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From: dawahaddict
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  • goood job brother... god bloss u

  • @MrDAHDZ

    Ur a piece of shit and so full of yeast infection and so full of SHIT and u need help loser.......... UGLY

  • @Dawahaddict

    SubhannAllah. Thankyou soo much for your vedios. Allah (swt) had guided you down the right path, InshaAllah he will do so for all of mankind. you are truly blessed, & i hope heavens doors open for you. Assalam Alykoum.... :)

  • @MrDAHDZ

    First of all u need to shut tht dirty hole u call a mouth b/c u dont know anything & ur just soo quick to judge. You dont see anyone makin fun of ur religion! & thts cuz we have 2 much respect for loosers like u! But u know what, ur not worth my time. Ur just a dirty rotten pig tht will regret everything later on. So learn to take ur comments somerwhere there wanted cuz im pretty sure no ones welcoming for ur lousy comments!!

  • Who is muhammad?

    A fucking pederast, raper and liar.

    he invented a bloody religion, based in judeo-christian mythology to gain power, he was a sick pederast who like little girls, and invented a god who talks to him to rape children sayin "god says it's not wrong"

    Muslims and christians are retards, hypocrites, they talk about love and compassion but they kill people, by the laws invented by this liar pig muhammad.

    Thank you!!!

  • WOW! You are such a great rolemodel, you really effected me, you are like the older brother I never had! Thank you!!!

  • If Allah means God, then Allah like the word God is just a title and Not the personal or actual name of God. Jews and Christians have a personal name of God. God is a title that can be applied to any Allah(God) out of the many God's.

  • @viperfaceX you better watch his another new video...

    In english. its different between God (with capital G) and god....

    God is the only one creator...

  • @04523305 Small or Big its still a title, not a personal name

  • Barak Allah Feek brother .

  • How can allah be merciful?

    Do muslims KNOW what mercy means?

    Here is the definition of mercy;

    compassion or forbearance shown especially to an offender or to one subject to one's power; also : lenient or compassionate treatment

    I again repeat, how can allah be merciful?

  • @sirjambo - Allah can be merciful because he forgives our sins, he's mercy takes over he's anger (verily, if Allah is really angry with you), he's compassionate,he's all-knowing, he's all powerful, he's NOOO WORDS JUST THE GOD THAT DESERVES TO BE WORSHIPED :) HE'S 99 names which are the best of name (beautiful) go search it up.

  • @islamtogo "Allah can be merciful..."

    No he can't since it is CRYSTAL CLEAR that unbelief in him is the GREATEST CRIME in islam.

    "HE'S 99 names..."

    You are limiting him since I can come up with names for him other than the 99.

    Doofus non existant and stupid come to mind. So maybe he has 102 ha?

    Allah CANNOT be merciful since he sends people he himself made unbelievers to HELL!

    That's the OPPOSITE of being Merciful

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  • @TruthIsSalvation

    What more is there to discuss?

    And thats odd. I am able to remove my comments on just about every video.

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  • @TruthIsSalvation

    Alhamdulilah

    May Allah forgive us all and accept our repentance.

    What answer?

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  • JazakAllah. I didn't know the names were so similar in the three languages. :)

  • @BlweLotus "I didn't know the names were so similar in the three languages"

    Well that is a start. Now take time out to find more

  • may allah bless u brother and i am so happy that allah guided u to islam<3

  • I like ur videos Mashallah and God bless u Brother..

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  • @TruthIsSalvation

    You said and I quote "could you explain this "shar'i form" as distinct from linguistics"

    And I did, then I quoted Ibn Kathir to show I am not making up the difference between the two and that there actually IS a difference that you brothers are ignoring. It is relevant because it shows words like Iman and kuffar which we know means faith and disbeliever actually have another meaning linguistically. These aren't the only words that are like that.

