gnostic
The Lost One
Apostasy:
Treason:
Which is what I thought they both mean.
And this is what I thought might be the case.
I am not surprise if this is the case that some Muslims would put two the together. Even scholars and clerics who should know better have put the apostasy and treason together.
And there lies my confusion where Muslims blurred the definitions of the two.
It reminded me of the case of one Afghan who left Islam and converted to Christianity. Don't remember his name. Many Muslim Afghans would have been happy to see him executed, including his own family, because it was his own family that had the police arrested him in the 1st place. He was found guilty of apostasy and sentence to death. And at the head of calling for his death are the Muslim clerics. Only the pressures from outsiders and media attention on the case, that eventually the president and government.
This apostate should not been arrested in the first place. Nothing in the case indicated he was attacking Islam. His admission to conversion to Christianity to his family was all that needed for his arrest, conviction and punishment. It would seem more like vendetta and revenge against those would leave a religion instead of justice.
It is one of the reasons why I don't think religion should be involved in politics and laws.
I know that Islam states that should not be compulsion or coercion to join Islam, but that doesn't seem to be the case with someone who wish to leave Islam. It like the old Christianity, but in reverse. With Christianity, it is instilling fear of God's wrath and fear of hell that make some people baptize. It is the opposite with Islam - leave Islam and risk death.
It's bad enough to force people to believe or join in a religion unwillingly, but it is just as as repugnant to force people to stay in a religion that a person no longer believe in.
badran said:1) leaving Islam (either for another religion, or no religion)
Treason:
badran said:2) The common understanding of treason.
Which is what I thought they both mean.
badran said:These are two different things, the problem is however is that some people mix up between the two, and consider merely leaving Islam as a form of treason.
And this is what I thought might be the case.
I am not surprise if this is the case that some Muslims would put two the together. Even scholars and clerics who should know better have put the apostasy and treason together.
And there lies my confusion where Muslims blurred the definitions of the two.
badran said:There are three ways in which you could leave Islam, leave and have no bad feelings towards it or its followers, or leaving it but with a negative view which you usually share with others. The last is leaving it and becoming an enemy to muslims, or in other words becoming a traitor to your community, in the common understanding of being a traitor.
The last one is the one on which this is supposed to be applied, as in there is no punishment for anybody leaving Islam, except if they utterly become enemies to the community.
So if someone leaves Islam and has no problem with it, but just don't want to follow it, or if someone leaves it and criticizes it, he shouldn't be touched. However, like i said for people who believe in killing apostates, some of them consider leaving the religion and criticizing Islam and Muslims as treason, and some consider even merely leaving as treason.
It reminded me of the case of one Afghan who left Islam and converted to Christianity. Don't remember his name. Many Muslim Afghans would have been happy to see him executed, including his own family, because it was his own family that had the police arrested him in the 1st place. He was found guilty of apostasy and sentence to death. And at the head of calling for his death are the Muslim clerics. Only the pressures from outsiders and media attention on the case, that eventually the president and government.
This apostate should not been arrested in the first place. Nothing in the case indicated he was attacking Islam. His admission to conversion to Christianity to his family was all that needed for his arrest, conviction and punishment. It would seem more like vendetta and revenge against those would leave a religion instead of justice.
It is one of the reasons why I don't think religion should be involved in politics and laws.
I know that Islam states that should not be compulsion or coercion to join Islam, but that doesn't seem to be the case with someone who wish to leave Islam. It like the old Christianity, but in reverse. With Christianity, it is instilling fear of God's wrath and fear of hell that make some people baptize. It is the opposite with Islam - leave Islam and risk death.
It's bad enough to force people to believe or join in a religion unwillingly, but it is just as as repugnant to force people to stay in a religion that a person no longer believe in.
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