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As Hank77 put it so succinctly:But that is not what we are talking about here. We are talking about your assertion that "Muhammad did begin hostilities in order to spread his religion and gain power – repeatedly and often." Theoretically that would be verifiable, except the Qur'an is the only contemporary source we have to the life of Muhammad.
ecco said:Do you have contemporary evidence to show that "God summoned Bahá’u’lláh to deliver a new Revelation to humanity?
LOL. Claims to revelation can never be proved historically, because God and revelation are not subject to historical verification.
What is written (scripturally) is important to people who want to justify actions with the authority of GOD.
When it is written and by whom it is written is only important to scholars and people who want to object to the BELIEVERS.
It is written that Muhammad authorized the beheading of 600.
It is written that Muhammad spread Islam through the use of violence.
ecco said:But, yes, apparently you can rape captive women.
http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/Muhammad/myths-mu-rape.htm
This hadith provides the context for the Qur’anic verse (4:24):
The Apostle of Allah (may peace be upon him) sent a military expedition to Awtas on the occasion of the battle of Hunain. They met their enemy and fought with them. They defeated them and took them captives.
Some of the Companions of the Apostle of Allah (may peace be upon him) were reluctant to have intercourse with the female captives in the presence of their husbands who were unbelievers. So Allah, the Exalted, sent down the Qur’anic verse: (Sura 4:24) "And all married women (are forbidden) unto you save those (captives) whom your right hands possess." (Abu Dawud 2150, also Muslim 3433)
Actually, as the hadith indicates, it wasn't Muhammad, but "Allah the Exalted" who told the men to rape the women in front of their husbands -
In your opinion.That does not sound at all like a valid hadith.
Allah doesn't talk directly to people
My comment was about justification for rape, I wasn't discussing husbands.and the verse in question while allowing for sexual relations with slaves does not say anything about raping them in front of their husbands.
Google "isis rape kurds". Do really believe it's all just Islamophobic propaganda.Even ISIS doesn't do that.
Oh goody.While infamous for enslaving women and selling them as concubines, in the case of married women they always wait four months.
I'm sure you wouldn't. Did you Google "isis rape kurds" yet? Are all those reports from "hate blogs"?I would not accept anything from that hate blog you are using.
So, in your opinion, nothing in the hadith is reliable.Sure. The ones based on the Qur'an are reliable.
What is your point?Muhammad was illiterate.
Maybe if that could be done and agreed upon by Muslim scholars that could be the reformation that one of the Muslim men was saying is needed for Islam. It seems to me that is where the terrorist get a lot their steam from.Muslims mostly judge the reliability of a hadith by reputation of those who transmitted the story (isnad.) A hadith is deemed only as reliable as its weakest link. But have you ever played telephone? Whatever ends up at the other end is never the same as what you started with. On the other hand, ahadith are our only source which gives context to the Qur'an so we can't do without in completely. I would like to see a new science of hadith evolve, not such much for legal reasons but rather as part of the search for the historical Muhammad. We know slightly more about Him than we do Jesus historically speaking, but not that much more. However, better methodologies have evolved for biblical studies and I'd like to see higher criticism applied to ahadith as well.
Ahadith are not scripture.
ecco said:It is written that Muhammad authorized the beheading of 600.
Not in scripture it isn't.
ecco said:It is written that Muhammad spread Islam through the use of violence.
Where?
smaneck post #200 said:Muslims mostly judge the reliability of a hadith by reputation of those who transmitted the story (isnad.) A hadith is deemed only as reliable as its weakest link. But have you ever played telephone? Whatever ends up at the other end is never the same as what you started with. On the other hand, ahadith are our only source which gives context to the Qur'an so we can't do without in completely.
smaneck post #200 said:I would like to see a new science of hadith evolve, not such much for legal reasons but rather as part of the search for the historical Muhammad. We know slightly more about Him than we do Jesus historically speaking, but not that much more. However, better methodologies have evolved for biblical studies and I'd like to see higher criticism applied to ahadith as well.
OK. There is no explanation just how Allah "sent down" the verse in the Sura. Yet there it is.
My comment was about justification for rape, I wasn't discussing husbands.
Google "isis rape kurds".
Do really believe it's all just Islamophobic propaganda.
Are all those reports from "hate blogs"?
You also call for a "search for the historical Muhammad". What could this based on? You dismissed the Sira of Ibn Ishaq as being written too far after the actual events to be of any use.
Maybe if that could be done and agreed upon by Muslim scholars that could be the reformation that one of the Muslim men was saying is needed for Islam. It seems to me that is where the terrorist get a lot their steam from.
I agree with you that Christians don't always do what is right. But George Bush did not use scripture to justify Iraq. He said he prayed about it but that isn't the same thing, is it.Jesus taught his followers to turn the other cheek. Yet the crusaders murdered thousands in their rampage across the Middle East, and U.S. President George W. Bush, a devout Christian, invaded Iraq without military provocation. Readers may object to these examples, arguing that other factors were at play—but that is exactly the point: Christian Scripture doesn’t always determine the behavior of its followers, and the same goes for Islamic Scripture."
I agree with you that Christians don't always do what is right. But George Bush did not use scripture to justify Iraq. He said he prayed about it but that isn't the same thing, is it.
The crusades are an example of the Church taking over the power of the state, somehow thinking that they were some kind of theocracy. Their attempt at a theocracy, was built by men, not God.
Any time the church (any church) becomes the government there is going to be evil.Too much power corrupts good men. So your example of the crusades may be closer to what you are talking about.
At this juncture the point of the discussion has gotten lost.We are discussing the hadith you cited which was from a hate blog. Try to stay on the same page.
You're right. You didn't. That was AionPhanes who responded to a post directed to you.Didn't mention the Sirat, but a good deal of it utilizes ahadith which even Muslims regard as weak. But yes, the Sirat would be useful if we applied the methods of higher criticism to it.
It doesn't matter that some people believe "That's the OT, it doesn't apply any longer" or "That's a lesser hadith, it doesn't count".
What matters is that some people will point to it as being indicative of what god wanted and apply it as they see fit.