From the Hadith:Bukhari (52:260) - "...The Prophet said, 'If somebody (a Muslim) discards his religion, kill him.' "
Bukhari (83:37) - "Allah's Apostle never killed anyone except in one of the following three situations: (1) A person who killed somebody unjustly, was killed (in Qisas,) (2) a married person who committed illegal sexual intercourse and (3) a man who fought against Allah and His Apostle and deserted Islam and became an apostate."
Bukhari (84:57) - "[In the words of] Allah's Apostle, 'Whoever changed his Islamic religion, then kill him.'"
Bukhari (89:271) - A man who embraces Islam, then reverts to Judaism is to be killed according to "the verdict of Allah and his apostle."
Bukhari (84:58 ) - "There was a fettered man beside Abu Muisa. Mu'adh asked, 'Who is this (man)?' Abu Muisa said, 'He was a Jew and became a Muslim and then reverted back to Judaism.' Then Abu Muisa requested Mu'adh to sit down but Mu'adh said, 'I will not sit down till he has been killed. This is the judgment of Allah and His Apostle (for such cases) and repeated it thrice.' Then Abu Musa ordered that the man be killed, and he was killed. Abu Musa added, 'Then we discussed the night prayers'"
Bukhari (84:64-65) - "Allah's Apostle: 'During the last days there will appear some young foolish people who will say the best words but their faith will not go beyond their throats (i.e. they will have no faith) and will go out from (leave) their religion as an arrow goes out of the game. So, wherever you find them, kill them, for whoever kills them shall have reward on the Day of Resurrection."
So what do I tell a non-Muslim who sent this to my friend?
I think you should consult an imam or a scholar because this is a delicate topic, stuff like this is often used to show religion as barbaric.
Those who danced were thought to be quite insane, by those who couldn't hear the music...
The following are answers from three different scholars.
thank you very much for those.
Don't just do something! Stand there.
Next time i have any problems like this im going straight to beast.
Those who danced were thought to be quite insane, by those who couldn't hear the music...
Salam
I do not believe that God ordered us to kill a muslim who converts to Buddhism.
God is Kind and Merciful.
Creator of the Universe allows freedom of conscience.
Omrow
Is it aposty or apostasy? :?
' Nay, verily! With me is my Lord, He will guide me ' {2662}
Salam
I can understand that how one can be punished for an apostrophe;
but i cant see how one can be executed for an apostasy.
Omrow
apostasy.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Yaqub, mate, quote this from the Quran.
"Let there be no compulsion in religion...." (2:256, or something like that,)
It really doesn't take Einstein to work this one out. Those Ahadith aren't very reliable now, are they?
Chin up, mate! Life's too short.
Yes they are reliable. Traditionally in Muslim states. If you apostated then the scholars would interview you, if you had reasons for apostating then they could try to help you. Only if you were apostating [b]for the fun of it or had no real argument[/b] and after that refused to return to the fold were you executed.
Gentleness and kindness were never a part of anything except that it made it beautiful, and harshness was never a part of anything except that it made it ugly.
Through cheating, stealing, and lying, one may get required results but finally one becomes
err...Bukhari not accurate?
in that case we can't ever know pretty much anything from the life of the Prophet (saw), and we completely lose the source of Islamic knowledge which is the Sunnah, leaving just the Qur'an as our sole source?
Don't just do something! Stand there.
Well no, they contradict the Quran. Any Hadith that does that loses quite a bit of its reliability, doesn't it. I'm not saying that Bukhari is generally unreliable, he's probably the most reliable. But the the big BUT is, that it contradicts the Quran in this situation.
Chin up, mate! Life's too short.
ahadith can never contradict quran. the words of Nabi and the kalaam of Allah (swt) will never contradict! what you've just done Courage is a what a lot of muslims do, hence this situation in the ummah. when we take a hadith, we must look at the background of that hadith, what situation it was said in, to whom it was said, whether if there is another hadith about the same situation and so forth. likewise with quran, when the ayah was revealed, where it was revealed and whether if there is a specific hadith about the ayah.
thats the very reason why we need scholars/teachers. see what happens when people try to say this hadith means so and so!
may Allah (swt) give the ulema long healthy lives! ameen thuma'ameen!
