Winkle,
Thanks for sharing with me your views. If you want to know why I started discussing things with you please refere to your original post. You were the one who verbally attacked Muslims and when I showed you that it wasn't true, you didn't apologize, but you made additional attacks, so re-read the posts. I'm done discussing things with you now. Bye.
James Kelly saidÂ…
Why do we continue to have religious debates on this forum? jim kelly
IÂ’m trying to stop. Really! Maybe this is my last post. I got some work I have to get to. But these discussions, when done seriously, have been informative, to me anyway. They certainly help me sort out my thoughts. I hope my post show that I give them serious thought and not just throw down an argument for the sake of attack.
Ken saidÂ…
The taking of a human life by another human is something that should be avoided at all costs. However, there are circumstances in which it does, unfortunately, become justified.
If something is justified, it can never be unfortunate.
My take on the whole thing is that it seems to me that American and Israel want to go to war with Syria and Iran because the talking heads on the news keep dropping those countries names left and right as arming Hezbollah, but the same talking heads rarely, if ever, mention America is arming Israel.
They could just talk about Hezbollah as the threat and wiping them out, but they always got to mention Iran and Syria... Iran and Syria... Iran and Syria...
Well, at least itÂ’s not a war against Islam, right?... WhatÂ’s that, Mr. Blair?
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/08/ ... index.html
Yikes! Every country he listed where he says it is a “global fight about global values” has a non-Muslim occupier in Muslim or Muslim majority land.
Lebanon – Although somewhat new, Israel has penetrated the border
Gaza – Occupied territories by Israel
Iraq – Occupied by American forces
Afghanistan – Occupied by America (is it under NATO?)
Kashmir – Occupied by India
A selected quote from the article aboveÂ…
“It's about modernization within Islam and out of it. It's about whether our value system can be shown to be sufficiently robust, true, principled and appealing that it beats theirs.”
Superiority complex? Is occupation really an Western value? I donÂ’t remember learning that growing up! What you say and what you do are two different things. The measure of your true character is what you do, not what you say, Mr. Blair.
Digitaljez,
The Golden Rule
digitaljez wrote...
Rmd3 wrote:
How does someone determine what is true innate morality and what is something they've picked up from the ideology they have been exposed to?
If it conforms to the golden rule - do unto others as you would have them do unto you - then it will be in accord with your innate morality.
Then the measuring stick for whether their innate morality is correct is actually taken from
a dogmatic standard. Of course, you can argue that the golden rule is also innate, but how do you know that it is innate? What standard tells us that the golden rule is innate? I think it wouldn't be a standard but a value; the value of fairness.
Analogous to the Golden Rule in Islam is the saying of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) “None of you truly believes until you wish for your brother what you wish for your self.” Bother in that saying refers to fellow human being.
At the same time, the golden rule is not a legal ruling, but a guideline to how to behave with people interpersonally. I can whole-heartedly accept this as a measure on morality for dealing with people. IÂ’m not sure it applies to governments over their subjects, and, in fact, IÂ’m pretty sure it doesnÂ’t. I have to follow their rules, but the government need never follow mine.
Of course, I suppose I could argue in conjunction with the arguments of my previous post that in taking a life because of apostasy, it is unfair for the individualÂ’s freedom of choice to preempt the societyÂ’s choice to maintain its identity and social order. Then the golden rule wouldnÂ’t be relevant because the value of fairness isnÂ’t being maintained, and the golden rule is only applicable if the value of fairness is preserved.
The Question of Innate Belief
digitaljez wrote...
Rmd3 wrote:
I guess there's something innate in both Winkle's and my nature that says there is a God.
Innate or absorbed ? How do you differentiate ?
This is how I differentiate it. As I was growing up I believed in God but not necessarily what I was being taught about God. So my believing in God would seem to be innate because it remained even though the dogma I was exposed to was rejected.
Later in life, I came to find IslamÂ’s description of the Creator fit what I had innately yearned for. It just seemed like a flawless description of God and at the heart of that description was that there was no god except God.
digitaljez wrote...
You would be friends if you did not have to defend you faiths.
I agree on that possiblity. The Quran says something about Christians being the closest in love to the believers.
What about my apostasy from Christianity?
digitaljez wrote...
Rmd3 wrote:
Of course the morally justifiable one.
So - innate morality or doctrinal morality ?
In the end, I would say I would have to surrender to the doctrinal morality as I think my innate morality might have been compromised by dogmatic influences of my upbringing.
HereÂ’s an article that I found to be quite informative regarding IslamÂ’s position on apostasy, the rational for the ruling, and the types of punishments for it. I only came across it today, and some of it reflects my earlier arguments.
http://www.islamonline.net/English/cont ... e01c.shtml
As for my own apostasy from Christianity. I think if I was in fear of my life for becoming a Muslim, I wouldnÂ’t have proclaimed my faith publicly or I would have relocated to a Muslim country. Certainly, if the land I live in proclaimed that it was a capital crime, IÂ’d have to leave on the double. So in that sense, I can accept that the Golden Rule would have applied to me, but I seriously doubt I would have put my life in jeopardy in making a public claim of conversion and knowing the consequences of that.
Do I appreciate the fact that I could change my religion to Islam in America without consequence? Of course. Do I think Muslims can meet out Islamic Law punishments to Muslims that leave Islam in America? No. There is no vigilantism in Islam, as I stated before, and Muslims must obey the laws of the lands they live it. Why do I stress that? Because I don't want people getting false impressions of Islam from sensational stories.
Given my stance, you might still find it a hard pill to swallow, but I hope you can see the reasoning isnÂ’t simply about an individualÂ’s right to choose his/her faith, but there are larger societal issues at hand, and that the application of apostasy law in Islam is not just some blanket rule that is easily applied at the drop of a hat at any time or place. Life is precious and it is a serious matter and it shouldnÂ’t be considered lightly.
Thanks for the discussion. I learned a lot even if you think I am morally bereft of any inner sense of right and wrong. I hope you donÂ’t think that, but youÂ’re free to think what you want.
-Randall