book has conflicting advice??  What kind of 'only one god' is Allah if he can't even manage a straght final revelation but comes up with more confusion and contradiction than before?

The reality is that these conflicting, incoherent rules and 'revelations' are Mohammed's own inventions and that is why they are so conflicting and irreconcilable.

Meshuggeh was and is correct.



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Karnal
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #91 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 1:32pm
 
Soren wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 12:55pm:
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 11:29am:
Moses, I don't think any of your quotes actually mean what you've said. Take this one:

Quote:
qur'an 8.67: It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made a great slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.


Muhammed is advising his followers not to kill prisoners of war.

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 9.20: Those who believe, and have left their homes and striven with their wealth and their lives in Allah's cause are of much greater worth in Allah's sight. These are they who are triumphant.


How does this translate into Jihad and Islamic slaughter?

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 61.4: Truly Allah loves those who fight in His Cause in battle array, as if they were a solid cemented structure.


It's about banding together and being a strong team.

Academics have argued that the Koran contains two separate things: instructions on a spiritual path; and the attempt to lay down a social order in a time of unrest (including the rules of war).

The difficulty in the Koran is that these two purposes can conflict.

Allah is uanble to come up with divine guidance for both the spirit and society?? The eternal, unchangable book has conflicting advice??  What kind of 'only one god' is Allah if he can't even manage a straght final revelation but comes up with more confusion and contradiction than before?


Good point. If Muslims saw the Koran as the straight, final revelation, they would hardly need all those aHadith to attempt to qualify it.

Nothing can possibly be the final revelation. No one can possibly be the final prophet. I'm okay with the fundamentals of Islam - there is no God but Allah and Muhammed is His prophet - but I can't go with the dogma that there's no other way. I don't even see how this squares with Islamic theology/cosmology itself if the universe is to be seen as the ever-unfolding, increasingly complex expression of Allah. There have to be other prophets.

Muslims and Christians both saw the final ascension as being just around the corner. So far, it's been 2000 years and the universe continues to happily unfold.

There are different paths for different people, but I do think the paths result in essentially the same thing: humility, mercy, peace. This is what submission means: submitting your ego to a well-trodden path, submitting to a higher force, giving up.

Muhammed is not a savior, he's a prophet. He's also dead. People who follow the path need people to guide them in this world - people who have walked the path, not just read about it.

You can get a few tips for life and submission from Muhammed and the Koran, but you still have to walk the path. You still need teachers to show you how. Muhammed is not the final teacher in the Muslim tradition, he's really the first - this, I gather, is what it means to be a prophet. Abraham established a covenant. Moses led his people out of slavery. Jesus led followers on a path of forgiveness and humility. Muhammed formed a society and established a rule of law.

None of this means anything, however, if you don't take the steps yourself. No blood covenant, or sacrificial salvation, or religious conversion will save you from having to walk the path and making progress on it. The rules are important in establishing a direction, but they're not the destination.

This is the mistake fundamentalists - both for and against Islam - make.
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moses
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #92 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:18pm
 
Karnal wrote: Quote:
Moses, I don't think any of your quotes actually mean what you've said. Take this one:

Quote:
qur'an 8.67: It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made a great slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.


Muhammed is advising his followers not to kill prisoners of war.


Not to kill prisoners of war? You jest surely? muhammad was always coming up with so called prophecies to excuse his own psychopathological deeds of inhumane perversion. In this case he unequivocally gives himself the right to slaughter rafts of people before taking any prisoners.

Quote:
Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 9.20: Those who believe, and have left their homes and striven with their wealth and their lives in Allah's cause are of much greater worth in Allah's sight. These are they who are triumphant.



How does this translate into Jihad and Islamic slaughter?


Just three of many

qur'an 4.74: Let those fight in the cause of Allah who sell the life of this world for the other. Whoso fighteth in the cause of Allah, be he slain or be he victorious, on him We shall bestow a vast reward.

qur'an 4.76: Those who believe fight in the cause of Allah, and those who reject Faith Fight in the cause of Evil: So fight ye against the friends of Satan: feeble indeed is the cunning of Satan.

qur'an 9.111: Lo! Allah hath bought from the believers their lives and their wealth because the Garden will be theirs: they shall fight in the way of Allah and shall slay and be slain. It is a promise which is binding on Him in the Torah and the Gospel and the Qur'an. Who fulfilleth His covenant better than Allah? Rejoice then in your bargain that ye have made, for that is the supreme triumph.

The qur'an unambiguously tells muslims their duty is to slay and be slain in the cause of allah (jihad  islamic slaughter).

