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What are the general views of prayer in the Deistic community?Very few, if any, Deists pray.
So is this revival of dIn i-ilahi you're doing a new attempt at making a parody, Pastafarianism/FSM-like, religion or no? If not, then I'm sorry to break it to you, but Akbar created the religion because he wanted to marry some of his 5000 sex-slaves which he brought to his harem in Dilli (they came from places as far as Russia and Abyssinia). 300 of his slaves were made wives and since the Qur'an limits the amount of wives a person could have to four, he was forced to change religions. He tried to use the Shi'a mutta method at first, but both the Shi'a-s and Sunni-s agreed that it didn't extend to 300 wives, so he changed religions. What's ironic is that some Muslims want to use Akbar as an example of Islamic religious tolerance when in actuality, dIn i-ilahi would classify as kuffar from a Muslim perspective. Also, Akbar was a murderer who ordered the murder of 30,000 Hindu peasants in single day (in order for him to become a Ghazi) and hence he couldn't classify as tolerant anyway.I consider myself a deist- I do not accept any sacred scripture, I accept one man as a prophet of God, but not because some alleged authority of his words, or the miracles he done, because there exists neither, but because I think he was the promulgator of what is true and good, and he himself has established his religious community like that, like a deist community. The person in question is Akbar.
As far the topic is concerned, I pray five times in the manner of Islamic salah, except I have a different shahada in which I do not mention Mohammad, but Akbar, and I turn not to Mecca, but towards the tomb of Akbar. I do not in this prayer ask anything from God, I just praise God, and use these prayers as a mechanism to rebember the divine- God and virtues- throughout the day, and to fix my mind on the divine, and I find it a great tool to keep my discipline.
There isn't one, AFAIK