T
TheProphet
Guest
To You Your Religion To Me Mine.
Well it depends on the muslim country that you are living in. Saudi Arabia bans christian prayer groups, bibles, rosaries in its land. In some Muslim countries, if a Muslim converts to a Christian, he is automatically sentenced to deathFrom the history and present situation, it’s proven that Islam stays to be the most peacful and tolerants religion. The Holy Prophet (peace be upon him) was promoting peace during his lifetime and is considered to be the most influential figure.
that’s because that’s the legislated punishment in islam for apostasy. however, that doesn’t change the fact that islam allows someone of another faith to keep that faith and is not to be forced to accept islam against his will.In some Muslim countries, if a Muslim converts to a Christian, he is automatically sentenced to death
Does Islam not teach that there are 3 options for non-believers:that’s because that’s the legislated punishment in islam for apostasy. however, that doesn’t change the fact that islam allows someone of another faith to keep that faith and is not to be forced to accept islam against his will.
You can say Islam is tolerant, but in practice it is extremely intolerant. (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Egypt, Pakistan are all examples) Words are cheap my friend…you need to back up your statements with examples of your own.From the history and present situation, it’s proven that Islam stays to be the most peacful and tolerants religion. The Holy Prophet (peace be upon him) was promoting peace during his lifetime and is considered to be the most influential figure.
this may be so in current times with the many reformations the catholic church has gone through. however, it certainly wasn’t the case in the past with the inquisitions that took place throughout history, with people being burned at the stake or tortured–many times until they died–for holding heretic beliefs and “going against” the church.Sure, you can argue that someone may by spoken ill of or even ostracized for leaving the Catholic faith, but they would not be executed.
3 options for non-believers who a muslim army has come upon, meaning, in a context and situation of war.Does Islam not teach that there are 3 options for non-believers:
- Convert to Islam
- Live in “subjugation” (as a dhimma) and be subject to a “poll tax” called a "Jizya
- Death
Then why are you posting here?To You Your Religion To Me Mine.
You have a warped view of history. The Ottoman’s gained their empire through peace? The whole of the Arab world converted to Islam peacefully? Spain was glad to see the Moors and just welcomed them with open arms? IMO Mohammid was a false prophet and has caused more wars than any single man in history.From the history and present situation, it’s proven that Islam stays to be the most peacful and tolerants religion. The Holy Prophet (peace be upon him) was promoting peace during his lifetime and is considered to be the most influential figure.
Many Muslims would call their “Jihad” upon the “west” as a situation of war. Al-Qaeda and numerous other terrorist organizations feel they are in a state of war right now against the west, so I guess these 3 options apply right now.3 options for non-believers who a muslim army has come upon, meaning, in a context and situation of war.
Another term for “jizyah” that is a little more current would be “extortion”.btw, the second option is to surrender to the muslim army and either leave the land or stay and live under the protection of the muslim conquerers, hence the term ahl adh-dhimmah–which literally means “the people of protection”. in lieu of this protection, they pay the jizyah.
I agree with you on this point. Since I don’t consider any of the options acceptable, I support our country’s war on terrorism.also the third option is not death, it’s to fight, which does not necessitate death, nor is the intent behind the fighting necessarily to eradicate and kill the peoples who are being fought against. there are instances throughout history where people have fought against the invading muslim army, then later surrendered–as was the case with jerusalem when the 3rd caliph, umar bin al-khattaab, conquered it.
Wrong. Only the Islamic State can declare and wage a state of war, not a ragtag band of hellraisers. That’s what both you and these terrorist organizations don’t understand.Many Muslims would call their “Jihad” upon the “west” as a situation of war. Al-Qaeda and numerous other terrorist organizations feel they are in a state of war right now against the west, so I guess these 3 options apply right now.
It’s not extortion if you get what you pay for…which is your defense.Another term for “jizyah” that is a little more current would be “extortion”.