In the verse you quoted muslims are to leave their homes to kill or be killed in the cause of allah.

Justification for those muslims who have left home to join the islamic state pure and simple



Quote:
Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 61.4: Truly Allah loves those who fight in His Cause in battle array, as if they were a solid cemented structure.



It's about banding together and being a strong team.


About banding together being a strong team while slaughtering  innocent people in the cause of allah

muslims invoke the name of allah before, during and after slaughtering their fellow man. islamic human sacrifice on a daily basis somewhere on the globe
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Karnal
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #93 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:21pm
 
moses wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:18pm:
Karnal wrote: Quote:
Moses, I don't think any of your quotes actually mean what you've said. Take this one:

Quote:
qur'an 8.67: It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made a great slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.


Muhammed is advising his followers not to kill prisoners of war.


Not to kill prisoners of war? You jest surely? muhammad was always coming up with so called prophecies to excuse his own psychopathological deeds of inhumane perversion. In this case he unequivocally gives himself the right to slaughter rafts of people before taking any prisoners.



You haven't read the bit that comes after, Moses. Muhammed is telling others not to kill their prisoners but to release them in return for a ransom.

Do you always read books like this?
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moses
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #94 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:31pm
 
Sell what's left after muslims have made a great slaughter in the land?
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Karnal
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #95 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 5:16pm
 
moses wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:31pm:
Sell what's left after muslims have made a great slaughter in the land?


I'm not sure. Why don't you read the book and get a little context?

It's not like you don't refer to these passages in every post you write. Why don't you brush up on it for accuracy?
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #96 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 8:34pm
 
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 1:32pm:
Soren wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 12:55pm:
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 11:29am:
Moses, I don't think any of your quotes actually mean what you've said. Take this one:

Quote:
qur'an 8.67: It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made a great slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.


Muhammed is advising his followers not to kill prisoners of war.

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 9.20: Those who believe, and have left their homes and striven with their wealth and their lives in Allah's cause are of much greater worth in Allah's sight. These are they who are triumphant.


How does this translate into Jihad and Islamic slaughter?

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 61.4: Truly Allah loves those who fight in His Cause in battle array, as if they were a solid cemented structure.


It's about banding together and being a strong team.

Academics have argued that the Koran contains two separate things: instructions on a spiritual path; and the attempt to lay down a social order in a time of unrest (including the rules of war).

The difficulty in the Koran is that these two purposes can conflict.

Allah is uanble to come up with divine guidance for both the spirit and society?? The eternal, unchangable book has conflicting advice??  What kind of 'only one god' is Allah if he can't even manage a straght final revelation but comes up with more confusion and contradiction than before?


Good point. If Muslims saw the Koran as the straight, final revelation, they would hardly need all those aHadith to attempt to qualify it.

Nothing can possibly be the final revelation. No one can possibly be the final prophet. I'm okay with the fundamentals of Islam - there is no God but Allah and Muhammed is His prophet - but I can't go with the dogma that there's no other way. I don't even see how this squares with Islamic theology/cosmology itself if the universe is to be seen as the ever-unfolding, increasingly complex expression of Allah. There have to be other prophets.

Muslims and Christians both saw the final ascension as being just around the corner. So far, it's been 2000 years and the universe continues to happily unfold.

There are different paths for different people, but I do think the paths result in essentially the same thing: humility, mercy, peace. This is what submission means: submitting your ego to a well-trodden path, submitting to a higher force, giving up.

Muhammed is not a savior, he's a prophet. He's also dead. People who follow the path need people to guide them in this world - people who have walked the path, not just read about it.

You can get a few tips for life and submission from Muhammed and the Koran, but you still have to walk the path. You still need teachers to show you how. Muhammed is not the final teacher in the Muslim tradition, he's really the first - this, I gather, is what it means to be a prophet. Abraham established a covenant. Moses led his people out of slavery. Jesus led followers on a path of forgiveness and humility. Muhammed formed a society and established a rule of law.

None of this means anything, however, if you don't take the steps yourself. No blood covenant, or sacrificial salvation, or religious conversion will save you from having to walk the path and making progress on it. The rules are important in establishing a direction, but they're not the destination.

This is the mistake fundamentalists - both for and against Islam - make.

Except that there is no room for this sort of unfolding in Islam.
It would be the end of Islam if, after 14010 years, someone said that the fundamental doctrine of final revelation, final prophethood, eternal unchangable essence of the Koran was up for revision.

The fatal flaw of Islam is that it is totally unbending. It has over-represented itself from the start, thanks to Mohammed's semi-literate misunderstanding of both Judaism and Christianity.

