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I am not the least bit worried or concerned about being "smote to cinders" by the imaginary friends of others.How insolent of you. You dare imply that mere mortals have the capacity to judge god? Shouldn't you be cowering under a rock 'lest you be smote to a cinder?
We all know that Muhammad (PBUH) was an unlettered man. If he wasn't actually a prophet, then where did the Qur'an come from?
It would be better if you have actually read the Qur'an in Arabic beforehand as it cannot be fully appreciated any other way.
it takes me an hour to read/translate a single Surah. Not fluetn at all so I can't speak fully, but maybe sensory derivation with long periods of not sleeping or eating in high altitudes is ripe conditions for hallucinating...We all know that Muhammad (PBUH) was an unlettered man. If he wasn't actually a prophet, then where did the Qur'an come from?
It would be better if you have actually read the Qur'an in Arabic beforehand as it cannot be fully appreciated any other way.
it takes me an hour to read/translate a single Surah. Not fluetn at all so I can't speak fully, but maybe sensory derivation with long periods of not sleeping or eating in high altitudes is ripe conditions for hallucinating...
You mean he severely disrupted his body's ability to process both memory and sensory input before having a vision?
Islam like all Abrahamic religions states that the testimony of a witness is only worth entertaining if there are 2 or more witness's. This is particularly important when the new witness's contradict many others before them.
Muhammed was one witness who contradicts all the prophets before him.
Islam expects us to believe that one man at the end of a long line of prophets has the annointing to claim all the other prophets scripture is corrupt and he alone has come to correct it.
Islam denies the resurrection and that Jesus is the eternal Son of God. There is no salvation outside of Christ. Ask all the prophets before the one witness Muhammed.
First of all I have to say that your point of reading the Qur'an in Arabic beforehand as a prerequisite is ridiculous. only a few members here read Arabic, and even they speak modern Arabic and not Classical Arabic. the other thing is that reading Arabic is completely irrelevant to the natural premise that the Qur'an like any other scripture of the major world religions is the product of men. if you base the entire history of the Qur'an on only just one man, not surprisingly the prophet, you are on shaky ground.We all know that Muhammad (PBUH) was an unlettered man. If he wasn't actually a prophet, then where did the Qur'an come from?
It would be better if you have actually read the Qur'an in Arabic beforehand as it cannot be fully appreciated any other way.
Modern scholars claim that this is because Muhammad thought that he is revealing to the Arabs universal teachings that were already found in Judaism and Christianity. its not because Islam is doing other religions any favours.If you ask the Jews they'll tell you that Jesus Christ wasn't resurrected, and wasn't even a Messiah in the first place. Also, Judaism contradicts a lot of other religions that came before it. Which "witnesses" are you talking about?
All I'm saying is, most religions contradict each other and deny a lot of each other's ideas. At least Islam acknowledges Moses and Jesus as prophets.
By the way, I didn't mean for any of this to come across as confrontational. It's just the way it's paragraphed, if anything.
and so the point becomes lost, son, much like the idea that every person in Arabia considered Muhammad's poetry to be the best thing since the Kabbah. Given that we only have the commentaries of Muslims to go by doesn't bode well for any thoughts to the contrary.
English. Oh wait, that nullifies my argument, I suppose.
Oh never mind, it doesn't sound like you are a particularly serious or skilled debater anyway.
I simply do not believe you. Given your insistence on the wondrous nature of the Qur'an in Arabic, it follows that any attempts to imitate the Qur'an would also have to be done in Arabic. No doubt you would be inclined to move the goal posts in a heartbeat if anyone came close.
True, however, the point is that both "extremist" and "moderate" Muslims still cow tow to the same ideology.
Actually there is precious little in the pages of the Qur'an that qualifies as a "scientific insight" but that doesn't seem to stop many Muslims from chanting tired canard. I wonder why only Muslims find their arguments persuasive? What's with that?
First of all I have to say that your point of reading the Qur'an in Arabic beforehand as a prerequisite is ridiculous. only a few members here read Arabic, and even they speak modern Arabic and not Classical Arabic. the other thing is that reading Arabic is completely irrelevant to the natural premise that the Qur'an like any other scripture of the major world religions is the product of men. if you base the entire history of the Qur'an on only just one man, not surprisingly the prophet, you are on shaky ground.
Modern scholars claim that this is because Muhammad thought that he is revealing to the Arabs universal teachings that were already found in Judaism and Christianity. its not because Islam is doing other religions any favours.
If you ask the Jews they'll tell you that Jesus Christ wasn't resurrected, and wasn't even a Messiah in the first place. Also, Judaism contradicts a lot of other religions that came before it. Which "witnesses" are you talking about?
All I'm saying is, most religions contradict each other and deny a lot of each other's ideas. At least Islam acknowledges Moses and Jesus as prophets.
By the way, I didn't mean for any of this to come across as confrontational. It's just the way it's paragraphed, if anything.
It's still a ridiculous thing to post. as you already know the vast majority of members here do not speak Arabic. nor is it important to a debate at hand. as readers can approach both traditional and secular scholarship about the Qur'an, its history or it's origins in English.I said that it would be "better to", not a prerequisite. It's definitely preferred being that Arabic is the text's main language, much like how most rhetoric/linguistically-rich texts are better read in their original versions.
Because when you consider the other argument, you quickly understand it is not objective.Or maybe because some of the ideas of Judaism/Christianity were correct and so are present in Islam? Why look at it one way without considering the other?
At which point to we part from discussing a traditional point of view and begin to stick to it in favour of non traditional scholarship?In my humble opinion, the Quran came from Muhammad.
Even if Muhammad was an illiterate or barely literate man, that does not change his poetic abilities that he may have, does it?
The revelations he claimed to have, after all, came slowly -- possibly slow enough for someone to decide on what to reveal in advance to make something truly amazing to give the masses. Or, maybe they were his poetry expressing the amazement at things he had seen during his mystic expressions coupled with his own opinions.
We'll never know for sure, though.
I suppose this is one of the difficulties of discussing the secular origins of religious revelations and figures.At which point to we part from discussing a traditional point of view and begin to stick to it in favour of non traditional scholarship?
I can respect tradition. but when people take traditionalist interpretation as exclusive over secular scholarship and promote it, the traditional discussion is starting to lose favour with me.
which is a shame considering there is not always much respect for tradition today.
I think the difficulties arise when the traditionalist POV is pushed. then it becomes a dividing power instead of being the unifying element that tradition should be.I suppose this is one of the difficulties of discussing the secular origins of religious revelations and figures.
I totally understand where you're coming from, and I wholeheartedly agree.I think the difficulties arise when the traditionalist POV is pushed. then it becomes a dividing power instead of being the unifying element that tradition should be.
It's how I feel anyway. I would find many beautiful things with a tradition or a religion. but when people start to push the traditional beliefs of this religion and mix them with science and objective history that beauty starts to wane.