The article in that link has so many errors in it, I don’t know where to begin.this may be so in current times with the many reformations the catholic church has gone through. however, it certainly wasn’t the case in the past with the inquisitions that took place throughout history, with people being burned at the stake or tortured–many times until they died–for holding heretic beliefs and “going against” the church.
found this pretty interesting article containing descriptions of some of the methods of punishment that were meted out during these times… rotten.com/library/history/inquisition/.
Since the population of Europe in 1300 was only 10 million, and the entire population of the whole world didn’t reach 500 million until 1650, methinks the figures opined here are perhaps a shade inflated. The present-day population of England, France, Spain, and Italy combined is only 216 million. What does the author if this article think the Catholic Church did, import people from other planets to disagree with?Historically, there have been between two billion and five billion non-Catholics living in the world at any given time since the Church was founded. That’s a lot of heresy.
The Crusades had nothing to do with converting Muslims. Specifically, they were to secure the rights of Christian pilgrims to visit sacred sites in Palestine without fear of molestation. Later they segued into territorial conquest, but this still had nothing to do with converting Muslims.The first implementations of this policy were the Crusades, which involved sending armies out to forcibly convert those who didn’t agree with the Pope (specifically the Muslims inhabiting the Holy Lands). The first Crusade went really well, but subsequent efforts to recapture the magic were miserable failures.
And neither one was a function of the Catholic Church. The Spanish Inquisition was an arm of the Spanish Crown, under the auspices of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. The Albigensian Crusade was carried out by French secular forces under Simon de Montfort, not by the Church.Technically, the Inquisition is an ongoing function of the church (more on this below), but when people talk about “the Inquisition,” they’re usually referring to one of two historically notable incidents: the Albigensian Inquisition, or the Spanish Inquisition.
The Albigensians were a development from two other heretical groups, the Cathars and the Bogomils, and I guess you could say that they were strict Christians who held stoutly to the teachings of Christ—if you discount, of course, the fact that the Albigensians believed that Satan created the world, not God; that Adam and Eve were brought to life with the spirits of demons, not the breath of God; that Jesus entered and exited Mary’s body through her ear; that meat, cheese, and eggs were not to be eaten because they were the result of sexual activity; and that the practice of ritual suicide was a good thing.The Cathars become popular in the Languedoc region of France by living a chaste and ascetic lifestyle which was considerably more in the teachings of Jesus than the local clergy
Various historians place the number of deaths under various Catholic inquisitions in the vicinity of 3,000 to 4,000 over the course of approximately 300 years. The number varies since there is no way to ascertain the exact numbers. By comparison, however, 800 executions a year were carried out in the early post-Reformation period in England, where Catholic inquisitions never operated at all. The burning of alleged witches was practically unknown in Catholic countries, but quite common in Protestant countries, such as England, where 30,000 people were burned at the stake for supposed witchcraft; in Germany, the number was 100,000.In addition to uncounted numbers of completely innocent people
Whereupon follows a repetition of the laundry list of horrors, trotted out verbatim from the Black Legend ever since the English pamphleteers invented it back in the 16th century.To assist people in repenting, the Inquisitors used any torture method they could think of, with the theoretical restriction that they couldn’t break the skin. The Inquisitors came up with numerous gadgets to work within this restriction. They included:
It does not matter if I as a Catholic do not understand all of the teachings of Islam. I will continue to educate myself, so that I can better discuss these issues with you.Wrong. Only the Islamic State can declare and wage a state of war, not a ragtag band of hellraisers. That’s what both you and these terrorist organizations don’t understand.
in case anyone was interested, my source for this quote of al-Mawardi (d. 1058), isOn top of that, according to al-Mawardi (d. 1058), Shafi’i jusrist of Baghdad, author of important treatise on constitutional law
“Whoever converts from a Jewish to a Christian sect is not free to do so. According to the more correct of the two opinions he is obliged to become a Muslim.”
hmmm, i wonder what will happen if he refuses to become a Muslim?