Peanut wrote:...what? I have to ask for your source Nate and how they respond to the number of Islamic countries where anything from theft to atheism to homosexuality is punished with physical harm, imprisonment or death.
Well, while about a relatively minor thing, there is this verse:
"He has made unlawful for you that which dies of itself and blood and the flesh of swine and that on which the name of any other than Allah has been invoked. But he who is driven by necessity, being neither disobedient nor exceeding the limit, then surely, Allah is Most Forgiving, Merciful." - —Quran, Al-Baqara 2:173
In other words, "Don't eat pork, things that die naturally, or meat sacrificed to other gods. But if you're starving, then it's totally fine."
I know there's other verses that state it is okay to break certain laws to avoid offending others. I don't know a verse off-hand, but I have a Muslim friend who is very well-versed in the Quran and I'm sure she could get the verses for you if you really want to know.
My guess is they would state their interpretation is wrong which is the same case that can be made for Christianity based on verses such as "Let him who has sin cast the first stone" as well as Matthew 7:1-5, Luke 6:37, and Romans 2:1-3 to name a few. All of these remove the central thing that causes conflict (being judgmental) and can lead to embracing people where they are.
It's not comparable. Jesus didn't say it was okay for the woman to commit adultery (he tells her to go and sin no more). Islam states that if following a tenet of Islam will offend someone else, that you do not have to follow it, because Allah is a god of peace. Something along those lines. As far as I know, Christianity does not allow you to break a commandment in certain situations, barring overly legalistic interpretations of commandments (such as when Jesus was accused of violating the commandment against work on the Sabbath when he gathered wheat or healed people).
Also of note is that in Islam, "lesser" sins that you commit do not matter to Allah if you have not committed any "major" sins.
"If you avoid great sins (kaba’ir or dhanb) which are forbidden you, We will remit from you your evil deeds (sayyi’a)."
— Quran 12: 29
Last I checked, Christianity also does not say "If you commit a small sin it's okay as long as you don't commit any big ones," as the Christian view of sin is that it is a state of being that separates us from God. This holds true even in Christian denominations that hold that there are lesser and greater sins (such as Catholicism). In Islam, sin is seen as an act, not a state of being.
You could still try to say that Islam is superior based off of this principle
I'm not saying Islam is superior. I never even implied that. I was just saying that arguing that "God reaches out to us and gives us salvation" is in no way an exclusively Christian view, and thus does not support the "relationship not religion" nonsense.
I don't know of any Muslim who would actually be willing to go down that path since any rule can cause conflict with your fellow man in the right circumstance and by the time we are done, you are forced to hold nothing at all.
I think it is only minor things. Though again, you have to take into account the point of view of Islam, which is that sin is an act, not a state of being. Even the "seven deadly sins" in Islam are based on actions (example, turning away from an opposing army) and not a state of mind like the "seven deadly sins" in Christianity. In Christianity, if you think a lustful thought, even if you haven't
done anything, it's still a sin. Islam is not like this.
So while you couldn't say, practice witchcraft so as not to offend someone (that is a major sin), if you commit minor sins, they don't matter so long as you do not commit major ones and have faith in Allah.
But He will overlook the bad deeds of those who have faith, do good deeds, and believe in what has been sent down to Muhammad —the truth from their Lord —and He will put them into a good state.
— Qur'an, sura 47, ayat 2
Also much like Christianity, Allah will not honor those who claim repentance merely to avoid punishment in the afterlife.
It is not true repentance when people continue to do evil until death confronts them and then say, ‘Now I repent.
— Qur'an, sura 4 ayat 18
Good works are important but no where in scripture post Jesus does it teach that a human can gain salvation by performing good works. They are more seen as the expected result of salvation not as a requirement for it.
I guess that all depends on your interpretation...I do see that you specified "post Jesus" which is good because it means I can't claim the parable of the sheep and the goats as a counter-argument. My question then would be so why is what some random dude said decades after Jesus ascended to Heaven somehow superior to what the Son of God himself said?
but the theif on the cross was never part of a religion he never had the chance to do a good work
He rebuked the other thief, did he not? That would qualify as a good work as far as I'm concerned.
But anyway...
"Religion without a Relationship is meaningless."
Okay, now
that I can agree with. :3 But...
I hear them say that but I don't see them practice it and they are always contradicting themselves on this subject, it also seems to always be a selfish relationship
That's funny, because that's how I view a lot of mainstream Christianity. And I'll leave it at that, so as not to violate the rules.