A Critical Exposition Of The Popular JihadDirect Download!
The Prophet Muhammad, strictly forbid suicide, and
stated that anyone who commits suicide
will be cast into hell.
Suicide Bombings are not Martyrism and
are are suicidal.
The Qura'n says: "And spend of your substance
in the cause of Allah, and make not your
own hands contribute to (your)
destruction; but do good; for Allah love
those who do good." (Al-Baqara:195). The
verse obviously indicates that failing to
spend in Allah's Cause is like casting
oneself into ruin.
A
CRITICAL EXPOSITION
OF
THE
POPULAR "JIHÁD."
SHOWING THAT
ALL THE WARS OF MOHAMMAD WERE DEFENSIVE;
AND THAT
AGGRESSIVE WAR, OR COMPULSORY CONVERSION,
IS NOT ALLOWED IN THE KORAN. WITH APPENDICES
PROVING THAT THE WORD "JIHAD" DOES NOT
EXEGETICALLY MEAN 'WARFARE,'
AND THAT
SLAVERY IS NOT SANCTIONED BY THE PROPHET
OF ISLAM.
BY: MOULAVI GHERÁGH ALI,
Author of
"REFORMS UNDER MOSLEM RULE,"
"HYDERABAD (DECCAN) UNDER SIR SALAR JUNG."
CALCUTTA:
THACKER, SPINK AND CO. 1885.
And As Relevant
Today, As Religious Precepts Do Not Change
With Time
Excerpts
Mohammad:
In avenging my injuries," said he (Mohammad),
"molest not the harmless votaries of domestic
seclusion; spare the weakness of the softer sex,
the infant at the breast, and those who in the
course of nature are hastening from this scene of
mortality. Abstain from demolishing the dwellings
of the unresisting inhabitants; destroy not their
means of subsistence, respect their fruit trees,
and touch not the palm, so useful to the Syrians
for its shade, and delightful for its verdure."
28. Though Mecca had surrendered, all its
inhabitants had not already become converts to
Islam. Mohammad did not take any compulsory means
to convert the people: "Although the city had
cheerfully accepted his supremacy," writes Sir W.
Muir, "all its inhabitants had not yet embraced
the new religion, or formally acknowledged his
prophetical claim. Perhaps he intended to follow
the course he had pursued at Medina and leave the
conversion of the people to be gradually
accomplished without compulsion."
The Author:
In publishing this work, my chief object is to
remove the general and erroneous impression from
the minds of European and Christian writers
regarding Islam, that Mohammad waged wars of
conquest, extirpation, as well as of proselytizing
against the Koreish, other Arab tribes, the Jews,
and Christians;[1] that he held the Koran in one
hand and the scimitar in the other, and compelled
people to believe in his mission. I have
endeavoured in this book, I believe on sufficient
grounds, to show that neither the wars of Mohammad
were offensive, nor did he in any way use force or
compulsion in the matter of belief.
Almost all the common Mohammadan and European
writers think that a religious war of aggression
is one of the tenets of Islam, and prescribed by
the Koran for the purpose of proselytizing or
exacting tribute. But I do not find any such
doctrine enjoined in the Koran, or taught, or
preached by Mohammad. His mission was not to wage
wars, or to make converts at the point of the
sword, or to exact tribute or exterminate those
who did not believe his religion. His sole mission
was to enlighten the Arabs to the true worship of
the one God, to recommend virtue and denounce
vice, which he truly fulfilled . . . all these are
questions quite separate and irrelevant, and have
nothing to do with the subject in hand, i.e., the
popular Jihad, or the crusade for the purpose of
proselytizing, exacting tribute, and exterminating
the idolaters, said to be one of the tenets of
Islam . . . the Koran does not teach a war of
aggression . . . and strictly prohibiting
offensive measures.
This assertion is not borne out by the sacred
injunction of the Koran, and, on the contrary, is
in direct contradiction to the same. There are
several passages in the Koran already quoted in
pages 16-25, which expressly forbid the taking of
offensive measures . . .