We Shia Muslims believe that our 12 Imams taught us that any Hadith or saying that goes against the teachings of Holy Quran must be thrown against the wall.
Our Ayatollahs tell us not to accept any information as true if it contradicts the Book of Allah.
No matter which other book it is, if it is against Quranic verses, then we Shias never believe it as true. God's Quran is number one source for us. All other sources - books as well as teachers - are checked against it for credibility and authenticity. That is what Prophety Muhammad taught and all or sinless and perfect twelve Imams( peace be upon them all).
This is the only real and true religion from God.
www.al-islam.org
Ayatollah rightly named America as "Great Satan".
www.presstv.ir
There are many times where ahadith seem to contradict one another, or contradict the Qur'an, or even parts of the Qur'an seem to contradict each other.
If we believe that there are no inconsistencies (which I'm sure we all do), then wghen there is something that doesn't make sense, we must assume that it is US who are deficient in our understanding.
Noor is right in terms of taking note of place, time and context of each revelation, and the need for scholars, but I disagree with part of what she said. It wasn't said explicitly, but was more implied - forgive me if I've understood you. Even if I have, my point still holds, because there are many Muslims who do this.
Whilst scholars [b]are [/b]important, they are not the only ones who should try to decifer/find meaning within religious texts. Allah (swt) has blessed us all with the capacity for reason, and we should use it. We shouldn't just be recepticals for scholars' lessons, we should try to find our own meaning from the Qur'an too. When you read the Qur'an, then Allah (swt) is talking directly to you; in YOUR time, place and context. Muslims believe that the Qur'an is universal and true to all times, and it is unreasonable to suggest that scholars have been throught the same individual experiences as us. I think that the Qur'an has different types of lessons - some are for scholars to learn from and issue fatawa and so forth, while others are for us all (Muslim and even non-Muslim) to read individually and reflect on privately by ourselves.
Don't just do something! Stand there.
Thank God for Imam Shafi'i RA ! He is famous RA for the work he did on ironing out [u]apparent[/u] contradiction in our primary texts.
The Qur'an speaks, who is listening?
There is an ayah in The Qur'an that says "[The Qur'an is] a guidance for those who have Taqwa." There is a saying that "only the Ulema fear God SWT" The true scholars are the people of Taqwa.
Ayat in the Qur'an teach us, that many are guided and many are misguided by it. According to the scholars it is kufr to attribute a meaning to the ayaat from your own desires.
[u]Well if you accept that, how can common people reflect on the Qur'an?[/u]
Go to the scholars, go to the books of Tafsir and let them explain the meanings, then reflect on their significance.
Don't let your exercise of "reflecting on The Qur'an" be a problem solving exercise! (thoughts: [i]okay so by way of elimation this means that that isn't that [/i] ) . If I tell you The sentance I mentioned earlier:
means that, not everyone has the hearing, not everyone has the ability to understand. Not everyone has had their heart opened to The Qur'an as Sayyidina Abdullah ibn Abbas RA did when he said, "If I lost a camel I would not go searching outside for it, I would look in The Qur'an." The Qur'an speaks but only the pious true scholars really hear.You might not have got that understanding the first time around, but now I've given commentary so you can understand it. Does this mean you can't reflect on that statement anymore, because I've explained it?
No way! Reflect on the significane, on the beauty, on [size=18][b]THE UNDERSTANDING YOU HAVE FOUND[/b][/size]. Did you know the Arabs have the same word for 'finding' something as they have for 'ecstacy' How cool is that?
So understand and reflect away!
Gentleness and kindness were never a part of anything except that it made it beautiful, and harshness was never a part of anything except that it made it ugly.
Through cheating, stealing, and lying, one may get required results but finally one becomes
my point is that we should read [b]many[/b] commentaries/explanations, and then use these to ask Allah (swt) what He means by a particular verse, rather than listen to one commentary [b]telling [/b]you what He means.
Like all the different fonts, though.
