Profile
Name:
Derrick
Channel Views:
6,835
Total Upload Views:
50,213
Age:
45
Joined:
Jun 5, 2009
Latest Activity:
3 hours ago
Subscribers:
70
About Me:
Hometown:
Philadelphia, PA
Country:
United States
Subscriptions
(103)
Subscribers
(71)
Recent Activity
|
|
4Xderrick commented on Elijah Muhammad messenger of Allah or Satan?
|
|
|
|
4Xderrick commented on Elijah Muhammad messenger of Allah or Satan?
"@VoyageIslam
Nice try. As I said, loaded/leading questions and statements. The Messenger never said that Allah could die. You love to over-simpl..." more |
|
|
|
4Xderrick commented on Elijah Muhammad messenger of Allah or Satan?
"@VoyageIslam
As far as looking for the gullible, I have faith in each individuals ability to reason for themselves what is right and what isn't." more |
|
|
|
4Xderrick commented on Elijah Muhammad messenger of Allah or Satan?
|
|
|
|
4Xderrick commented on Elijah Muhammad messenger of Allah or Satan?
"To all who would see this video, see Minster Farrakhan's Saviour's Day address at this link: noi.org/sd2012/keynote/ and formulate your own opini..."
more
|
|
Channel Comments
















Peace to you and your closest..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
Hope you have a great 2011
Surah Al Imran ayat 7 gives the rules of interpretation. My exegesis comes from the Messenger of Allah. Time dictates agenda. Histories given within a prophetic framework hold their greatest importance when viewed within a future context. If we truly want to remain faithful to Allah's message (delivered by the Prophet Muhammad), then we need to allow the message to grow to meet the times, and be prepared to grow with that message to properly understand it within the context of the Time.
Stray question: By what criterion does one determine what passages are allegoricallly intended and what literal? Is this discriminating principle outlined anywhere in the Quran? Ahadeeth? Or is it your own subjective exegesis? If I want to be faithful to the message of Muhammad without corrupting his plain meaning would I not be advised to take him at face value? A genuine question this.
That's not what the Holy Qur'an said.
Hey, Allah disdains not the use of a gnat, for a simile. Certainly I can employ a little Latin to illustrate a point. Problem is, you keep missing the point. I try to show a more expanded view of one hadith, and you turn around and take another hadith, only to view it through that same narrow prism you call your perspective. Are you sure you made a real effort to try to understand Islam when you were "in it", because you don't seem very adept at all. Any parent has a hard time convincing their small child to believe in Santa Claus, these days. Yet you naively believe that the Holy Qur'an and the hadith are only meant to be taken in their most extreme literal sense?