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Salam alaykum.

My dear brothers and sisters, please watch this video below and share your thoughts.

Sunni Muslims vs Quran Alone: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dV4Oogq0djw


Regards.

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General Discussions / Can someone please refute this scientific "error"?
« on: December 23, 2016, 07:50:42 PM »
The Location of the Moon and the Stars

In the Qur’an we find the following statements about the moon and the stars:

He Who created the seven heavens, one above the other …
And We have adorned the lowest heaven with lamps … (67:3,5)

And He completed them seven heavens in two days
and inspired in each heaven its command;
and We adorned the lower heaven with lamps,
and rendered it guarded… (41:12)

We have indeed adorned the lower heaven with the beauty of the stars. (37:6)

Do you not see how God has created the seven heavens
one above the other,
and made the moon a light in their midst,
and made the sun as a lamp? (71:15-16)

The above is Yusuf Ali’s translation. Pickthall renders Sura 71:16 as

And hath made the moon a light therein, and made the sun a lamp?

The Qur’an seems to teach that there are seven heavens, one above the other, whether it was imagined to be like storeys in a high building (flat layers) or like shells or the layers of an onion.

As a poetic way of expression this is acceptable, even though there are, scientifically speaking, no discernable stages in the universe that would allow us to differentiate between those various heavens.

However, the Qur’an specifically assigns the stars to a lower or even the lowest heaven, while it states the relationship of the moon to the totality of the seven heavens is that it is “in them” (fehinna). This gives the impression that the moon is at least as far away as the stars if not further.

But everyone knows today that the stars are much much further away from the earth than the moon. This is not a small difference, it is an issue of several magnitudes. The average distance from the earth to the moon is 384,400 km, while Proxima Centauri, the closest star to us outside of the solar system, is already about 4.3 light years = 40,682,300,000,000 km (40 trillion kilometers) away, or expressed differently, we need to multiply the distance of the moon by more than 100 million to reach even the nearest
of all the stars.

Had the Qur’an formulated “and the moon in the middle of them” then this would have been unambiguously wrong. The formulation “in them” is vague enough to still allow the possibility of the moon to be in the lowest heaven as well. The wording of the Qur’an is certainly less than scientific in this instance and suggesting wrong notions even though it is sufficiently vague to not make it a clear error. It does, however, throw substantial doubt on the claim that God made the Qur’an scientifically as a proof of its divine origin.

Though it seems quite strenuous, one could say that maybe all the stars are in the lowest of the seven heavens (as the Qur’an does) and the moon is on the lowest part of the lowest heaven (which the Qur’an neither says nor implies). The Qur’anic expression relates the location of the moon to the plurality of the heavens and says that the moon is “in them”. It does not say it is exactly in the middle, but it does say somewhere “inside” when we look how this word is used elsewhere.

There are a good number of other verses where the Qur’an uses the exact same Arabic word “Fihinna” as in the verse we are talking about. In the verses 9:36 and 2:197 it is used in the phrase “the holy months, IN THEM do not …”, i.e. with the meaning of “during this time”. It is used speaking of a temporal “inside”.

In the following a list of verses where this word is used for location:

55:56

(about the gardens of Paradise)
IN THEM will be (Maidens), chaste, restraining their glances, …

55:70

IN THEM will be fair (Companions), good, beautiful;-

This is clearly stating that these beautiful women are inside these gardens, and more or less in the middle or distributed, but not that they are all huddling on the boundaries of it. This will be important below.

5:120

“Never said I to them aught except what Thou didst command me to say, to wit, ‘worship God, my Lord and your Lord’; and I was a witness over them whilst I dwelt AMONGST THEM; when Thou didst take me up Thou wast the Watcher over them, and Thou art a witness to all things.

Again, this is about Jesus, and the whole point is that he lived AMONG THEM, not a life at an obscure point at the periphery, not he was in their midst and they have no excuse that they did not hear his message because they didn’t know about it.

17:44

The seven heavens and the earth, and all beings THEREIN, declare His glory: there is not a thing but celebrates His praise; And yet ye understand not how they declare His glory! Verily He is Oft-Forbear, Most Forgiving!

Again, the totality is meant, not just the beings at the periphery.

23:71

If the Truth had been in accord with their desires, truly the heavens and the earth, and all beings THERIN would have been in confusion and corruption! Nay, We have sent them their admonition, but they turn away from their admonition.

Again, IN THEM, means ‘inside’ those living in the earth or in the heavens.

Finally the verse 71:16 that is in question:

Pickthall: And hath made the moon a light therein, and made the sun a lamp?

Yusuf Ali: And made the moon a light in their midst, and made the sun as a (Glorious) Lamp?