  • @Ibrahim1109

    Thank you for your esteemed efforts in applying your intelect to the word of God and may you be richly rewarded insha Allah. The word in question is none other the the most important word and pivotal to the entire Quran, The Message of Islam and Muslims. singularly and uniquely the word Allah is synonymous with Twahid the worship of The One God. The significance of this word is yet to be revealed in evidence.

  • @Ibrahim1109

    I am not ignoring any thing. I leave no stone unturned. I appreciate what you are trying to say. Can you point me to references on the subject of Shar'i form studies where I can go and read to get a full understanding of the topic.

  • @TruthIsSalvation

    Linguistic is what the word literally means in arabic. Shar'i is what it means once used in an Islamic context. Check Surah Hadid ayat 20 kuffar is not in shar'i usage here, but linguistical usage.

  • @Ibrahim1109

    Correct me if I am wrong, so what you are saying is that linguistically the word Allah is not a proper noun name

    "Shari" the word Allah is a proper noun name

    Where is your evidence that the word Allah is a proper noun name according to your "Shari" islamic context. Please discuss the word Allah not Kuffar

    And where are you getting this concept of Shari from? What on earth is Shari what does it mean and what is its transliteration from Arabic to English?

  • @TruthIsSalvation I meant if you just wish to say "The God" linguistically in arabic you have to say Al-Ilah or Allah if you wish to join them. This is for the kuffar who refer to others as "The God". It can be adapted to anything one worships or holds as a God. For example if a pagan arab says " The God Lat said such" he would have to use Al-Ilah or a variation of it.

  • @TruthIsSalvation Whereas the name Allah in the way it's used ALL throughout the Qur'an and Islam is a name Specific to Allah, so if one was speaking as a muslim then you would say Allah, and the default usage is that you mean the proper name of Allah and not just the phrase "The God" joined on whatever one wishes to use it on. When a Muslim says Allah linguistically "and" the Islamically both are Allah's names.

  • @7ensewlew I might agree with you if it wasn't just a contraction, but a new word. And yes I think tons of words have the same exact meaning. Many words in arabic have a feminine and masculine form. When you change the gender the word has a different letter yet the meaning is still the same.

  • @Ibrahim1109 Agree to disagree?

  • Brother, they're the same words. Allah is just those two words shortened and joined. Why would the meaning change? It's not a new word with a different root word. It's still Al and Ilah they didn't go anywhere.

    Your basically saying if we have al and qamar in a sentence and we join the two to make alqamar the meaning the two had before when used in the same sentence is changed. And in Arabic no it's not changed it still means "the moon".

  • I think your not making the distinction between the two forms. If someone calls a farmer a kaffir based on linguistical meaning you cannot say that man made takfir unless you ascertained his intention when he said kaffir. Understand what I'm saying?

  • So no, that Buddhist will not say Allah for his deity because he does not believe in Allah or Islam. He will call his deity by whatever name he gave to his deity. BUT, if he decides to use "Allah" in it's linguistical sense then yes he would say "Allah" whenever he wishes to say "The God" for whatever reason.

  • So Allah is only interchangeable with one of his other names like Ar-Rahman or As-Shakur.

    As for the Buddhist, again your talking about the shar'i meaning which is "the one worthy of worship" or in otherwords it is a name with which you call someone by, and not an adjective.

  • So because Allah is Al and Ilah joined for brevity how does the meaning change as far as adjective for goes? I don't see how it changes, and I did not get that information from your comments so maybe you can tell me why. JazakAllahKhair, otherwise it seems clear to me Allah and "The God" are interchangeable linguistically. As far as Islamically with regards to the sharia then no they are not, because God is not one of the names we find in the Qur'an or sunnah.

  • @Ibrahim1109 "The god" wold be "AL-iLAH" with an "i". Now have you EVER heard of two words in the Arabic language that have the same exact meaning? I haven't. Therefore, if "AL-iLAH" means "The god", ALLAH must have a different definition, maybe a similar definition, but still different. :)

  • @7ensewlew lol same here. I don't think your understanding this point, and if after you understand it you don't agree then I guess it's just a disagreement.

