A question for Muslims.

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We are not talking about the average Arabian Joe from their tribes here.

We are talking about a “PROPHET OF GOD” who at 53 years of age, married a little girl of 6 years old and consummated the marriage when she was 9…!!!
How old was the Holy Mother when she gave birth to Jesus?
 
Erik, people with a bias against Islam would have you believe this is a fact and they conveniently neglect to tell you Aisha was already married to someone else before being married to the Prophet. They also neglect to tell you reports of her being a prepubescent girl in her 2nd marriage contradict other historical events. It’s a form of intellectual dishonesty in my opinion.

The truth is these reports don’t stand up to scrutiny and the only reason some Muslims stand by it is because they have been conditioned to believe everything written in Sahih Bukhari / Muslim is authentic and can not be questioned.
-Could you link a source for Aisha’s prior marriage? This is the first I’ve heard of it.
-What was the norm for marriage practices and ages during that time? As I understand it, a older man entering into a marriage with a prepubescent girl wasn’t that odd since the marriage (ceremony) and the marriage (consummation) could take place several years apart depending on the age of the bride.
 
How old was the Holy Mother when she gave birth to Jesus?
Thread title: ----------------> Question for muslims

Bringing Mother Mary into the conversation is called “derailing” the thread.

**No one knows the age of Mother Mary **when all this happened. Her age was never documented.

However, the Islamic hadith is clear:

Bukhari 7:62:64 & 65
Narrated 'Aisha: that the Prophet married her when she was six years old and he consummated his marriage when she was nine years old, and then she remained with him for nine years (i.e., till his death).

Narrated 'Aisha: that the Prophet married her when she was six years old and he consummated his marriage when she was nine years old. Hisham said: I have been informed that ‘Aisha remained with the Prophet for nine years (i.e. till his death)." what you know of the Quran (by heart)’

searchtruth.com/book_display.php?book=62&translator=1&start=64&number=63
 
Thread title: ----------------> Question for muslims

Bringing Mother Mary into the conversation is called “derailing” the thread.

**No one knows the age of Mother Mary **when all this happened. Her age was never documented.

However, the Islamic hadith is clear:

Bukhari 7:62:64 & 65
Narrated 'Aisha: that the Prophet married her when she was six years old and he consummated his marriage when she was nine years old, and then she remained with him for nine years (i.e., till his death).

Narrated 'Aisha: that the Prophet married her when she was six years old and he consummated his marriage when she was nine years old. Hisham said: I have been informed that ‘Aisha remained with the Prophet for nine years (i.e. till his death)." what you know of the Quran (by heart)’

searchtruth.com/book_display.php?book=62&translator=1&start=64&number=63
Yes, the title of the thread is "A question for Muslims" and since the very first response (I wonder who’s post that was) to the OP was by a non-Muslim, said first response started off not with- “Well Islam teaches…” but with “Here’s my take on your question:”, only 2 Muslims has actually posted in this thread, and none of your posts are response to either Muslim poster(including the one who provided citations of his supporting evidence) I assumed the discussion had moved past the title.

Bringing the Holy Mother into the thread would only be derailing if other posters had not decided the crucial bit of information in this discussion was the age at which Muhammad’s marriage was consummated and other posters had not decided that we need to highlight that Muhammad was, as one of the other posters put it, a PROPHET OF GOD. Or are we to hold prophets to a higher standard than God? Perhaps some would classify this as an attempt to derail because the age at which the Holy Mother gave birth to Christ would invalidate their own argument?

Additionally, while the Holy Mother’s age is not mentioned specifically in the Bible, it can be reasonably acquired by using some basic reason and critical thinking. Jewish law and customs concerning marriage and the age of marriage, cultural norms for that time, living conditions (18 was old for that time period for a woman to get married for the first time), the traditional views and teachings of the Church on the matter, etc. God gave us our “little grey cells” for a reason, and I’m pretty sure it wasn’t to use them to put forth an argument that since it wasn’t in the Bible we can’t ever know for sure.
 
-Could you link a source for Aisha’s prior marriage? This is the first I’ve heard of it.
-What was the norm for marriage practices and ages during that time? As I understand it, a older man entering into a marriage with a prepubescent girl wasn’t that odd since the marriage (ceremony) and the marriage (consummation) could take place several years apart depending on the age of the bride.
Here is one from a Q & A translated from Arabic to English

alqatrah.net/en/question/index.php?id=150

I don’t know what the average age for marriage was. I would guess it’s anywhere from 13-17 but that’s just my guess and I could be wrong.
 
Here is one from a Q & A translated from Arabic to English

alqatrah.net/en/question/index.php?id=150

I don’t know what the average age for marriage was. I would guess it’s anywhere from 13-17 but that’s just my guess and I could be wrong.
Thank you. Additional queries-
-Why does “May Allah’s Curses be Upon Her” follow her name?
-Am I understanding it correctly that her status/role is a controversial/hotly debated one within Islam?
 
Thank you. Additional queries-
-Why does “May Allah’s Curses be Upon Her” follow her name?
-Am I understanding it correctly that her status/role is a controversial/hotly debated one within Islam?
Hi oldcatholicguy,

Twelver shia theology is made up of 1. a set of 6 theological beliefs that we call the roots of faith and 2. a set of 10 practices that we call the branches of faith.