You can't make the guy who was the best of men for 1400 years a mere man who got a lot of things wrong.

There is no Islam without Mohammed as the best of men. Islam IS Mohammedanism so there is no removing him from the scene, however embarassing and patently wrong he was.  Muslims are stuck with him - hence the rioting and murdering when he is mocked and not taken seriously.




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freediver
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #97 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 10:11pm
 
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 5:16pm:
moses wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:31pm:
Sell what's left after muslims have made a great slaughter in the land?


I'm not sure. Why don't you read the book and get a little context?

It's not like you don't refer to these passages in every post you write. Why don't you brush up on it for accuracy?


Can you back up your claim please Karnal?
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Karnal
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #98 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 10:44pm
 
freediver wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 10:11pm:
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 5:16pm:
moses wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 3:31pm:
Sell what's left after muslims have made a great slaughter in the land?


I'm not sure. Why don't you read the book and get a little context?

It's not like you don't refer to these passages in every post you write. Why don't you brush up on it for accuracy?


Can you back up your claim please Karnal?


I thought I did, FD.

Feel free to answer my questions if you like.
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Karnal
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #99 - Jul 7th, 2015 at 10:46pm
 
Soren wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 8:34pm:
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 1:32pm:
Soren wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 12:55pm:
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 11:29am:
Moses, I don't think any of your quotes actually mean what you've said. Take this one:

Quote:
qur'an 8.67: It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made a great slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.


Muhammed is advising his followers not to kill prisoners of war.

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 9.20: Those who believe, and have left their homes and striven with their wealth and their lives in Allah's cause are of much greater worth in Allah's sight. These are they who are triumphant.


How does this translate into Jihad and Islamic slaughter?

Or this one:

Quote:
qur'an 61.4: Truly Allah loves those who fight in His Cause in battle array, as if they were a solid cemented structure.


It's about banding together and being a strong team.

Academics have argued that the Koran contains two separate things: instructions on a spiritual path; and the attempt to lay down a social order in a time of unrest (including the rules of war).

The difficulty in the Koran is that these two purposes can conflict.

Allah is uanble to come up with divine guidance for both the spirit and society?? The eternal, unchangable book has conflicting advice??  What kind of 'only one god' is Allah if he can't even manage a straght final revelation but comes up with more confusion and contradiction than before?


Good point. If Muslims saw the Koran as the straight, final revelation, they would hardly need all those aHadith to attempt to qualify it.

Nothing can possibly be the final revelation. No one can possibly be the final prophet. I'm okay with the fundamentals of Islam - there is no God but Allah and Muhammed is His prophet - but I can't go with the dogma that there's no other way. I don't even see how this squares with Islamic theology/cosmology itself if the universe is to be seen as the ever-unfolding, increasingly complex expression of Allah. There have to be other prophets.

Muslims and Christians both saw the final ascension as being just around the corner. So far, it's been 2000 years and the universe continues to happily unfold.

There are different paths for different people, but I do think the paths result in essentially the same thing: humility, mercy, peace. This is what submission means: submitting your ego to a well-trodden path, submitting to a higher force, giving up.

Muhammed is not a savior, he's a prophet. He's also dead. People who follow the path need people to guide them in this world - people who have walked the path, not just read about it.

You can get a few tips for life and submission from Muhammed and the Koran, but you still have to walk the path. You still need teachers to show you how. Muhammed is not the final teacher in the Muslim tradition, he's really the first - this, I gather, is what it means to be a prophet. Abraham established a covenant. Moses led his people out of slavery. Jesus led followers on a path of forgiveness and humility. Muhammed formed a society and established a rule of law.

None of this means anything, however, if you don't take the steps yourself. No blood covenant, or sacrificial salvation, or religious conversion will save you from having to walk the path and making progress on it. The rules are important in establishing a direction, but they're not the destination.

This is the mistake fundamentalists - both for and against Islam - make.

Except that there is no room for this sort of unfolding in Islam.
It would be the end of Islam if, after 14010 years, someone said that the fundamental doctrine of final revelation, final prophethood, eternal unchangable essence of the Koran was up for revision.

The fatal flaw of Islam is that it is totally unbending. It has over-represented itself from the start, thanks to Mohammed's semi-literate misunderstanding of both Judaism and Christianity.

You can't make the guy who was the best of men for 1400 years a mere man who got a lot of things wrong.

There is no Islam without Mohammed as the best of men. Islam IS Mohammedanism so there is no removing him from the scene, however embarassing and patently wrong he was.  Muslims are stuck with him - hence the rioting and murdering when he is mocked and not taken seriously.