    For example: If I join "is" and "not" to make "isn't" is the meaning the same or is it changed because I joined them? It's the same! So whether LLAH is a word or not is irrelevant. Thats like saying is "sn't" a word. The words "is" and "not" are still there in the combined form and so is the meaning.

  • @Ibrahim1109 correct me if I'm wrong, but LLAH isn't a word, it's not Al-LLah, it's only ALLAH. If it was AL-iLAH Then that'd make it interchangeable with "The God". Let say you have an Arab Buddhist, would he say Allah? Probably not, because he doesn't believe that's god's ne is Allah. I honestly feel like I'm starting to repeat myself, perhaps I'm failing to understand what you're saying? Idk, how about we agree to disagree? :)

  • @TruthIsSalvation From what I know, that is one of the definitions of Allah's name.

  • @7ensewlew

    I asked:“Is Allah the proper noun name of The Only Ilah Worthy of Worship?”

    You replied:“From what I know, that is one of the definitions of Allah's name”

    So, if the word Allah is as you stated above I beg the question

    WHAT IS THE NAME OF Allah?

    Be clear I am asking for THEWORD representing the Proper Noun Name of your Rab/LORD, & not just any word a generic common noun name/tile/attribute like the words King, Creator, Eternal. The word Mohammed is a proper noun name

  • @TruthIsSalvation Sorry if I wasn't clear.

    When you ask "What is the name of Allah" it's like asking "What is the name of John"? Allah is the name of our creator. Allah does not mean "God, King, Lord, Eternal, etc.". Allah is a name that has it's own definition, and one of those definitions is "The only god worthy of true worship". Now the reason why I say "One of those definitions" is because perhaps there are other definitions that I'm not aware of. Hope to have helped.

    Peace be with you.

  • @7ensewlew

    CORRECTION!

    I never asked "what is the name of Allah"

  • @TruthIsSalvation One more thing, "LLAH" isn't a word, if you're trying to say "god" in Arabic, it's "ilah". :)

  • @7ensewlew

    What is this LLAH?

    CORRECTION

    I never mentioned the word LLAH

  • @7ensewlew

    Please read my comments FIRST

  • @TruthIsSalvation

    Check out the video on youtube

    "The root of the word Allah"

  • @TruthIsSalvation Ibn Kathir (rh) said: Linguistically, in the absolute sense, Iman merely means trust, and it is used to mean that sometimes in the Qur'an, for instance, Allah the Exalted said,

    ﴿يُؤْمِنُ بِاللَّهِ وَيُؤْمِنُ لِلْمُؤْمِنِينَ﴾

    (He trusts (yu'minu) in Allah, and trusts (yu'minu) in the believers.) (9: 61)

  • @Ibrahim1109

    Why are you quoting Ibn Kathir I see no relevance in what you stated.

    Look dont confuse your self and complicate the answer. If the word Allah is the proper noun name (PNN) in the islamic context then atleast prove it in the Islamic context. Where in the Quran does it say that the proper noun name of The God is Allah? which verse(s)? we need the evidence from the Quran.

    Note you admit that linguistically the word Allah is not the proper noun name (PNN) of The God

  • @TruthIsSalvation If your trying to ask me if Anywhere it says "Allah is the name of The God" then no I do not have a verse for you saying thay. And I don't need one. Allah is "The God" which is merely a phrase that refers to the one worthy of worship alone as does "alathee khalaqa samawati wal ardh" refers to him. It's the same as me saying Allah is the one who created Ibrahim so and so. No ayat specifically says that yet from what we know we can say that with a certainty.

  • @Ibrahim1109 Developing from our discussion I will ask you what do you consider as the correct concept for the etymology of the word Allah.

    Either the word Allah is a compound of al (the) and ilah (god) or it is a unique word not derived from any other word.

    Please give your reasons for your understanding

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  • @TruthIsSalvation That means it is his name. If you want to say "well you said Allah means "The God" so he is just saying "The God" and he isn't saying his name is "Allah", I would say if a boy's name means wood does that mean when I call him by his name I am saying come here wood? No, I am just saying his name, because if that were the case I would just say wood and not his name. Or to put it another way If I said huwa asad does that mean that boy is actually a Lion?

