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Yytz6

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I repeat, a mosque doesn't need a specific building or even a building for it to be.
 
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mindlight

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I repeat, a mosque doesn't need a specific building or even a building for it to be.

The Arabic word used cannot refer to a site and was not used like that by Ali for instance.


The term used for mosque (masjid (Arabic: مَـسْـجِـد‎)) occurs only for building structure of worship, but does not mean to site or a location without building structure.....Masjid is a place of prayer: here it refers TO THE KAB’AH at Mecca. As a “house of Worship”, not a place. (Ali, p. 57, 2:128 (102))

Isra and Mi'raj - Wikipedia
 
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mindlight

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If the whole world is a mosque then why does Ali use the word to describe the Great Mosque in Mecca and why does Muslim tradition point so strongly to a mosque in Jerusalem for the Isra.
 
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Limo

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If you're talking about "make scenes", answer these questions with little "sciene ":

  • Where did Ibraheem sent his wife and elder son Ismaeel ?

The place is holy regardless if it's a dung-hill during Christian Roma Empire, or built, or destroyed. It exists since Ibraheem and may be since Adam.
Moslems used the existing building at that time.

Moslems built the Dome mosque
 
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Barney2.0

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Abraham sent his son Ishmael to the wilderness of Paran which is right here:



He didn’t send him to an unknown infertile area in southern Hejaz. It being holy or not isn’t the point, the point is that there was no building on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem at the time of Mohammed’s supposed visit, so this indicates that the Quran and other Islamic sources contain a major historical error and also reveals the late composition of the Quranic text which was likely composed in the beginning of the Umayyad caliphate.
 
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Yytz6

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If the whole world is a mosque then why does Ali use the word to describe the Great Mosque in Mecca and why does Muslim tradition point so strongly to a mosque in Jerusalem for the Isra.
I think I answered that already.

The source in your Wikipedia article isn't clear. So I checked the translation of the meaning of the Qur'an by Yusuf Ali - I assume that's what it's referring to - and came up with some parts (not the same parts as mentioned in the article though but paragraphs nearby) mentioning 'the house of Allah' which some think is an argument for this.

This is false:


But then the link after it appears to lead to another book, translated by Asad instead of Ali.

In Yusuf Ali's commentary (though I think he didn't actually write all of the commentary on his book) he separates the Kabah and the Masjid Al-haram. But even without all that. Saying that Masjid (be it a building or not) is a place of prayer is not incorrect or change things on any way, seeing as a special building or space made into a mosque is a mosque even if the area surrounding it (the whole world), in another sense, is a mosque as well.

A person who lives in a forest can live in a tent and still be living in a forest as well.
 
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Yytz6

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The Arabic word used cannot refer to a site and was not used like that by Ali for instance.
It probably refers to Muhammad Asad's translation of the meaning and commentary:

But that doesn't help us with the Wikipedia article written quite obviously by someone who has more than just doubts against islam and lets it show in his writing in a Wikipedia article.

"Ali does, however, confirm that masjid al-haram refers to an actual physical building, namely the Kabah, and not merely to a site or place: … Masjid is a place of prayer: here it refers TO THE KAB’AH at Mecca. As a “house of Worship”, not a place. (Ali, p. 57, 2:128 (102))"

He isnt quoting the words, which is good since he isn't using quotiation marks but if only the actual text would fit his claim.

1)not Ali's book
2)The writer writes that in the Quran the Kabah is frequently referred to as Masjid al-haram, as well as The House of Worship and The Ancient Temple. This doesn't mean Masjid al-haram = Kabah.