Clearly “in their midst” is a valid translation and there is no need to understand this as “exactly in the middle heaven” but it is “inside”. What does “in” refer to? It is THEM, i.e. the seven heavens, since that is what the Qur’an talks about in the verse before it.

Do you not see how God has created the seven heavens
one above the other,
and made the moon a light in their midst,
and made the sun as a lamp? (71:15-16)

No indication that the moon is on the boundary of these heavens, or even at the lower boundary of the lowest one of the seven. The natural reading is still “somewhere inside”. And clearly, Yusuf Ali thought that was the natural reading.

In distinction to this, we have the very clear statement that the stars are “on the boundary” of the seven heavens since they are in the LOWEST heaven as Sura 67:5 says.

As such, maybe one cannot say that the moon is further away than the stars, but given that the stars are in the lowest and the moon is inside the heavens, the moon is at least as far away as the nearest stars and that is scientifically problematic. If it is not outright wrong what the Qur’an says due to the vagueness of expression, it does nevertheless give a wrong impression!!!

https://arabkingdom.wordpress.com/contradictions-in-quran/

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Salam alaykum everyone.


Verse 2:282 is the longest ayah of the Quran. But I am having trouble understanding a part of it. See the bold part in the translation below.

2:282
Pickthall: O ye who believe! When ye contract a debt for a fixed term, record it in writing. Let a scribe record it in writing between you in (terms of) equity. No scribe should refuse to write as Allah hath taught him, so let him write, and let him who incurreth the debt dictate, and let him observe his duty to Allah his Lord, and diminish naught thereof. But if he who oweth the debt is of low understanding, or weak, or unable himself to dictate, then let the guardian of his interests dictate in (terms of) equity. And call to witness, from among your men, two witnesses. And if two men be not (at hand) then a man and two women, of such as ye approve as witnesses, so that if the one erreth (through forgetfulness) the other will remember. And the witnesses must not refuse when they are summoned. Be not averse to writing down (the contract) whether it be small or great, with (record of) the term thereof. That is more equitable in the sight of Allah and more sure for testimony, and the best way of avoiding doubt between you; save only in the case when it is actual merchandise which ye transfer among yourselves from hand to hand. In that case it is no sin for you if ye write it not. And have witnesses when ye sell one to another (waashhidoo itha tabayaAAtum), and let no harm be done to scribe or witness. If ye do (harm to them) lo! it is a sin in you. Observe your duty to Allah. Allah is teaching you. And Allah is knower of all things.

The Arabic of that part is "waashhidoo itha tabayaAAtum". Most translators translate this part as "and take witness when you trade with one another / make commercial transaction".

Does this mean that if I sell something to someone or buy something from someone, we will need a witness, yet the previous part says that a buying / selling transaction may not be recorded in paper? How can it be that a paper record is not required but a witness is required? Nowhere in this world does a person buy or sell something and have it purposefully witnessed by another person.

So what could be it's correct interpretation?

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General Discussions / Please explain this "contradiction"
« on: February 25, 2016, 05:56:16 PM »
As-salamu alaykum.

Can you please brothers and sisters explain to me this "contradiction"? I know there is no contradiction in the Quran, but when I saw a verse in surah Ar-Rahman, instantly a question came into my mind, and when I searched for it on google, I found skeptics consider this as a contradiction.

55:39 says that we won't be questioned in the Day of Judgment:

55:39
For, on that Day, neither man nor jinn will be questioned about his sins.

However, in 7:6 and 102:8, we see references of God's questioning:

7:6
Then shall We question those to whom Our message was sent and those through whom We sent it

102:8
Then on that Day you shall be questioned about your worldly favours.


I am confused.

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General Discussions / Qiyamah
« on: February 21, 2016, 04:22:59 PM »
My dear brothers and sisters,

As-salamu alaykum.

I hope you all are doing well by the grace of Allah.

I wanted to share with you guys a thought that I get in my mind which stays secret with me. I am not too old yet, but I have gone through a lot in life, a lot of struggle and difficulty. I try my best to follow the Quran-centric position in practice that we all have. I try to establish the 5 daily salats everyday, fast in the month of Ramadan, memorize surahs and ayahs of the Quran and read the Quran with meaning and understanding, and I try to be nice and kind with my parents and everyone else as much as possible. However, my dear brothers and sisters, I also secretly wish for God to end this world. I get this feeling sometimes, and I really wish for the Day of Judgment to arrive. It's not that I am not scared. I am very scared, but I still sometimes feel that way. I am not sure if this is a normal feeling, and I don't mean to offend anyone. It's just that all the injustices and wrong things that happen in this world everyday just baffles my mind.