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  • @TruthIsSalvation If I said "He is Asad the strong and Mighty" then I would be using his name and not the meaning which is lion.

    2. As far as I know, yes. Allah knows best

  • @TruthIsSalvation We infer a great deal from the Qur'an and Sunnah, but this is not one of those in my opinion. If you could direct me to places where I could learn about this position and who supports it maybe I will change my mind.

  • @Ibrahim1109

    I will myslef give you the answer direct after we conclude the preliminaries

  • @TruthIsSalvation "Developing from our discussion I will ask you what do you consider as the correct concept for the etymology of the word Allah."

    That Allah is a contraction of Al and ILah. I am not a scholar so it is not for me to state all the points on each position. But your video is a good brief explanation on this. And I am of this opinion because I believe it is the stronger one. Simple as that.

  • @TruthIsSalvation tyndalearchive. com/ tabs / lane/

    Shar'i is defined there. The word is just a variation of Shari'ah. I presume you don't need me to define linguistics.

    As for Shar'i form studies you would just need to study Islam in general. Things like Kuffar and Iman etc. are all taught in this form. They tell you Iman means faith which is the shar'i meaning and so on.

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  • @Ibrahim1109

    This comment format is annoyingly word limiting and do not allow for proper expression. May I suggest that you and me continue this discussion by posting our comments on my channel page where there is no limit on the number of words you can post in any one time

  • @TruthIsSalvation "If the word Allah is the proper noun name (PNN) in the islamic context then atleast prove it in the Islamic context."

    Maybe that's a mistake? Because if you need me to prove that then someone hasn't been reading the Qur'an! And I am positive you do :)

  • @Ibrahim1109

    let us Agree on a foundation of understanding and build on it

    (1) There is no verse in the Quran which unequivocally and conclusively attest that His Proper Noun Name is Allah.

    (2) Two approaches to understanding the word Allah as well as (A) the Linguistic lexical a second (B) Shari (Islamic context)

    (A) Lexical Dictionary: In Arabic, the word means simply "the God"

    (B) Shar'i: According to Islamic belief, Allah is the proper name of God

    Correct me if I am wrong?

  • @Ibrahim1109

    Yes the majority of the human race have not read the Quran. Many Muslims have not read the Quran.

    I am speaking for the uninitiated. How do we explain what we say without burhan. The Burhan is the Quran.Why do we need to prove our words because they are not ours so we need to show the source.I stand by my initial question "If the word Allah is the proper noun name 'IN' the islamic context then atleast prove it 'IN' the Islamic context." You're saying it you prove it

  • @Ibrahim1109 Further, many Muslims reading the Quran do they truely comprehend it?No.So Ibrahim when we extrapolate meaning from the Quran such as the proposition that the word Allah,in the Quran,represents His Proper Name we need to produce the burhan for our rational we need to expose the evidence.It simply will not do to ask people to plung into the depths of the ocean to support your contentions.Bring the evidence out of the depths of knowledge if you are privy to them.Are you?

  • @TruthIsSalvation Thank you so much, I have been looking for this video! :)

    /watch?v=igUMyTokdZc

  • @7ensewlew Good

    Now share your comments and answer the Questions I posed to you. Take up my challenge scrutinize what you say by substantiate your opinions with evidence.

  • @thone2008 "And of His signs are the night and day and the sun and moon. Do not prostrate to the sun or to the moon, but prostate to Allah , who created them, if it should be Him that you worship." As for the made up goddess "Allat", find me one verse in the Quran that says Allat is to be worshipped, because you seem to be confusing the pagan Arabs with the Muslims

  • @7ensewlew

    That, and in Arabic they may not use the phrase "God of something" it's probably restricted to xRab of this or that". But I do not know, maybe you do.