The term used for mosque (masjid (Arabic: مَـسْـجِـد‎)) occurs only for building structure of worship, but does not mean to site or a location without building structure..
Still haven't found the source for this - clearly Wikipedia isn't a reliable source. At this it only cites youtube, once. But even if we say it was as the paragraph says, one person's opinion (majority of whose hadiths have been rejected by large) isn't proof of anything.
...Masjid is a place of prayer: here it refers TO THE KAB’AH at Mecca. As a “house of Worship”, not a place. (Ali, p. 57, 2:128 (102))

Isra and Mi'raj - Wikipedia
"Ali does, however, confirm that masjid al-haram refers to an actual physical building, namely the Kabah, and not merely to a site or place: … Masjid is a place of prayer: here it refers TO THE KAB’AH at Mecca. As a “house of Worship”, not a place. (Ali, p. 57, 2:128 (102)"

The verse and commentary referred to doesn't say 'Masjid' at all. So 'Masjid is a place of prayer' is here written by the editor of the Wikipedia article not by Asad in his commentary. Of course Masjid is place of prayer but it is here used simply to twist the meaning of the commentary and the verse.
 
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Yytz6

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Can you quote or link any sources? To the hadiths about opening of doors and to ibn kathir's view? Why are you so sure there was nothing more left there than that? Is it based on some historical evidence?
 
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Limo

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What is your reference for naming this area as Paran ?
What is your sources that make you sure that there was no building in mountain temple location?
 
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mindlight

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In the hadiths the full phrase is often used :Masjid al-Aqsa or Masjid al-Haram. That is a specific building not just a place in both cases and has always been understood as such in the Muslim world. But there was no building there at the time of Muhammad. The below article lists a great many hadiths that affirm this interpretation

Muhammad's Alleged Night Journey to the Jerusalem Temple

From the talk section behind the Wikipedia article it seems that many people consider this article to assume the truth of the Muslim story rather than to be biased against it and are incredulous we grant any credibility to an account of a journey for which there is no proof and the facts of which contradict reality. The talk also says that this is not definitely described in the Quran (the farthest mosque could be anywhere even if most Muslims have always understood that to be Al-Aqsa) but is stressed by Muslims as if it were obvious that Jerusalem was Islams third holiest city and Muhammad had his Isra to there. Actually ever since a disappointed Umar conquered the place it has been a somewhat neglected backwater compared to other Islamic cities like Cairo, Baghdad, Constantinople and its political significance has been overstressed ever since that well known Nazi the Grand Mufti in the 1920s started talking about Muhammads winged mule being tethered to the Western wall. With British and then Israeli control of the city suddenly it was important to Muslims to win it back and they started stressing stories that might make the case for that around about then.

That Muhammad may have visited a Jerusalem rubbish dump on a winged mule and then journeyed to heaven, from there of all places ,seems a curious , unprovable and unhelpful affirmation of the significance of Jerusalem to Muslims.
 
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Barney2.0

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Can you quote or link any sources? To the hadiths about opening of doors and to ibn kathir's view? Why are you so sure there was nothing more left there than that? Is it based on some historical evidence?
The sources which back my assertions can be seen on the link I gave you to answering Islam.com which quotes tafsir and other historical sources to back its argument.
 
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Barney2.0

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What is your reference for naming this area as Paran ?
What is your sources that make you sure that there was no building in mountain temple location?
Because Hagar left Abraham’s dwelling in Beersheba and left to its wilderness as can be seen in Genesis 21, and Beersheba is in modern day Israel not Saudi Arabia. My source that tells me that there was no temple of major importance in Beersheba is the absence of it in any sources. Mecca and the Kaaba themselves are absent from any historical classical record the, Kaaba itself was built by Qusayy Ibn Kilab Mohammed’s ancestor to be used as a pagan shrine full of idols not a house of monotheistic worship.
 
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Limo

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No reference, No sense, no science
 
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Islam_mulia

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Glory to Him Who carried His beloved by night from the Sacred Masjid to the Furthest Masjid, whose precincts We have blessed, to show him of Our wonders! He it is Who is All-Hearing, All-Seeing: Quran 17:1

The Sacred Masjid, Masjidil Haram, as a building, was not built when the surah was revealed. Similarly, the Furthest Mosque, Masjidil Aqsa, was not referring to a building, a mosque.
Hence, the word masjid may refer to a place of worship, not necessarily a building.
 
