psychoslice
Veteran Member
For what we call morals today, I don't believe many had the same morals back then, so I would say that no, Muhammad wasn't moral compared to our morals today.
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I agree.To be able to truly honestly judge Mohammed is impossible
Agreed that it's a bit out of context, but this is recurring and damaging bit of misinformation...
To be clear: The Crusades were a tiny, tiny counter measure, in response to 400 years of Islamic conquest.
(There are certainly many things in the history of Christianity that Christians should be ashamed of, but not the Crusades.)
I think it's misinformation because - given the sweep of history - there seems to be an overblown amount of western guilt surrounding the Crusades, and an overblown amount of Muslim grudge holding as well.
Say more!
I never thought I'd see a self-confessed anti-theist label the Crusades as something the Christian world should feel no shame over - especially considering:
- How unnecessarily brutal the Crusaders were. They proclaimed to be acting on behalf of all Christendom yet they saw fit to betray & sack Constantinople the world capital of Orthodoxy. And whenever the Crusaders captured a city they ran riot;
- The Church claimed to be acting purely to restore the Christian realm, but it profited immensely from the Crusades and hoarded that wealth;
- It was aimed at slaughtering Muslims for the 'crime' of being non-Christians ruling an area that had been majority Christian hundreds of years before.
Hey Augustus -
To round out your analogy, are you assuming that propaganda is always inaccurate? (It could be, I just want to make sure that I understand your analogy.)
I'm not seeing how propaganda fits into the discussion of the Crusades? My point is that the world's common conclusions about the Crusades amount to revisionist history.
Then again, Karen Armstrong is hardly a "go to" person in regards to... well, anything...You replied to a specific quote "The period of the Crusades, when the fictional Mahound was established, was also a time of the great strain and denial in Europe. This is graphically expressed in the phobia about Islam.(By Karen Armstrong in her book, Muhammad: A Biography of the Prophet, page 27)."
If you intended to reply to this specific quote: it is not talking about the crusades, but about how a certain view of Muhammed was established in medieval Europe around the time of the crusades. Your reply didn't match the content of the quote.
If you meant to make an unrelated point about the historical perception of the Crusades then I misunderstood you.
Maybe the second or third one was. But the first one contained a significant population of Europe for the times.Wait what?
Dawud said:
The Crusades came hundreds of years after Muhammad died. How do the Crusades fit into this thread?
Also, the Crusades are typically misunderstood. They were a tiny, tiny counter-offensive that occurred after hundreds of years of violent, widespread Islamic conquest.
Then again, Karen Armstrong is hardly a "go to" person in regards to... well, anything...
That said, I'd imagine that Muhammad was no less vilified than how Muslims vilified non-Muslims who fought against them. Jus' sayin'...
I know. It's not like Islam was good news to the Christians of Europe, so the antipathy should be expected. Heck, at the time, most hadn't even read the Bible, let alone the Qur'an.It is true to acknowledge that European perceptions of Muhammed have historically been shaped through a hostile Christian lens though. This is separate from any other points about Muslim perceptions of Christians or whether or not he was an ethical person.
It's like saying contemporary images of Salahudin have been shaped by romanticised Victorian literature like The Talisman by Sir Walter Scott. This is simply true, and says nothing about the historical figure.
I know. It's not like Islam was good news to the Christians of Europe, so the antipathy should be expected. Heck, at the time, most hadn't even read the Bible, let alone the Qur'an.
Then again, Karen Armstrong is hardly a "go to" person in regards to... well, anything
Actually, more emphasis should be placed on his hilarious "moon splitting" and his romp in the "night flight" where he actually had the temerity to haggle with god. The weird part is that haggling with god would seem downright peculiar from the European perspective whereas from an Arabic perspective it would likely seem to be quite an understandable and noble deed. Talk about standing memes on their pointy little heads...As regards this, she is a hagiographer who interprets theology in a certain way. It is fair to point out though that most 'anti-Muhammed' commentators rely on interpreting theology in a certain way also. Most people aren't talking about actual history after all.
People seem very happy to quote all of the perceived negative actions he carried out, yet these are from the same sources that say he split the moon in half.
People seem to want to interpret theology as history when it suits them, but treat the same sources as theology when it doesn't.
I just find this inconsistent.
As regards this, she is a hagiographer who interprets theology in a certain way. It is fair to point out though that most 'anti-Muhammed' commentators rely on interpreting theology in a certain way also. Most people aren't talking about actual history after all.
People seem very happy to quote all of the perceived negative actions he carried out, yet these are from the same sources that say he split the moon in half.
People seem to want to interpret theology as history when it suits them, but treat the same sources as theology when it doesn't.
I just find this inconsistent.
I'd say that if you study the Hadith and the Sira, even a little bit, you'll find dubious morality by today's standards.
That may be the case, but is not relevant to my point.
Most of it didn't happen. It was a theologically motivated pseudo-history constructed to explain the Quran.
It makes a big difference if you are discussing theology rather than history.