    Walhamdulilah wasalam ala Muhammed wa ala aali Muhammed, And Allah knows best.

  • @7ensewlew

    Indeed lol.

    Yes brother the word god may be used that way which I why I specifically said when used by ahlul kitab and Muslims. And why not? If Allah is just Al and Ilah joined for brevity what stops it from being used? The answer InshaAllah is that Allah is overwhelmingly used as One of the 99 names rather than an adjective so the default usage is a name, and thus it makes 0 sense to say Allah of something,because thats like saying "Ibrahim of the sun" doesn't work if you put a name

  • @7ensewlew

    Asalamualaikum first ^_^

    And Brother words have a linguistucal meaning and a shar'i meaning. Literally Allah is "The God" and in Islam we come to know that Allah is the only one worthy of worship which is the shar'i meaning. God means both. It refers to the one who revealed the Torah and Injeel, this is what is meant when the Jews,Christians, and Muslims say God and this necessitates that the God referred to here is the only one worthy of worship.

  • @Ibrahim1109 Wa alaykum assalam, we got distracted by this chit chat and we forgot to make salam :P

    Let me put it this way, if one says "the god" it doesn't necessarily mean you're talking about Allah.

    For example, Some polytheists might say "The god of the sun", would it make sense if you said "Allah of the sun" instead? No, because "The god" and the word "Allah" are not the exact same thing, they're not interchangeable.

  • All Religions state Allah/God is in the Sky. 21st Century People have Telescopes

    how come they not found a Giant Person wandering in the Sky?, or Giant Gates, or Flying Virgins, or Huge Stairways.

  • @thone2008 Not all religions say that god is in the sky. In Islam we believe that god is beyond this universe. There are seven skies, each one compared to the other is like a seed in a desert, and the largest sky is like a seed in a desert when compared to the throne of Allah the almighty. Also, we do not believe that god is a human, he's not like anything of his creation. Unique in his own way, incomparable to anything or anyone.

    May Allah guide us both to the straight path.

  • @7ensewlew

    You comparing the Sky with what you see on the Earth, and now you talk about Thrones?

    If Allah is the creator, that would mean WE, are in the confinements of Allah' own Mind, we are thus a Product of his though Bubble, which means We Do not Exist.

  • @thone2008 How do you derive that result merely from Allah being the creator? It makes 0 sense. If I create a fly is it just in my mind or is it real? This is an elementary school question!

  • @thone2008 Sorry but I don't understand what you're trying to say.

    "Originator of the heavens and the earth. When He decrees a matter, He only says to it, "Be," and it is." [2:117]

  • @7ensewlew

    it simply means that when God wants to create some thing he doesn't work for it like we do he just says be

  • @wsmshrb

    "Allah - there is no deity except Him, the Ever-Living, the Sustainer of [all] existence. Neither drowsiness overtakes Him nor sleep. To Him belongs whatever is in the heavens and whatever is on the earth... "

  • @wsmshrb "... Who is it that can intercede with Him except by His permission? He knows what is [presently] before them and what will be after them, and they encompass not a thing of His knowledge except for what He wills. His Kursi extends over the heavens and the earth, and their preservation tires Him not. And He is the Most High, the Most Great." Noble Qur'an [2:255]

  • @7ensewlew Originator of the heavens and the earth (2:1) In the Beginning the Elohim (Plural) created the Heaven and the Earth (Gen 1:1) (500BC) In the beginning there was only the swirling watery chaos, called Nu (Egypt) (2000BC) In beginning of time, there was chaos, Sun rose created Heaven+Earth (2500BC) As the SUN Rises, it LIGHTS up(creates) the Heaven and the Earth. Allah = Ur Ra (RA, Most High) Quran = Khu-Ra ( Wisdom of RA) Torah = Tua-Ra (Worship of Ra) Bible = Papy-Ra (Book of Ra)
  • @thone2008 I dont know where you you've heard that.