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mindlight

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So what doors was Muhammad referring to if it was not a literal building. Fact is there was no building, the place was a rubbish dump at the time.
 
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Islam_mulia

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So what doors was Muhammad referring to if it was not a literal building. Fact is there was no building, the place was a rubbish dump at the time.
The reference to the 'doors' of the masjid might not have been from a hadith. Even then, it was a Miraculous Night Journey and God showed Muhammad (pbuh) many things during his stop at Baiytul Maqdis.
 
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Barney2.0

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There’s just one problem with that interpretation, it’s the Hadiths hat describe the mosque as having doors and being a physical and active building at the time of Mohammed’s supposed visit:

Some of them (narrators) said: The Prophet, may Allah bless him, had disappeared that night, so the members of family of 'Abd al-Muttalib went out to search him. Al-'Abbas went to Dhu Tuwa and began to shout: O Muhammad! O Muhammad! The Apostle of Allah, may Allah bless him, said: I am here. He said: O my brother's son! You have worried the people since the (beginning of the) night, where had you been? He said: I am coming from Bayt al-Muqaddas. He said: In one night? He said: Yes. He said: Did you experience anything which was not good? He said: I did not experience anything but good. Umm Hani said: He was taken on this journey from our house. He slept that night with us; he offered al-'Isha prayers, and then he slept. When it was pre-dawn we awoke him (to offer) morning (prayers). He got up and when he offered morning prayers he said: O Umm Hani! I offered al'Isha prayers with you as you witnessed, then I reached Bayt Al-Muqaddas and offered prayers there; then I offered morning prayers before you. After this he got up to go out; I said to him: Do not relate this to the people because they will belie you and harm you. He said: By Allah I shall relate to them and inform them. They wondered at it and said: We have never heard a thing like this. The Apostle of Allah, may Allah bless him, said to Gabriel; O Gabriel! my people will not confirm it. He said: Abu Bakr will testify to it; and he is al-Siddiq. The narrator added: Many people who had embraced Islam and offered prayers went astray. (The Prophet continued,) I stood at al-Hijr, visualised Bayt al-Muqaddas and described its signs. Some of them said: HOW MANY DOORS ARE THERE IN THAT MOSQUE? I HAD NOT COUNTED THEM SO I BEGAN TO LOOK AT IT AND COUNTED THEM ONE BY ONE AND GAVE THEM INFORMATION CONCERNING THEM. I also gave information about their caravan which was on the way and its signs. They found them as I had related. Allah, the Almighty, the Great, revealed: "We appointed the vision which We showed thee as an ordeal for mankind". He (Ibn Sa'd) said: It refers to the vision of the eye which he saw with the eye. (pp. 246-248; bold and capital emphasis ours).

You can find more information here:

Muhammad's Alleged Night Journey to the Jerusalem Temple
 
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Islam_mulia

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That's the Majesty, the grandness of the Night Journey (al-israk). It goes beyond the narrow confines of breaking physical barriers and transcends into the divine spectrum. Muhammad (pbuh) was given the opportunity to see beyond the normal physical constraints.
The Prophet travelled from Masjid al-haram (the building not constructed at that time) to Masjidil aqsa (the mosque not built at that time). What he saw (the mosque in another dimension, possibly) and experienced, were rejected by some Muslims at that time. Only those with faith stick to Muhammad (pbuh) and God.
 
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dzheremi

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Okay, but we don't have faith in Muhammad or Islam, soooo...

The thread can be summarized as: Muslims believe that Muhammad was taken on a miraculous spiritual and perhaps physical (depending on who you ask) journey to places that didn't exist yet, and because they didn't exist yet it proves that the words used to talk about those places didn't mean the things that they mean in every other instance.

That's your god's miracle? Changing the meaning of words for the sake of Muhammad's story? Showing Muhammad doors that didn't really exist, but are some kind of 'miracle', not-physical doors for him to count?

Wow...what a god and religion...
 
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