One of those practices within the branches of faith is called Tabarra, It means to disassociate and distance oneself from the evildoers, oppressors, enemies of Allah and His Prophet and the Prophet’s Family. A common practice among Twelver Shias is to invoke God’s curse on such people after mentioning their name. This is a form of Tabarra through public displays of disapproval of that person.

You’re right, her status and role is a controversial one within Islam.
Sunni Muslims revere and respect her as the wife of the messenger, mother of believers, highly knowledgeable, etc.etc… and many feel the act of invoking God’s curse against her is highly blasphemous and deeply offensive. The extreme ones believe those who insult Aisha and the companions of the Prophet are heretics and should be put to death.

Shia Muslims on the other hand don’t have a good opinion of Aisha and accuse her of commuting uncountable crimes. Her fabricated hadiths about her age at marriage pale in comparison to her other crimes which include Poisoning and Assassinating the Prophet, abusing his daughter, leading the first civil war in Islam that caused the death of 30,000 people. Abusing Ali and his children. Fabricating Hadiths and attributing them to the Prophet
 
Hi oldcatholicguy,

Twelver shia theology is made up of 1. a set of 6 theological beliefs that we call the roots of faith and 2. a set of 10 practices that we call the branches of faith.

One of those practices within the branches of faith is called Tabarra, It means to disassociate and distance oneself from the evildoers, oppressors, enemies of Allah and His Prophet and the Prophet’s Family. A common practice among Twelver Shias is to invoke God’s curse on such people after mentioning their name. This is a form of Tabarra through public displays of disapproval of that person.

You’re right, her status and role is a controversial one within Islam.
Sunni Muslims revere and respect her as the wife of the messenger, mother of believers, highly knowledgeable, etc.etc… and many feel the act of invoking God’s curse against her is highly blasphemous and deeply offensive. The extreme ones believe those who insult Aisha and the companions of the Prophet are heretics and should be put to death.

Shia Muslims on the other hand don’t have a good opinion of Aisha and accuse her of commuting uncountable crimes. Her fabricated hadiths about her age at marriage pale in comparison to her other crimes which include Poisoning and Assassinating the Prophet, abusing his daughter, leading the first civil war in Islam that caused the death of 30,000 people. Abusing Ali and his children. Fabricating Hadiths and attributing them to the Prophet
Thank you for the information. I didn’t know that about the phrases that follow certain individual’s names (I assume the opposite is true for the positive phrases) nor how controversial Aisha is within the Islamic community and why.

Back to the topic of Aisha’s age and marriage to Muhammad I can generally conclude that-
-Sunni Muslims hold that she was of a young age and a virgin (I assume this is important, but don’t know why it is) when she married Muhammad.
-Shia Muslims hold that she was older, already had been married, and was not a virgin (see above) when she married Muhammad.

Would this be roughly accurate?
 
One of the Hadith’s has her playing with dolls.
digitaljournal.com/article/329317

The reason why this is important is not to go back and time and criticize the social mores of ancients with our modern knowledge. It is because it is a problem that religion is exasperating today.
There are people who suffer by regarding this type of behavior as iconic.
 
She was a young woman, according to the testimony of Biblical prophecy.

Too old to be playing with dolls.
And the term used in the Bible meant then what it means today in regards to how we define “young woman”?
 
digitaljournal.com/article/329317

The reason why this is important is not to go back and time and criticize the social mores of ancients with our modern knowledge. It is because it is a problem that religion is exasperating today.
There are people who suffer by regarding this type of behavior as iconic.
So what you are saying is the important part of Muhammad’s marriage to Aisha isn’t the “oh no he entered into a marriage contract that was in no way outside the norm for that time (and, if my information is correct, for Judaism at the time of the writing of the Old and New Testaments) and consummated the marriage within the norm for that time”;

but that it codified as correct something that we (the human race) have since learned through our advancement in knowledge concerning the physical and mental development of children isn’t correct;

and that this codification within Islam and the method by which Islamic theology is developed forces Muslims to pick between two truths (the truth of the Quran/Muhammad’s practices or the truth of secular knowledge [in this case science]);

and that this also highlights one of the failures of Islam’s man-made nature because, unlike Judaism and Christianity, if places the focus and purpose of marriage on the wrong aspects?

If that is what you are getting at, I agree.
 
So what you are saying is the important part of Muhammad’s marriage to Aisha isn’t the “oh no he entered into a marriage contract that was in no way outside the norm for that time (and, if my information is correct, for Judaism at the time of the writing of the Old and New Testaments) and consummated the marriage within the norm for that time”;

but that it codified as correct something that we (the human race) have since learned through our advancement in knowledge concerning the physical and mental development of children isn’t correct;

and that this codification within Islam and the method by which Islamic theology is developed forces Muslims to pick between two truths (the truth of the Quran/Muhammad’s practices or the truth of secular knowledge [in this case science]);

and that this also highlights one of the failures of Islam’s man-made nature because, unlike Judaism and Christianity, if places the focus and purpose of marriage on the wrong aspects?

If that is what you are getting at, I agree.
In a nutshell, yes.
Our dealings with other faith traditions, or even the fully secular need not focus on the theological details, which are irreconcilable differences for all practical purposes.

To focus on the practical is something that people of good will and common sense can come to authentic agreement on.
 
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