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Topic: Islamic view of Moses


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 Jewish view of marriage - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Jewish declaration of marriage includes the phrase that the marriage is being carried out by the laws of Moses and Israel; according to the sages, such a declaration has no meaning for a marriage ceremony between a Jew and a gentile.
See Religious aspects of marriage for entries on how all religions view marriage, and the get in relation to secular laws for the relevant rules in the Conflict of Laws.
Judaism considers marriage to be the ideal state of existence; a man without a wife, or a woman without a husband, are considered incomplete.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Jewish_view_of_marriage   (2223 words)

  
 Khidr in the Islamic Tradition
Since Moses in the Islamic tradition is regarded as a prophet as well as a messenger; bearer of the divine command­ments, and conveyer of God’s truth to his people, his seeking of knowledge from a non-prophet does not fit the criterion of the divine wisdom given to all prophets.
In Tabari’s view, history has been thus suffused with prophecy, to the extent that it is impossible to extricate the ‘sacred’ from the ‘profane’.
Khidr is one of the four prophets whom the Islamic tradition recognizes as being ‘alive’ or ‘immortal’.
khidr.org /khidr.htm   (2223 words)

  
 Mount Nebo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
According to the final chapter of Deuteronomy, Mount Nebo is where the Hebrew prophet Moses was given a view of the promised land that God was giving to the Hebrews.
Islamic belief holds that Musa (Moses) was buried not on the mountain but a few kilometres to the west, somewhere beyond the River Jordan.
Pope John Paul II visited the site during his pilgrimage to the Holy Land (Mount Nebo being one of the most important Christian sites in Jordan).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mount_Nebo   (2223 words)

  
 Encyclopedia article: Mount Nebo
The view from the summit provides a panorama of Ancient Palestine (A British mandate on the east coast of the Mediterranean; divided between Jordan and Israel in 1948) and to the north, a more limited one of the valley of the River Jordan (additional info and facts about River Jordan).
Islamic (additional info and facts about Islamic) belief holds that Musa (Moses) was buried not on the mountain but a few kilometres to the west, somewhere beyond the River Jordan (additional info and facts about River Jordan).
The original Nebo inspired the naming of the Mount Nebo (additional info and facts about Mount Nebo) that is the highest point in the Wasatch Range (additional info and facts about Wasatch Range) of Utah (A state in the western United States; settled in 1847 by Mormons led by Brigham Young).
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/m/mo/mount_nebo.htm   (276 words)

  
 Speaking of Faith Violence and Crisis in Islam
Said the Prophet Muhammad, "Islam came as a stranger, and it will be a stranger once again." The same can be said of the religions of Moses and Jesus.
Theoretically, all Islamic law is divine because it is inspired by the word of God in the Qur'an; experientially, most Islamic legal decisions are based on the hadith of the Sunna.
While hadiths tend to provide a law-centered view of Islam, the Qur'an stands in contrast, providing a word-centered approach in that the divine word allows human consciousness to experience the knowledge of God.
speakingoffaith.publicradio.org /programs/2004/09/30_crisisinislam/index.shtml   (276 words)

  
 Radical Islamic Anthropology: Key to Christian Theologizing in the Context of Islam
The Qur’anic story of the mysterious instructor of Moses, identified as al-Khidr in Islamic tradition is revolutionary in the sense that al-insan al-kamil is experienced as the Supreme Saint, al-shaykh al-akbar engaging with the saints or disciples (shaykhs or murids) as their instructor, murshid.
Arab philosophical epistemology was to al Ghazzali radically reductionistic, for it involved a low view of the human nature and the human potential for knowledge of and relations with the transcendental realities beyond what the rational aspect of man allowed.
SN was a mere conceptual category to refer to objects that might not exist in SP as fragments of thoughts or intentions of the divine to create or actualize.
www.religion-online.org /showarticle.asp?title=1633   (276 words)

  
 Symposium: Islamic Anti-Semitism
The teachings of the prophets, in this view, were perverted by Christians and Jews to form the teachings of those religions, but the real, untwisted teachings of Moses, Jesus, etc., were identical to the teachings of the Qur'an.
The prophets were not Jews, but Muslims: “Abraham was not a Jew nor a Christian but he was an upright man, a Muslim, and he was not one of the polytheists” (Sura 3:67).
Muslim anti-Semites exploit such passages to deny any Jewish origin for their religion; rather than considering Jews and Christians their Abrahamic brethren, they claim to be the only legitimate children of Abraham.
www.freerepublic.com /focus/f-news/1012110/posts   (3821 words)

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