93. Rule of interpretation.
Now, there are only
two verses in the Koran (Sura II, v. 245, and Sura
IX, v. 124) containing an absolute or
non-conditional injunction for making war against
the unbelievers . . . There is a rule in the
exegesis of the Koran, as well as in other
Scriptural interpretations, that when two
commandments, one conditional, and the other
general or absolute, are found on the same subject
. . .
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How to Live a Holy LifeDirect Download!
C. E. Orr <> DEVOTIONAL READING. A person may almost be known by the books he reads. If he habitually reads bad books, we can pretty safely conclude that he is a bad man; on the other hand, if he habitually reads religious books, we can reasonably presume that he is a religious man. Why is this? It is because the nature of a person's books is usually the nature of his thoughts; and as a man thinks, so he is.
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Men Of The Bible; Some Lesser-Known CharactersDirect Download!
by George Milligan, D.D. J. G. Greenhough,
M.A. Alfred Rowland, D.D., Ll.B. Principal Walter F. Adeney, D.D. J. Morgan
Gibbon. H. Elvet Lewis. Principal D. Rowlands, B.A. W. J. Townsend, D.D.
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Missionary Survey As An Aid To Intelligent Co-Operation In Foreign MissionsDirect Download!
BY ROLAND ALLEN, M.A./THOMAS COCHRANE, M.B.,
C.M. This book, written by Mr. Allen, bears both our names because we studied
the material together, and settled what should be included and what excluded. We
discussed and disputed, and finally found ourselves in complete agreement. We
therefore decided to issue the book in our joint names, on the understanding
that I should be allowed to disclaim the credit for writing it. But the book
would never have been written at all save for the inspiration and help of Mr.
S.J.W. Clark, who, in his travels in nearly every mission field, has brought an
unusually acute mind, trained by a long business experience, to bear upon
mission problems, and has done more hard thinking on the question of survey than
any man we know.
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Spirits In Bondage A Cycle Of LyricsDirect Download!
By Clive Hamilton [C. S. Lewis] <> Published under the pseudonym, Clive Hamilton, Spirits in Bondage was C. S. Lewis' first book. Released in 1919 by Heinemann, it was reprinted in 1984 by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich and included in Lewis' 1994 Collected Poems. Most of the poems appear to have been written between 1915 and 1918, a period during which Lewis was a student under W. T. Kirkpatrick, a military trainee at Oxford, and a soldier serving in the trenches of World War I. Their outlook varies from Romantic expressions of love for the beauty and simplicity of nature to cynical statements about the presence of evil in this world. In a September 12, 1918 letter to his friend Arthur Greeves, Lewis said that his book was, "mainly strung around the idea that I mentioned to you before--that nature is wholly diabolical & malevolent and that God, if he exists, is outside of and in opposition to the cosmic arrangements." In his cynical poems, Lewis is dealing with the same questions about evil in nature that Alfred Lord Tennyson explored from a position of troubled faith in "In Memoriam A. H." (Stanzas 54f). In a letter written perhaps to reassure his father, Lewis claimed, "You know who the God I blaspheme is and that it is not the God that you or I worship, or any other Christian." Whatever Lewis believed at that time, the attitude in many of these poems is quite different from the attitude he expressed in his many Christian books from the 1930s on. Attempts in movies and on stage plays to portray Lewis as a sheltered professor who knew little about pain until the death of his wife late in life, have to deal not only with the many tragedies he experienced from a boy on, but also with the disturbing issues he faced in many of these early poems.
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The Jericho RoadDirect Download!
by W. BION ADKINS Author of "Twelve Steps Toward Heaven," "The Anonymous Letter," etc. "I have lived much that I have not written, but I have written nothing that I have not lived, and the story of this book is but a plaintive refrain wrung from the over-burdened song of my life; while the tides of feeling, winding down the lines, had their sources in as many broken upheavals of my own heart." A book, like an implement, must be judged by its adaptation to its special design, however unfit for any other end. This volume is designed to help Odd-Fellows in their search for the good things in life.
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The Master's IndwellingDirect Download!
ANDREW MURRAY 1953 The following papers were in substance delivered by the author in a series of addresses at the Northfield Conference of 1895, but later rewritten and revised by him for this permanent and authorized publication.