Hi Gabriella, here is the new thread and my opening post
Not sure what you mean here by people who claim to have encountered Mohammed in their lives –
I think Hillside means people who claim to have met a risen spiritual personal mohammed
do you mean the stories about Prophet Mohammed's companions and spouses in Arabia during the time period he was supposed to have lived?
I don’t see given the context how he can mean this. I feel moved to find instances where the word encounter is used in terms of literature here. Could your term ‘’encounter with stories’’ be used for any literature or is there an extra dimension to it in the case of Mohammed and the environment he interacted with?
He was just a man so once he is supposed to have died it is not part of mainstream Muslim tradition for Muslims who came after him to claim they encountered him.... or God for that matter
Stupid question but How does God therefore end up being central in Islam? Is he central in Islam?
There is no equivalent belief to the claims by some Christians of encountering Jesus.
But is it true to say that you can encounter the Koran? And would it be fair to say that the Koran is for some Moslems the Word of God?
I say "some" because I have no idea if that is universal belief amongst all Christians.
The Muslim faith belief is that they have the Quran - a book of his messages believed to be the revelations
To whom?
or words of Allah/ God
So the actual word of God is embodied in the words of the Quran in the ink or Liquid crystals and materials which make up the words?
communicated via "angel" Jibreel .
Like gold transported in a crucible, to use a metaphor?
Most Muslims don't claim they have encountered 1 or 3 supernatural entities
And yet they encounter the actual word of Allah only made available to man via an encounter with a supernatural entity
- the Muslim faith as I understand it has a different vibe from the Christians - unless there are some Christians who don't believe it is possible to have personal encounters with God.
Our concept is that we know of God through words we read and that there is nothing comparable to God
I would suggest that a Christian could also sincerely say there is nothing comparable to God
because if God can be compared to anything e.g. a man (like Jesus for example)
But this isn’t what Christians are doing, by comparing I think you are talking rather about equating here or anything else that we would "encounter" or make sense of, [/quote] And yet you encounter the word of Allah
then God doesn't seem unique enough to be worthy of worship.
On the contrary there is enough in Christianity to still make God the supreme subject or object of worship. But feel free to expand on why this cannot be true.
There are various (99 to be precise) characteristics/ attributes given to God such as "merciful" or "just" etc but not physical attributes ( though I think physical attributes are occasionally used metaphorically) .
But these are human attributes to. Yes they may be superior analogues of the human version but I take it that we are to understand that God is merciful and just etc.
Most Muslims don't seem to want to encounter their concept of God nor do they seem to want their concept of God to be like one of them
I think you would be surprised at the number of anybody who wouldn’t actually want to meet an incarnate or any version of God
i.e. a man,
But they seem quite happy to have his word embodied in ink and paper and for Mohammed to have the supernatural encounter
nor do they believe that an all-knowing God would need to become a man to understand anything
nor do I and that certainly isn’t the purpose or function of the incarnation in the bible.
I think it also fitting to say at this juncture that mainstream Christians are keen to point out the belief that Jesus was both Fully man and fully God without confusion of the two. In other words he is not a man shaped God. I would also challenge the claim that no comparisons are ever made between God and man. Take the comparison of the comprehensibility of God and Man expressed by yourself for starters.
And with that, I’ll hand the floor back to you.