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Culture God looks ethnic

No Homo
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This man AKA the Lovecharger is a living god purportedly and has raped hundreds of women, convinced hundreds of men to be castrated and even has his personal mass grave. Millions of curries believe him to be God.



This has me thinking that well if i saw a god and had an ethnicity it would not be curry but apparently there are curries that look upon each other and think maybe they are gods.

I would think only white people and maybe far east asians might think god as their race.

Its pretty normal for blacks to think god is black but i think its more cope than anything.

Do you look at your race and see it as divine or think members of it might be god?
 
No Homo
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This is why the muslim concept of god will always be the most accurate, god is something the human mind cannot comprehend, it is not a bearded humanoid figure in the sky because god is above all those concepts so he cannot have a look or race or gender or anything
Kaffir!
Walk the path of the love charger!
 
No Homo
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Kaffir is an Islamic word for Infidel, basically to be treated the same as the jews goys.
Which is worse than you would treat them normally

I mean in islam kaffirs are treated worse than goys but religiously its same shit and horrendous
 
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"My mercy prevails over my wrath"
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Kaffir is an Islamic word for Infidel, basically to be treated the same as the jews goys.
Which is worse than you would treat them normally

I mean in islam kaffirs are treated worse than goys but religiously its same shit and horrendous
Just means disbeliever, what you said about the treatment of disbelievers is the complete opposite in islam.
 
No Homo
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they probably dont think they are literal gods also to be fair the "lovecharger" I was told that hes seen as god by a athiestic female so I might be some bad info.

I love how curries will give this reverence to incels, neets and just about everything. Really spreads the love and spiritual diversity.

Im not even player hater against "the love charger" i just think its funny
 
"My mercy prevails over my wrath"
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Muslims dont know their own religion like others dont know their own religions
Elaborate please, don't throw accusations without evidence and/or elaboration. Jazakallah khair.
 
No Homo
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Elaborate please, don't throw accusations without evidence and/or elaboration. Jazakallah khair.
Id have to pick out circumstances with every religion where people dont know their own religion.

If you focus on religion long enough you will see that its obvious and all religions. Im not going to writ a 1 or 2 page article about it

We can have an argument that it is islamic to treat Kaffir in ways similar to how Jews treat Goyim or worse
 
"My mercy prevails over my wrath"
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Id have to pick out circumstances with every religion where people dont know their own religion.

If you focus on religion long enough you will see that its obvious and all religions. Im not going to writ a 1 or 2 page article about it

We can have an argument that it is islamic to treat Kaffir in ways similar to how Jews treat Goyim or worse
I disagree but please provide evidence so we may discuss this further inshallah.
 
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I disagree but please provide evidence so we may discuss this further inshallah.

I dont know why you think its defensible but this is a fair place to start

Saudi Atheism Punishable by Death​

In Saudi Arabia, atheism is considered a serious offense and is punishable by death under the country's strict interpretation of Islamic law. The government has equated atheism with terrorism, and individuals who are found to be atheists can face severe penalties, including the death sentence.234+1
For example, Ahmad Al-Shamri was sentenced to death for atheism after he denounced the Prophet Muhammad in videos he uploaded to social media.6 Additionally, in 2014, King Abdullah passed royal decrees that further reinforced the association between atheism and terrorism.2
These laws reflect the highly restrictive regime in Saudi Arabia, where public expression on religion or belief must align with the government's particular brand of Sunni Islam

Apostasy in Islam Punished​

In Islam, apostasy, known as ridda or irtidād, is commonly defined as the abandonment of Islam by a Muslim, in thought, word, or through deed. This includes not only explicit renunciations of the Islamic faith by converting to another religion or abandoning religion, but also blasphemy or heresy by those who consider themselves Muslims, through any action or utterance which implies unbelief, including those who deny a "fundamental tenet or creed" of Islam.6
Islamic jurisprudence traditionally calls for the death penalty for those who refuse to repent of apostasy from Islam. However, what statements or acts qualify as apostasy and whether and how they should be punished are disputed among Islamic scholars, with some liberal interpretations rejecting physical punishment for apostasy.6
According to classical and some modern interpretations of Sharia, the death penalty is considered the most appropriate punishment for apostates.56 However, the implementation of such penalties is not uniform across all Muslim-majority countries. As of 2021, there were ten Muslim-majority countries where apostasy from Islam was punishable by death, but legal executions are rare. Most punishments are extra-judicial or vigilante actions, and most executions are perpetrated by jihadist and "takfiri" insurgents such as al-Qaeda, the Islamic State, the GIA, and the Taliban.6
In Afghanistan, for example, Article 130 of the Afghan Constitution and Article 1 of the Afghan Penal Code require courts to apply provisions of Hanafi Sunni fiqh for crimes of apostasy, prescribing the death penalty for the crime of apostasy.4 However, the accused can avoid prosecution and/or punishment if they confess to having made a mistake of apostasy and rejoin Islam.4
Despite the potential for severe consequences, several Muslims do leave the Islamic religion, either by becoming irreligious (atheism, agnosticism, etc.) or converting to other religions, mostly to Christianity.
 