Does anyone of you ever feel this way?

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General Discussions / Can't understand 2:27
« on: November 03, 2015, 07:05:42 AM »
Dear brother Joseph and all,

As-salamu alaykum.

I am facing difficulty in understanding about this 'covenant' God is talking about and what God has ordered to be 'joined' in 2:27.
I think the covenant is our pledge to uphold the Quran and live our lives according to it without transgressing and crossing any bounds which could lead us to hell fire in the hereafter. However, I am more confused when the ayah further talks about those who sever "what God has ordered to be joined."

2:27
those who break God's covenant after they have pledged to keep it, and sever whatever God has ordered to be joined, and spread corruption in the land it is they who are the losers.


I think the same subjects are repeated in 13:20-21.

13:20-21
they who are true to their bond with God and never break their covenant; and those who join together what God has commanded to be joined, and fear their Lord and dread the harshness of the reckoning;


Any help will be highly appreciated.

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General Discussions / Question on riba / banking
« on: November 23, 2014, 01:05:08 AM »
Dear brother Joseph,


As-salam alaykum.


I have been doing a lot of reading on the topic of 'riba' including your article, and I am still kind of confused whether the modern day banking interest equates to the riba mentioned in the Quran. Dear brother, I do not wish to raise any contentions on this matter and only want to get a direct answer from you to a couple of questions that I have as follows:


1) Do you think it is fine to keep amounts of fixed deposits on 'Islamic banks' where they claim that they invest those monies into businesses and in return profits share profits with the depositors on a monthly / yearly basis? Or do you recommend not to do that? I only want to know your personal opinion.


2) If you do not mind dear brother, can you kindly share whether you have any kind of bank account that you use?



Regards.

8
Dear brother Joseph,


Salamun alaykum.


I have a few questions regarding some of the verses of the Quran, and I am hoping that you could share your thoughts of them.



Take a look at these verses:

And he that will be given his Record in his left hand, will say: "Ah! Would that my Record had not been given to me!" (69:25)

But he who is given his Record behind his back, Soon will he cry for perdition (84:10-11)


Regarding the above two verses, in one verse it says that the record of the people who are destined for hell will be given in their "left hand", and in the other verse it says the record will be given "behind his back". I am aware that in 69:25, the word 'hand' is not there in Arabic. Therefore, to translate it more accurately we can say that the record will be given "in his left".

Why do you think one verse says "in his left", and the other says "behind his back"? If a critique of Islam points this out as a contradiction, what can we give him / her as a reply?



Now regarding the second part of my questions, many critiques point out that verses 7:54, 10:3, 11:7 and 25:29 say that God has created the heavens and the earth in six days. But in verses 41:9-12, the creation of the heavens and the earth counts up to be eight days, hence a contradiction. Please share how you would refute this critique.




Regards.

9
Salamun Alaykum.


I have two questions for brother Joseph Islam.



Question 1:

In your article, "Food Permissibility and Prohibitions", you have nowhere mentioned about 6:121.


Muhammad Asad: Hence, eat not of that over which God's name has not been pronounced: for this would be sinful conduct indeed. And, verily, the evil impulses [within men's hearts] whisper unto those who have made them their own that they should involve you in argument [as to what is and what is not a sin]; and if you pay heed unto them, lo! you will become [like] those who ascribe divinity to other beings or forces beside God. (6:121)


I want to know, doesn't this verse tells us that we will always have to pronounce God's name over ANY food, whether it's meat or vegetables, before eating them?



Question 2:


Very frankly speaking, more than two years ago, my fiancee and I hugged and kissed each other a lot of times, and at that time I was really ignorant and had very less idea about the word of God in the Quran. I was also a Sunni back then, and I was under the influence that we all Muslims will go to paradise anyway. But later when I read the Quran, I got so scared, I felt like I would be going to hell if I die. So my question is, does the word "zina" only means "illegal sexual intercourse", or does it have a wider meaning? Can "hugging and kissing" fall under the meaning of "zina"? Or in other words, have we done zina?

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General Discussions / Ramadhan timing
« on: May 20, 2013, 11:08:41 PM »
Salamun Alaykum, brother Joseph.


May Allah reward you for your superb works. I'm really glad and thankful to Allah to have found you on the internet, and I must say that your articles are simply eye-opening. :)


My question to you is:


From a Quran's perspective, is the worldwide timing of Ramadhan that we see today the correct timing of the month of Ramadhan? If it is not the correct timing, then when is it? I've read on another website that the Sunni and Shia Muslim's timing of Ramadhan is not approved by the Quran. I am confused. Please help me.

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