  • @7ensewlew

    And yes, I do not disagree with what your saying there. God's name is Allah. I clearly said God is not one of Allah's names. It's an adjective to refer to him in the English language. Simple as that. But you must realize Allah is also an adjective as well as a name. If it means "The God" or the one to be worshipped that makes it an adjective as well. If "God" in English means that exact same thing then you have a translation.

  • so He is indeed The Only One Who is worthy to be worshipped [alone], without any partners."-Shaykh Saalim At-Taweel

  • @7ensewlew The origin of [the word] 'Allah' is Al-Ilaah [The Only One Worshipped In Truth]. 'Al-Ilaah' [The Only One Worshipped In Truth] and 'Allah' are one and the same.

    In Allah, the hamza was deleted for ease of pronunciation, so it [the word Al- Ilaah] became the word, 'Allah'. And as the brother had said before, we know that the meaning of Al-Ilaah means "The Only One Worshipped In Truth." So we know that the meaning of 'Allah' is "The Only One Worshipped In Truth.

  • @Ibrahim1109 Perfect, now is "The only one worshiped in truth" the same exact thing as "The god" or "god"? Is there any difference between them? If there isn't any difference between them, then you can say that "Allah" means "the god" or "god", but since there is a difference, you can't say "Allah simply means god in Arabic". Why? because Allah means "the only one worshiped in truth" and not just "the god".

  • @7ensewlew Just like "kaffir" has a linguistical and shar'i meaning.

  • @7ensewlew

    Is Allah the proper noun name of The Only Ilah Worthy of Worship?

  • Check out the MSAMuslimsLive radio show! support your brothers and sisters

  • @aceticacid100 youtube.com/user/MSAMuslimsLiv­e?feature=g-all-s

  • Yes Allah is the one to be worshipped and Allah refers to this one who is to be worshipped, but linguistically it's meaning is not that exact phrase. Thats what people who don't really know what Allah means say when they are asked. What does Allah mean? They say Al-Haqq or something like this rather than actually breaking it down linguistically and looking at it that way.

    And to all. God is not Allah's name. It is a term to refer to him by. I may be referred to as captain, but my name isn't.

  • @abuammrah "Allah" is both.

    Al-Ilah shortened "The God"

    If you make Al-Ilah one word it functions as an adjective still because you are saying "The God" or "The Ilah". People think just because it's a name it is not an adjective. In fact all 99 names are adjectives! They're all descriptive! So "The God" in english is a literal translation and this is what is meant when used by Jews,Christians, and Muslims when they just say God.

  • @Ibrahim1109 I don't know if you're mixing up the capital "i" with the lower case L or if it's just me seeing it this way. For that reason I will write my Ls as upper case and "i"s as lower case. "AL-iLAH" would be "The god", "Allah" is not "AL-LLAH" that's not correct. LLAH on its own isn't a word. Even though they sound quite similar, ALLAH and AL-iLAH are not the same word

  • For everyone who does understand.

    God in the sense that pagans use is the pretty much the literal translation of Ilah. It can be plural-gods- and so can Ilah-alihah- while Allah cannot be plural. The fact that God is the same word the one used for idols and such does not mean we are referring to that usage of the word. Christians and Jews tacitly mean "The God" when they say God. This is what Allah means. Arabic speakers cannot tell me otherwise because I can quote a scholar who speaks arabic.

  • @7ensewlew

    That means no one can say Allah's name is Allah. And we all know it makes sense to say that.

    Also, we are not claiming it to be a name of Allah, because we have no knowledge of it and it would be haram to say it was. Nevertheless the term used to refer to "The God" or "The creator" etc. Is God. This is implied when used in the proper context.

  • @Ibrahim1109 Saying "Allah's name is Allah" is like saying "John's name is John", you see what I'm trying to say here? Now on the other hand, saying "God's name is Allah" makes sense, because Allah is a name.

    "Say, "Who is Lord of the heavens and earth?" Say, "Allah." [Qur'an 13:16]

    I hope this clears things up a bit more for you brother.

