Buddha Dharma
Dharma Practitioner
@LuisDantas I do have a thought for you, since going through some of the comments in this thread.
The Quran may appear to make blanket statements about believers and non-believers, but I'm not sure how true to the context such a reading is. The Quran has a definite historical context, and indeed setting in many instances.
The text documents actual conflicts the Muslims had to fight in defense, and sometimes such passages are advising about that. This is made even stronger when considered the Quran was compiled from repeating what Muhammad said. Therefore, it can be easy to not infer such a context.
A good example of a passage frequently misused is in Surah 9. The one that says slay the polytheists. That's in a historical context, and scholars of the Quran know it is. Because Muslims and Hindus have even intermarried for several centuries now.
Some scholars wrongfully stir up antagonism against Hindus to be sure, but how could something in a historical context be talking about all polytheists? See what I mean?
The Quran may appear to make blanket statements about believers and non-believers, but I'm not sure how true to the context such a reading is. The Quran has a definite historical context, and indeed setting in many instances.
The text documents actual conflicts the Muslims had to fight in defense, and sometimes such passages are advising about that. This is made even stronger when considered the Quran was compiled from repeating what Muhammad said. Therefore, it can be easy to not infer such a context.
A good example of a passage frequently misused is in Surah 9. The one that says slay the polytheists. That's in a historical context, and scholars of the Quran know it is. Because Muslims and Hindus have even intermarried for several centuries now.
Some scholars wrongfully stir up antagonism against Hindus to be sure, but how could something in a historical context be talking about all polytheists? See what I mean?