Don't just do something! Stand there.
don't we always ask Allah (swt) to guide us? to guide us to the ones He has guided?
shall add later.
food time
tried, tested and failed. i speak for myself. of course i understand and take in the less complicated ayat of the qur'an like backbiting, zakah, jannah etc, that yah i can understand and reflect upon that but the more complex ayat no way can i figure out what they mean. take surah al-fatiha an example, many of us will read the verse 'sirat ul mustaqeem' as the straight path meaning islam, guide us to islam and keep us on the straight path. but what is the path? one scholar has wrote a whole book of tafsir on surah al-fatiha, scholars say the path in fact means the Prophet (saw), somehow the root of that word means the Prophet (saw), it also means the scholars. now only an educated person who has studied classical arabic will be able to interpret that.
So...a scholar said that the way to the Straight Path is with a scholar, so it must be true, right?
Wow! That like saying that Pantene Pro-V is the way to clean hair, because the Pantene Pro-V advert said so!
OK, I'm just being provocative now...I love scholars and I've got a fat book of tafsir for Surah al-Fatiha myself.
I'm just concerned with the fact that many Muslims follow scholars as if what they say is indisputable. Whereas the lessons and teachings within the Qur'an and ahadith vary when put into different contexts.
e.g. Imam Shafii. When in Madina he issued a fatwa that to get divorced a man must say 'I divorce you' three times and then it is valid. When in later life he moved residency to Cairo, he judged that the fatwa was not applicable in Egyptian society, because in their culture men would often shout 'I divorce you!' during arguments, while not actually meaning it.
This proves that rulings/lessons can/should change from place to place.
This was only a few hundred miles away, and in the same time period, so imagine how different the rulings/lessons are between hundreds of years ago in the Mid-East and modern-day Britain?!
So why is this relevant? Because the scholars here have not grown up in modern-day Britain. How many renowned scholars are there who know about teenage/young people's lives? Very, VERY few.
So while it IS true that we need scholars to point us between 'halal' and 'haram', we can't rely on them to offer SOLUTIONS to our problems, because they've never faced the types of problems we face. So for example, when we read a verse about patience, the principal of patience that is mentioned is universal to all times/places. BUT how we go about implementing patience in our lives/becoming 'patient' ourselves, that is something that today's scholars, imams and sheikhs can't really help us with. (there are SOME, but way too few. There are more Americans but [b]hardly[/b] any fully-qualified British ones).
Insha'Allah this situation will change in the future.
Don't just do something! Stand there.
well yeah. if he has studied the text inside out, there is no way he can be wrong.. right? some people believe some don't.
they're more educated in matters of quran, ahadith, seerah, fiqh etc. if i didn't follow a scholar by now, i would have probably issued my own silly fatawa and invented my own fiqh!
Allhamdulilah my shaykh.
Wrong. Scholars are human just like us, and they are prone to mistakes unlike the Prophet (pbuh). But that doesn't mean we shouldn't listen to them because...
The Prophet (pbuh) said, “Scholars are the heirs of the prophets” [Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi].
yah duh i know that. but if 10 other scholars are saying that, they're probably gona be right. and a shaykh is much, much more than just a teacher.
I'm sure humans can reach a stage of ego being kamila (complete) meaning Allah (swt) has bestowed these awliyah Allah (friends of Allah (swt)) with the ability to not comitt mistakes - emphasis on this being a blessing from Allah (swt), i'll try me best to get a reference!
The phrase goes along the lines, Prophets (as) cannot commit a mistake whereas humans ie awliyah Allah are protected from it....
Are you confusing 'mistake' with 'sin'?
Humans may be able to get to a place where they do not commit sins but they are not Ma'sum, nor are they free of mistakes. Not every mistake is a sin. That does not mean it won't be costly, or plain wrong.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
oopsie my bad, sin it is :oops:
awliyahs cannot commit any sins cz they have completely submitted to Allah (swt), their limbs are unable to commit any haram. they have conquered the nafs
The reason I say this is because Musa (as) killed someone by accident and that was his mistake.
Can't be a sin coz Prophets (pbut) are protected from them.
I disagree. They are not Ma'sum. Only Prophets and children are.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
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