C
colmywaykurtz
Guest
What instances?I bet you were not aware of the instances in the Bible where Jesus had prophecised the coming of Mohammad.
What instances?I bet you were not aware of the instances in the Bible where Jesus had prophecised the coming of Mohammad.
So - I gather that you are an Ahmadi…This is the belief of the Ahmadi sect of islam.
I bet you a chocolate cake that they will quote the “paraclete” verse and also take verses from Song of Songs - SolomonWhat instances?
Quite funny that you should say so. I’ve just read another thread that says the same- That some messiah person in the 1800’s said that Jesus went to India with our Lady and died and was burried there! Have no idea where these strange beliefs come from! And by the way, aren’t Muslims forbidden from believing in other messengers after Muhammad?- Or is that just one of the interpretations:shrug:So - I gather that you are an Ahmadi…
Don’t want to derail the thread - but don’t Ahmadi’s believe that Jesus traveled to India and died there at the age of 92.
They claim that his tomb stone / grave is there right next to The Blessed Mother Mary and that Ahmadi’s visit their grave site.
Also, don’t the Ahmadi’s have their own prophet from the 1800’s which created this movement - therefore - making mohamads statement false since he claimed he is the seal of all prophets…???
BTW - Welcome to CAF…![]()
Good morning Mary ~Quite funny that you should say so. I’ve just read another thread that says the same- That some messiah person in the 1800’s said that Jesus went to India with our Lady and died and was burried there! Have no idea where these strange beliefs come from! And by the way, aren’t Muslims forbidden from believing in other messengers after Muhammad?- Or is that just one of the interpretations:shrug:
Yes we know all of this… it’s repeated on here all of the time from muslims…No mary muslims are encouraged to believe and understand the good things from other faiths. And muslims believe in jesus, moses, adam and all the other prophets before Mohammad, shows how much you know about Islam.
We’re still waiting to hear your “instances” of Muhammad being predicted in the Bible, LUV4ALL.No mary muslims are encouraged to believe and understand the good things from other faiths. And muslims believe in jesus, moses, adam and all the other prophets before Mohammad, shows how much you know about Islam.
Yea but he obviously got drunk with power. He enjoyed it. Knowing he could kill whoever he wanted if they didn’t agree with him obviously went to his head. He got clouded with it. He was high with power.True, but wouldn’t it take a thoroughly narcissistic person to go to such lengths just for personal gain? He caused a lot of people a lot of problems.
With fear of death. If they do not do as told, they get beaten or killed. God wants us to chose him out of free will, not be forced to. Mohammads teachings are disgusting and immoral.The test is 1500 years later, a billion people seem to take fasting more seriously than we do, they pray 5 times a day, and modesty is important.
Is this the work the devil wants to promote?
Peace
Eric
The Qur’an would seem to be too complex for an individual of Muhammad’s standing to compose on his own out of a lust for power. But given that poetry was the primary–in fact only–real form of entertainment available in contemporary Arabia, Muhammad may have known others who could act as his assistants, editors, or ghostwriters, if you will, in putting together this notable work of literature.Again, wouldn’t the simplest explanation be that he just made it up for personal gain? I guess (3), but I wouldn’t say it was for narcissistic reasons.
I’d like to add the following: it seems strange, indeed implausible, to posit that an ordinary individual would take the time and effort to compose a lengthy work of poetry, whether on his own or with the involvement of others, when the chances of his gaining enough influence over the community to achieve political and military dominance would be so slim as to render the notion as unrealistic as the hallucinations of a… hashish addict. (Hyperbole alert!)The Qur’an would seem to be too complex for an individual of Muhammad’s standing to compose on his own out of a lust for power. But given that poetry was the primary–in fact only–real form of entertainment available in contemporary Arabia, Muhammad may have known others who could act as his assistants, editors, or ghostwriters, if you will, in putting together this notable work of literature.
But the Quran wasn’t composed in one sitting or even one long project. It is made up of simple verses that were “revealed” to Mohammed throughout 23 years. The verses were also very convenient- being revealed when a question needed to be answered or something had happened needing resolution etc Plus verses/suras on stories in wide circulation in Arabia at that time, from the Jewish traditions and the Christian apocryphal books.I’d like to add the following: it seems strange, indeed implausible, to posit that an ordinary individual would take the time and effort to compose a lengthy work of poetry, whether on his own or with the involvement of others, when the chances of his gaining enough influence over the community to achieve political and military dominance would be so slim as to render the notion as unrealistic as the hallucinations of a… hashish addict. (Hyperbole alert!)
The words contained in both the Qur’an and the ahadith are written in Arabic and originated from the lips of the same man.But the Quran wasn’t composed in one sitting or even one long project. It is made up of simple verses that were “revealed” to Mohammed throughout 23 years. The verses were also very convenient- being revealed when a question needed to be answered or something had happened needing resolution etc Plus verses/suras on stories in wide circulation in Arabia at that time, from the Jewish traditions and the Christian apocryphal books.
I find nothing at all extraordinary about the composition of the Quran. If I write in my diary every day, or a few times a week for 20 years, you can be sure that I’ll have something much bigger than the Quran at the end of it all.Considering that poetry was the “diary” of those times, to capture any significant or meaningful thing, my diary (if I was a 7th Century Arab) would be another Quran. There is a reason the Quraish found Mohammed’s verses that he recited to the crowds to be utterly unimpressive. There was even a man who would follow him around and after Muhammad finished reciting his verses, the man would compose his own verses on the spot to challenge Mohammed and ask “Tell me, what makes his verses better than mine?” There’s nothing extraordinary at all about Mohammed’s 23 year compilation of verses called “the Quran” except that his followers memorized them as divine revelation when others were just poems.
If Muhammad hadn’t died when he did, he would have simply continued to give verses as he went and the Quran would have been much bigger than it is.