- Islam Explained
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- What is Islam?
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- The name
"Islam" simply means "Self-surrender to
the Will of God." It is the way of life that all
Prophets throughout history have taught, from those known
in the Western world such as Abraham, Moses and Jesus to
those sent to other parts of the earth like Salih,
Shu'ayb and Luqman, the African. The last and final Guide
was Muhammad, may he be blessed, who lived in sixth
century Arabia. A "Muslim," (i.e. a
self-surrendered one,) is a follower of this faith.
Nearly one in every five persons alive today is a Muslim.
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- What does Islam teach?
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- Islam calls humanity to
the service of the One, Omnipotent Creator, Who is known
as "Allah," (The Deity) in the Arabic language.
It further instructs people on how they may live together
in peace and harmony regardless of race, class or
beliefs. The unity of purpose brought by all previous
religious guides is highlighted as well as traditional
morality, the equality of the sexes before God and the
virtues of patience and humbleness.
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- Where do these teachings come from?
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- Muslims have two major
sources from which they derive their religious teachings.
The first is a book known as "the Qur'an," the
direct Revelation of God to His last Prophet, the blessed
Muhammad. The second source is the collected sayings and
pronouncements of the Prophet which are complimentary to
the Revelation. These are know as "the Hadith."
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- What about Muhammad? Who was he?
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- Muhammad (pbuh) was
born in Arabia in the year 570. His father's name was
Abdullah and his mother's was Aminah. Abdullah died
before his son was born and his mother died when he was
yet a small child. He was first placed under the care of
his grandfather and then later his uncle, who raised his
nephew as his own.
- As a boy, Muhammad
(pbuh), disliked the prevailing custom of idol worship
practiced by his people. How many a night he must have
paused to watch the stars and endless plains, while
tending his uncle's flocks, and wondered at the real
Creator of it all. He shunned the mischief of his fellow
youth and soon developed a reputation for honesty,
generosity and compassion.
- When he was a young man
he took employment in the merchant trade and soon
distinguished himself for his excellent managerial
skills, which resulted in an offer of marriage from his
wealthy, widowed employer, the noble lady Khadija. He was
25 and she was 40 when they got married. Their marriage
was based upon love, friendship and trust.
- Though time and
circumstances had changed as he grew older and wiser,
Muhammad (pbuh) still remained restless for the truth and
he began to retreat to the solitude which could only be
found outside the city of Mecca. He often went to a
mountain where he would sometimes spend days thinking and
contemplating about God, reality and the Divine way of
life. Then on one glorious day, the Almighty revealed
words of inspiration to him through His angel, Gabriel.
- "Read!" the
angel commanded him, "Read in the name of your Lord
who created man from a clinging embryo..." This was
Muhammad (pbuh), for all his truthfulness, patience,
piety and spirit, commissioned as the last and final
Prophet of God to humanity. Though many trials, tests and
triumphs lay ahead of him, he always called people to the
service if the One God, to shun myths and idols and to do
unto others only what is good and right. He always lived
a frugal life, and even after all of Arabia was liberated
from the darkness of ignorance, he, as the ruler, still
slept on a reed mat and mended his own clothes.
- He taught a new
standard to people and brought civilization to an area of
the world where it had long ago passed by. His lips moved
with the Revelation of God and his life put its precepts
into practice. Though teen years in Mecca and followed
faithfully by the believing citizens of Medina for ten
thereafter, he remained unto his death a devoted father,
husband, leader and Prophet. He was given the title of
"Mercy to the worlds" by God Himself in the
Qur'an and anyone who has studied the details and
adventures of his life must necessarily declare the same.
This man Muhammad (pbuh) is truly the hero of his age as
well as an inspiration to ours.
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- Do Muslims worship Muhammad like
Christians do Christ?
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- No. Muhammad (pbuh) was
only a man among men who received the special favor of
God. No true Prophet of God taught that any man must be
worshipped, as if any human body could contain the
infinite. God instructs us in the Qur'an about him thus:
"Muhammad is no more than Messenger. Many were the
Messengers who passed away before him..." (3:144.)
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- How does Islam compare with
Christianity and Judaism?
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- Islam, or, the Way of
Self-Surrender to God, was taught by all Prophets whether
their race was Jewish, Chinese, African, Arab or
Cheyenne.
- Accordingly, Moses, who
is regarded as the pivotal figure in Judaism, and Jesus,
who is the central personality of Christianity, both
taught Islam to their peoples. The teachings of these
great Messengers of God id not go unchanged, however,
over the centuries, and one can find that many practices,
beliefs and customs practiced by the adherents of those
faiths today differ from the original purity of their
founder's message.
- Muhammad (pbuh), simply
brought the last installment of self-surrender (Islam) to
the world in order to correct earlier coruptions in
humanity's knowledge of the truth. So if the roots of
Judaism and Christianity are the same as Islam, why does
Islam seem so exotic and strange?
- The problem is
two-fold. On the one hand there are people in the world
who claim to be Muslims, but who do not follow the
ethical or religious teachings of the faith.
Unfortunately, the media has a universal fascination with
negative news and a reluctance to highlight the positive.
One the other hand, much of what we read and learn about
Islam in the west is written, interpreted and presented
by those who either know very little about Islam and the
Muslim world, or are even hostile towards it.
- An even more important
area of misunderstanding lies in the Western world and
the Islamic world make. Because of the West's negative
experience with religion, an alternate ideology known as
secular-humanism had to be established to allow science,
rationalism and free-thought to flourish. Islamic
civilization, in contrast , never impeded science nor the
development of human thought, so a break between secular
values and religious ones never occurred. This is why
Islam is often miss-labeled "Theocratic.,"
Education and improvements in global awareness, however,
are slowly wearing down barriers to understanding, but it
will require some effort from all of us to finally reach
a point of tolerance and mutual good-will.
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- Where do Muslims live?
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- Muslims live in every
country and region on earth from Norway to Malaysia and
Morocco to Mexico. Muslims form a large percentage of the
population in Russia, China, India, and Eastern Europe.
Some Islamic lands are Arabia, Indonesia, Pakistan,
Turkey, Malaysia, Egypt and Nigeria. Arab Muslims form
minority of the worldwide Muslim population. There are
nearly six million Muslims in North America alone. That's
more than the population of some states such as Alaska,
Nevada and Rhode Island.
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- How does one become a Muslim?
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- There are no elaborate
rituals or ceremonies to perform to enter Islam
(Self-Surrender to God), for Islam is the faith of
reason, and therefore it takes an exercise of reason to
become a Muslims. Simply by declaring and believing in
one's heart the following phrase: "There is no
object of devotion save God and Muhammad is the Messenger
of God," one thereby is a believer as a consequence
of making this statement sincerely, everything an
individual did that was wrong or unethical in his life up
to that point, is forgiven by God, no matter what it was.
From that moment onwards, the slate is cleared and you
begin life again as a new person.
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