The gang-rapers tom mentioned specifically justified their actions by referring to the actions of the Prophet. At present, Sunnis have no way to address this issue.
I don't think it would kill you to admit that this is a serious problem. And to my mind, to ignore it is a betrayal of those young girls. — Mongrel
Since you have yet to comprehend anything I told you, I think we're done. — Mongrel
But you could ask. I don't think it's right to wave away victims. If they're brought up, they should be honored.. like, "Yes. That was terrible."I don't know which gang-rapers tom was referring to though — VagabondSpectre
I didn't thrust that dogma. People are violent for all sorts of reasons. People become pacifists for all sorts of reasons. A living religion is a worldview. Scripture is a touchstone. Ritual is an anchor. So religion comes into play when people go to war in the same way it's there at marriages and deaths.But why are you dogmatically thrusting this as the fundamental explanation of Islamic violence and christian pacifism? — VagabondSpectre
The very notion that the example of the Prophet should be applicable to modern day Muslims can itself be challenged — VagabondSpectre
Maybe I am biased though, when I did read the bible at around age 15 (new english translation), I read it front to back, so I was struck by all the lunacy of the OT before I got to the more familiar fairy tales. The prophet warrior kings I recall from the Old Testament may have been marginalized in thought and spirit, but not yet in in doctrine, or fully in practice. — VagabondSpectre
I was trying to convey in a nice way that it's obvious that you don't know much about how religious authority works in Sunni Islam.actually addressing the points I make instead of just inserting a suggested reading list, — VagabondSpectre
You did the QED, not me.the prevailing message of Christianity is peace, the Islamic prophet Mohamed was violent, QED, Islam is inherently more violent. — VagabondSpectre
The difference between our views is that you believe Christianity more rigidly gives rise to trends of peace and pacifism in the people who follow it, while Islam more rigidly gives rise to trends of oppression and violence in the people who follow it, — VagabondSpectre
Only within the protective walls of secularism could Sunni Islam begin to reform. It's not clear to me that it would survive the transformation. So Islamic conservatism is charged by three prongs: tradition, the disruption of the British Empire, and the threat of assimilation into the West. There will be no significant reform any time soon. — Mongrel
But you could ask. I don't think it's right to wave away victims. If they're brought up, they should be honored.. like, "Yes. That was terrible." — Mongrel
I don't need to acknowledge the abhorrence of rape and murder because it goes without saying. — VagabondSpectre
Whoever kills a person [unjustly]…it is as though he has killed all mankind. And whoever saves a life, it is as though he had saved all mankind. — Qur’an, 5:32
That's beautiful. — Mongrel
For that cause We decreed for the Children of Israel that whosoever killeth a human being for other than manslaughter or corruption in the earth, it shall be as if he had killed all mankind, and whoso saveth the life of one, it shall be as if he had saved the life of all mankind. Our messengers came unto them of old with clear proofs (of Allah's Sovereignty), but afterwards lo! many of them became prodigals in the earth.
The only reward of those who make war upon Allah and His messenger and strive after corruption in the land will be that they will be killed or crucified, or have their hands and feet on alternate sides cut off, or will be expelled out of the land. Such will be their degradation in the world, and in the Hereafter theirs will be an awful doom;
But if you feel it must be said, then here it is from the Qur'an: — VagabondSpectre
[Muslims] are threatened by Islamophobic forces against which they need the protections offered by liberalism — freedom of speech, freedom of religion, nondiscrimination. But the same liberalism also brings them realities that most of them find un-Islamic — irreverence toward religion, tolerance of L.G.B.T. people, permissive attitudes on sex. They can’t easily decide, therefore, whether liberalism is good or bad for Muslims.
many secular liberal Westerners...take a more benign view of Islam mostly because they assume that all religious ideas are arbitrary, that it doesn’t matter what Muhammad said or did because tomorrow’s Muslims can just reinterpret the Prophet’s life story and read the appropriate liberal values in.
This is a prime example of the sort of asymmetry of reasoning which is often applied in such cases: if a person (or group or culture, etc) performs some act, and is motivated in doing so by a mix of religious and political aims, then the religious motivations are marginalized or dismissed altogether (and it's blamed solely on historical context, globalism, etc. - and so much the better if the West can be blamed in some way for fomenting or establishing said historical context). This, of course, usually applies when people are carrying out heinous acts in the name of religion; when they're carrying out beneficent acts, then religion can comfortably be said to be the sole or primary motivating factor. Religion, of course, can only motivate good behavior; otherwise, it's not real religion.No wonder some don't want to talk about history as it demonstrates unequivocally that the religion itself is not the primary issue; it's the socio-cultural context in which the religion is put to work that matters most (as VagabondSpectre has pointed out). What's left over is pretty small beans by comparison. — Baden
Because of course, "the West" is monolithic, as much as "the Islamic world," right? People in Sweden hold the exact same values as those in Poland, who hold the same values as those in Australia, who hold the exact same values as those in Greece, who hold the exact same values as those in the U.S.A.(And personally, I find Islamic critiques of Western morality more than a little cogent.) — Wayfarer
Plenty of commentators do assert this, though. Reza Aslan has made a cottage industry of such claims, for instance.To say that it's the social context, and therefore the contemporary religious interpretation that matters, is not necessarily to say that the religious motivation is unimportant. — jamalrob
I agree: historically almost no religion has clean hands, and I've flogged the horrors of Christianity many times.I think it's silly, ahistorical--and from a practical standpoint counterproductive and damaging--to say that Islam is inherently more violent than Christianity, but I think it's also silly, counterproductive and damaging to claim that, for example, Isis is not Islamic.
Given that you have purposefully left out the beginning of the sura, which explicitly states that the verse is about the Jews, I've got to ask: What are you trying to achieve by spreading blatant misinformation?
Do you really think no one has access to a Quran? — tom
Or to be more specific, it is taqqiya. — tom
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