Sorry, old boy, is this a new post?

Shurely shome mishtake.
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Karnal
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #100 - Jul 8th, 2015 at 11:25am
 
Here's a Muslim elaboration of the verse in question:

Quote:
"It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise." Al-Anfal 8:67

'Al-Anfal' would mean 'spoils of war.'  The above verse does not at all mean to slaughter in a literal sense.  But it's simply a phrase, meaning 'war' or 'fighting.'  In this particular verse, "slaughter" would refer to 'an officially declared war.'  It should also be kept in mind that quite many wars or 'ghazwas' that were fought in the Prophet's (pbuh) lifetime involved very little or totally no bloodshed.  Even such 'wars' might be referred to as 'slaughter' because the phrase conforms with the term 'war.'  Thus, in other words, Allah is simply putting a rule before the people that there can be no prisoners unless a war has officially taken place.  And Allah knows best.

If you read through verses 8:67 to 8:69 quoted as follows:

"It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.  8:67
Had it not been for an ordinance of Allah which had gone before, an awful doom had come upon you on account of what ye took.  8:68
Now enjoy what ye have won, as lawful and good, and keep your duty to Allah. Lo! Allah is Forgiving, Merciful."  8:69   

These verses refer to the captives taken in the Battle of Badr.  In verses 8:67-68 Allah states that according to His ordinance, no Prophet in the past was ever allowed to take captives or prisoners unless they participated in a complete and official warfare on the battlefield.  I repeat, "made slaughter in the land" refers to the act of combat on the battlefield.  Verse 8:69 confirms that the event of taking prisoners taken by the Muslims after the victory at Badr was lawful because of the ordinance of Allah which He had already established.
http://muslimvilla.smfforfree.com/index.php?topic=94.0

Google: taqiyya.
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moses
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #101 - Jul 8th, 2015 at 4:01pm
 
Karnal wrote: Quote:
You haven't read the bit that comes after, Moses. Muhammed is telling others not to kill their prisoners but to release them in return for a ransom.

Do you always read books like this?


You ignore the bit that comes first, you know there must be a great slaughter in the land before taking prisoners, why is that?

Quote:
It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise." Al-Anfal 8:67

'Al-Anfal' would mean 'spoils of war.'  The above verse does not at all mean to slaughter in a literal sense.  But it's simply a phrase, meaning 'war' or 'fighting.'  In this particular verse, "slaughter" would refer to 'an officially declared war.'  It should also be kept in mind that quite many wars or 'ghazwas' that were fought in the Prophet's (pbuh) lifetime involved very little or totally no bloodshed.  Even such 'wars' might be referred to as 'slaughter' because the phrase conforms with the term 'war.'  Thus, in other words, Allah is simply putting a rule before the people that there can be no prisoners unless a war has officially taken place.  And Allah knows best.

If you read through verses 8:67 to 8:69 quoted as follows:

"It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.  8:67
Had it not been for an ordinance of Allah which had gone before, an awful doom had come upon you on account of what ye took.  8:68
Now enjoy what ye have won, as lawful and good, and keep your duty to Allah. Lo! Allah is Forgiving, Merciful."  8:69   

These verses refer to the captives taken in the Battle of Badr.  In verses 8:67-68 Allah states that according to His ordinance, no Prophet in the past was ever allowed to take captives or prisoners unless they participated in a complete and official warfare on the battlefield.  I repeat, "made slaughter in the land" refers to the act of combat on the battlefield.  Verse 8:69 confirms that the event of taking prisoners taken by the Muslims after the victory at Badr was lawful because of the ordinance of Allah which He had already established.


Yeah yeah muslim excuses flow thick and fast don't they, slaughter now means war what a weak apology, for islamic atrocities.

Are they saying muslims are so stupid they have to be told you don't get prisoners of war unless you have a war?

The excuse is a deliberate illogical lie, to cover the atrocities commanded in the qur'an.

The very reason islam is a worldwide security problem, is shown by this and other lies told by muslims to condone the depravity in the qur'an.

When are muslims and their apologists going to have the guts to be honest, and admit to the root cause of year in year out global islamic atrocities (islam allah muhammad qur'an and hadith)?
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #102 - Jul 8th, 2015 at 4:08pm
 
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 10:46pm:
Soren wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 8:34pm:
Except that there is no room for this sort of unfolding in Islam.
It would be the end of Islam if, after 14010 years, someone said that the fundamental doctrine of final revelation, final prophethood, eternal unchangable essence of the Koran was up for revision.