  • 6 people are swallowed up by the Antichrist/Dajjal

  • sorry i don't agree with you, allah is not the arab translation of god, Allah is the name of God not just, the real translation of the name god is ilah (أله) and not ALLAH , when we say god it can be anything (can be a cow, a idol) also god can hav a plural, but Allah is the name of the only God the creator of the life. so it's not just god.

    anything a human worship can be called but c ilah (god), but cannot be called ALLAH.

  • beautiful and simple video! thanks for sharing

    May Allah reward you:)

  • @lbagra well...lol when I studied Judaism, I liked the concept that God was so Great that his name is above and beyond and that putting a dash in between the letters symbolises that we are not really worthy of writing his name, also if it was thrown on the floor it wouldn't really matter as the word does not say G-d's name.

    Thats Why i say G-d instead Of All-h <-- see the dash, it symbolises All-h's (SWT) name is so beautiful and great, i ain't worthy enough to write it.

  • @zeshy999 But the jews don't even say the name of God for that same reason but if you don't remember God through his names how can you think of Him (swt)? if we werent worth saying his name it would have been clearly stated in the Quran....

    Quite the opposite we should praise Him (swt) all of the time and no do it only when we pray/are at a Mosque

    I understand though with internet it doesnt feel right cos itnernet is full of bad words, i feel alike

    :)

  • @lbagra lol, i understand what you mean but you can't throw my words on the floor can you.

    i guess its just showing respect and isolating it from other words.

  • @zeshy999 :)

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  • nice to see you back!

  • Baraka Allahu Fik

  • ma sha allah tx u so much allah bless u

  • Nice video

  • So if Allah translates to god in English, why do we still say 'Allah' when talking about him? I mean, I never hear any of my Jewish friends saying Yahweh or Mormons saying Elohim, they just say god.

  • @ForeverWiked Because we choose too? Plus Allah is unique. "god" can become gods or goddesses, etc.

  • Ask your church Why they translate Prophet Muhammad(PBUH) name in the bible to 'altogether lovely' (5:16).

    And the bible scripture is not in english, it is in Hebrew and new testament is in Greek. You think the word 'God' which is english will appear in the scripture?

    Jesus(PBUH) never even heard the name Jesus in his life is Yeshua. Why in the bible is Called Jesus? This word Jesus is man made by the Church. Just like the Church chose the word God instead using the one in the Scripture.

  • @ForeverWiked we can, i prefer Allah because now it's also showing what kind of god we believe in, like when i say Allah, you'll know i wasn't talk about the one that has human form died on the cross, i talk about one and only god.

  • @ForeverWiked That's because it doesn't simply translate to "god" in english, god would be "elah" in the Arabic language, but Allah is a name, god's name. Dawahaddict made an honest mistake that is quite common. Heck, even I used to make the same exact mistake.

  • simple and perfect

  • Subhanallahu :) :)

  • great video!

  • @abuammrah You can translate Muhammed just like you can translate Asad and it has been done many times before . If you study arabic and know the grammer and language properly then it becomes easy. Ilah can be translated and so if we make it Allah that can also be translated. Instead of giving links could you just briefly tell us all why it is impossible to translate Allah? Joining Ilah and Al is not some mysterious combination that renders translation impossible.

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  • @Ibrahim1109

    PLEASE ANSWER:

    1- Is the word 'Allah' the Proper Noun Name (differentiated from words generic common noun names/titles/attributes) of your Rab/LORD, The Only Ilah Worthy of Worship?

    2- Is the word 'Allah' a generic common noun and not your LORD's unique personal proper noun name?

    NOTE:

    God, King, Lord, Eternal, Almighty, Rahman are 'GENERIC COMMON NOUN NAMES/TITLES/ATTRIBUTES

    Mohammed, Adam, Ibraheem, Ismael are PERSONAL PROPER NOUN NAMES

  • @TruthIsSalvation First Asalamualaikum warahmatullah =)

    1. Yes in the shar'i form Allah is a proper noun name.

    2. No it is his personal name if used in it's shar'i form.

    I am repeating the same things over and over and over. There is a "difference" between linguistical form and Islamic form.