"My mercy prevails over my wrath"
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I dont know why you think its defensible but this is a fair place to start​

Saudi Atheism Punishable by Death​

In Saudi Arabia, atheism is considered a serious offense and is punishable by death under the country's strict interpretation of Islamic law. The government has equated atheism with terrorism, and individuals who are found to be atheists can face severe penalties, including the death sentence.234+1
For example, Ahmad Al-Shamri was sentenced to death for atheism after he denounced the Prophet Muhammad in videos he uploaded to social media.6 Additionally, in 2014, King Abdullah passed royal decrees that further reinforced the association between atheism and terrorism.2
These laws reflect the highly restrictive regime in Saudi Arabia, where public expression on religion or belief must align with the government's particular brand of Sunni Islam

Apostasy in Islam Punished​

In Islam, apostasy, known as ridda or irtidād, is commonly defined as the abandonment of Islam by a Muslim, in thought, word, or through deed. This includes not only explicit renunciations of the Islamic faith by converting to another religion or abandoning religion, but also blasphemy or heresy by those who consider themselves Muslims, through any action or utterance which implies unbelief, including those who deny a "fundamental tenet or creed" of Islam.6
Islamic jurisprudence traditionally calls for the death penalty for those who refuse to repent of apostasy from Islam. However, what statements or acts qualify as apostasy and whether and how they should be punished are disputed among Islamic scholars, with some liberal interpretations rejecting physical punishment for apostasy.6
According to classical and some modern interpretations of Sharia, the death penalty is considered the most appropriate punishment for apostates.56 However, the implementation of such penalties is not uniform across all Muslim-majority countries. As of 2021, there were ten Muslim-majority countries where apostasy from Islam was punishable by death, but legal executions are rare. Most punishments are extra-judicial or vigilante actions, and most executions are perpetrated by jihadist and "takfiri" insurgents such as al-Qaeda, the Islamic State, the GIA, and the Taliban.6
In Afghanistan, for example, Article 130 of the Afghan Constitution and Article 1 of the Afghan Penal Code require courts to apply provisions of Hanafi Sunni fiqh for crimes of apostasy, prescribing the death penalty for the crime of apostasy.4 However, the accused can avoid prosecution and/or punishment if they confess to having made a mistake of apostasy and rejoin Islam.4
Despite the potential for severe consequences, several Muslims do leave the Islamic religion, either by becoming irreligious (atheism, agnosticism, etc.) or converting to other religions, mostly to Christianity.
Jazakallah khair for the effort brother.

First, Islam is not "the religion of peace". This label came from non-Muslims and is typically used in a sarcastic way when discussing extremist violence. I've never heard it called the religion of peace by imams or during khutbahs for example. Islam is the religion of submission to Allah ﷻ, that's what Islam means.

Secondly, the laws on death for apostasy are typically taken out of context and blown out of proportion. It should be thought of more as capital punishment for treason than like some kind of sharia-sponsored systematic extermination of people who change their beliefs.
Capital punishment for apostasy can only be carried out in an Islamic state governing by the sharia once a judge has decided so with adequate proof. Adequate proof being publicly announcing it or 4 witnesses. The death for apostasy came out during a time of war where the Muslims were heavily persecuted and targeted.

So at the time, publicly declaring no longer being Muslim was essentially switching sides to the enemy tantamount to treason. Capital punishment is pretty common for treason, even today in many countries. To be clear, the punishment for apostasy cannot be carried out by individuals or vigilantes just because it's believed someone left Islam. That would be considered murder and the unjust killing of a person is obviously haram and considered a major sin.
Given the actual circumstances and rules of the law, if you do some research you will see that historically the death penalty for apostasy was not super common in during the time of the caliphates because of the heavy burden of proof to justify. Even today, how common is it really? Like is it responsible for a lot of deaths every year and something that is clearly being misused? The below article is a good read.
https://yaqeeninstitute.org/read/paper/the-issue-of-apostasy-in-islam
 
"My mercy prevails over my wrath"
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Do you consider yourself an Islamic reformist?
Not at all, I just have a different interpretation of fiqh (islamic jurisprudence), a sort of "rationalist" POV if you will. Some things should be taken literally yes, but a lot of islamic interpretation needs reasoning and context.

Here's more on the topic:

 
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