The fatal flaw of Islam is that it is totally unbending. It has over-represented itself from the start, thanks to Mohammed's semi-literate misunderstanding of both Judaism and Christianity.

You can't make the guy who was the best of men for 1400 years a mere man who got a lot of things wrong.

There is no Islam without Mohammed as the best of men. Islam IS Mohammedanism so there is no removing him from the scene, however embarassing and patently wrong he was.  Muslims are stuck with him - hence the rioting and murdering when he is mocked and not taken seriously.



Sorry, old boy, is this a new post?

Shurely shome mishtake.



Why? Is there a new Islam?

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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #103 - Jul 8th, 2015 at 9:45pm
 
Soren wrote on Jul 8th, 2015 at 4:08pm:
Karnal wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 10:46pm:
Soren wrote on Jul 7th, 2015 at 8:34pm:
Except that there is no room for this sort of unfolding in Islam.
It would be the end of Islam if, after 14010 years, someone said that the fundamental doctrine of final revelation, final prophethood, eternal unchangable essence of the Koran was up for revision.

The fatal flaw of Islam is that it is totally unbending. It has over-represented itself from the start, thanks to Mohammed's semi-literate misunderstanding of both Judaism and Christianity.

You can't make the guy who was the best of men for 1400 years a mere man who got a lot of things wrong.

There is no Islam without Mohammed as the best of men. Islam IS Mohammedanism so there is no removing him from the scene, however embarassing and patently wrong he was.  Muslims are stuck with him - hence the rioting and murdering when he is mocked and not taken seriously.



Sorry, old boy, is this a new post?

Shurely shome mishtake.



Why? Is there a new Islam?



Is there a new old boy?
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Re: islam and human sacrifice
Reply #104 - Jul 8th, 2015 at 9:53pm
 
moses wrote on Jul 8th, 2015 at 4:01pm:
Karnal wrote: Quote:
You haven't read the bit that comes after, Moses. Muhammed is telling others not to kill their prisoners but to release them in return for a ransom.

Do you always read books like this?


You ignore the bit that comes first, you know there must be a great slaughter in the land before taking prisoners, why is that?

Quote:
It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise." Al-Anfal 8:67

'Al-Anfal' would mean 'spoils of war.'  The above verse does not at all mean to slaughter in a literal sense.  But it's simply a phrase, meaning 'war' or 'fighting.'  In this particular verse, "slaughter" would refer to 'an officially declared war.'  It should also be kept in mind that quite many wars or 'ghazwas' that were fought in the Prophet's (pbuh) lifetime involved very little or totally no bloodshed.  Even such 'wars' might be referred to as 'slaughter' because the phrase conforms with the term 'war.'  Thus, in other words, Allah is simply putting a rule before the people that there can be no prisoners unless a war has officially taken place.  And Allah knows best.

If you read through verses 8:67 to 8:69 quoted as follows:

"It is not for any prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise.  8:67
Had it not been for an ordinance of Allah which had gone before, an awful doom had come upon you on account of what ye took.  8:68
Now enjoy what ye have won, as lawful and good, and keep your duty to Allah. Lo! Allah is Forgiving, Merciful."  8:69   

These verses refer to the captives taken in the Battle of Badr.  In verses 8:67-68 Allah states that according to His ordinance, no Prophet in the past was ever allowed to take captives or prisoners unless they participated in a complete and official warfare on the battlefield.  I repeat, "made slaughter in the land" refers to the act of combat on the battlefield.  Verse 8:69 confirms that the event of taking prisoners taken by the Muslims after the victory at Badr was lawful because of the ordinance of Allah which He had already established.


Yeah yeah muslim excuses flow thick and fast don't they, slaughter now means war what a weak apology, for islamic atrocities.

Are they saying muslims are so stupid they have to be told you don't get prisoners of war unless you have a war?

The excuse is a deliberate illogical lie, to cover the atrocities commanded in the qur'an.

The very reason islam is a worldwide security problem, is shown by this and other lies told by muslims to condone the depravity in the qur'an.

When are muslims and their apologists going to have the guts to be honest, and admit to the root cause of year in year out global islamic atrocities (islam allah muhammad qur'an and hadith)?


Moses, that’s the equivalent of the old boy’s never-ever post. When the living are presented with new information or context, they respond accordingly.

When cadavers are presented with the same, they respond just like you and the old boy have.

Each and every one of your quotes has a context and a story. Each of these deserves a little thought, not just the standard reply.

Believe it or not, they now have robots writing the news. Your post above is exactly the sort of programmed response you can do on your computer. And you did.

I wonder if I’m just talking to myself here.
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