  • @Ibrahim1109

    Could you please explain this 'Shar'i form' as distnict from Linguistics and what is the significace to the word Allah

  • @TruthIsSalvation Furthermore if in the linguistical sense "Allah" is just a contraction of Al and Ilah then my point stands that it can be translated perfectly as "The God" which still refers to him for reasons I already stated.

  • @Ibrahim1109

    Have you got all your thoughts on the subject collated together in one article that perhaps you can send to me as a message in my channel. I will read it gaining an understanding of your stance and then I would not have to ask you repeated questions. I am interested in what you have to say

  • @abuammrah

    That is just completely incorrect. Qur'an and Hadiths clearly show they used "Allah" before Muhammed peace amd blessings be on him and that he did not make it up after he became messenger. Who was the lord of the Kaabah? Allah Who was the creator of all things? Allah. Why is it they denied Ar-Rahman but recognized Allah ? Because it was not new.

  • Allah is a name, it's the name of the creator of the heavens and the earth. The word "elah" means god. Allah means "The only one worthy of true worship". That's a rough translation of the name "Allah". Please fix this, whether you make a new video or whatever you want to do, I appreciate the effort you're trying to put, and Inshallah you'll get rewarded for all the extra effort you put.

  • @abuammrah Can someone shut this Khawarij up! freaking learn your tauhid Ghububiah first fool!

    This Guy @dawahaddict is preaching Tauhid first above all.

  • salam - I must say that I'm a da'awa addict too, but I have a question, I'm starting to feel like nobody takes me seriously because I'm a girl >.> and really short, any tips?

  • Elah = god, Allah is his name. about the bibles translation,  because christians originally worshipped Allah :-)

  • Wa'Alaykum Asalam wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh,

    Jazaka'Allahu khair for this video, many people are adverse and oblivious to this.

  • Allah = God of humans and all of the universe.

  • MASHA ALLAH, very cute and blessed brother. May ALMIGHTY ALLAH SWT bless you brother, Aameen.

  • the problem with christianity is that they no longer worship the god jesus worshipped, Allah

  • Allah is the specific name of the true God :-) , elah means God, Allah is true, elah can be true if you mean Allah

  • I'm a former muslim, now Agnostic. Tip: look at the way Muhammad described paradise and then see if this is really from God or from the mind of a 7th century man

  • Masha Allah - thanks great vid - Jazakallahu Khair

  • @teletubeless Contrary to popular belief, that is not entirely true. Rabb in the Arabic language doesn't necessarily have to be related with Allah. We do say for instance, ربّ الأسرة "Rabb Al Osra" which means "Lord of the house".

    Furthermore, if we look at what the Holy Qur'an tells us, it's clear that Al Rabb is Allah. Take a look at the first Chapter of the Holy Qur'an Verse Number 2:"All praise is due to Allah, Lord of the worlds"

    and in Arabic:"الْحَمْدُ للّهِ رَبِّ الْعَالَمِين"

  • Love your videos! Mashallah!

  • noor just radiates from this mans face. mA.

  • it's not true

    allah means allah in arabic

    اله means god in arabic

  • it's wrong buddy

    god in arabic means اله

    الله is the name of allah

  • @abuammrah 'god' is the generic term, as in anything worthy of worship, اله

    "God" as in the proper name of the one God, in Arabic: الله

    which is, literally, a contraction of 'al-ilah', "The God."

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  • @abuammrah

    ilah = god

    Allah = God

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  • @abuammrah

    ياسيدي الفيديو موجه للغرب ..

    الغرب يعرفون الله = god

    في مسيحين غرب كتير انا اتناقشت معاهم يفتكرو ان الله اسم صنم او اله قمر والعياذ يالله

    دا فيديو بيوضح .. فبلاش الوقوف عند النقط الصغيرة دي

    انتا كدا بتبين اننا كمسلمين متناقضين

    الفيديو موجه للغرب