Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Muslims -Religion Islam

Muslims -Religion Islam


One who sincerely embraces the religion of Islam and is free from hypocrisy. A Muslim tries to worship God by following the teachings He has revealed to all of mankind, and worships Him. The feminine form of the word is Muslimah. There are nearly 1.2 billion Muslims in the world today. They are of all different racial and ethnic backgrounds including Arab, Asian, African, African-American, and Caucasian.

Muslims :

Chapter I: Knowledge and Religious Experience!

What is the character and general structure of the universe in where we live? Is there a permanent element in the constitution of this universe and how are we related to it
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(Coming Soon)

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Chapter II: Revelations of Religious Experience


The cosmological argument views the world as a finite effect, and passing through a series of dependent sequences, related as causes and effects. (Coming Soon)

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Chapter III: Concept of God & Meaning of Prayers


We have seen that the judgement based upon religious experience fully satisfies the intellectual test. The more important regions of experience, examined with an eye on a synthetic view. (Coming Soon)

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Chapter IV: Human Ego- Freedom and Immortality


The Quran in its simple, forceful manner emphasizes the individuality and uniqueness of man. Yet it is surprising to see that the unity of human consciousness which constitutes the centre of human personality never really became a point of interest in the history of Muslim thought. (Coming Soon)

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Chapter V: The Spirit of Muslim Society


The first important point to note about the spirit of Muslim culture then is that, for purposes of knowledge, it fixes its gaze on the concrete, the finite. (Coming Soon)

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Chapter VI: Islamic System


As an emotional system of unification Islam recognizes the worth of the individual as such, and rejects blood - relationship as a basis of human unity. (Coming Soon)

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Chapter VII:
Religious Life

Broadly speaking religious life may be divided into three periods. These may be described as the periods of Faith, Thought, and Discovery. (Coming Soon)

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