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==Cos'è il Corano?== | ==Cos'è il Corano?== | ||
Il '''Corano''' (القرآن) è il testo religioso principale dell'[[Islam]]. I Musulmani credono che il Corano sia il libro della guida divina e della condotta per gli esseri umani. Inoltre | Il '''Corano''' (القرآن) è il testo religioso principale dell'[[Islam]]. I Musulmani credono che il Corano sia il libro della guida divina e della condotta per gli esseri umani. Inoltre credono che tale testo nell'originale [[Arabo]], sia la parola letterale di [[Allah]]<ref>[{{Corano|2|23}} Corano, Sura 2, Versetti 23-24]</ref> rivelato dall'angelo Jibreel ([[Gabriele]]) a [[Maometto]] per un periodo di ventitre anni<ref>''Living Religions: An Encyclopaedia of the World's Faiths,'' Mary Pat Fisher, 1997, page 338, I.B. Tauris Publishers, </ref><ref>[{{Corano|17|106}} Corano, Sura 17, Versetto 106]</ref>, e considerano il Corano come ultima rivelazione di Dio.<ref>[{{Corano|33|40}} Corano, Sura 33, Versetto 40]</ref><ref>Watton, Victor, (1993), ''A student's approach to world religions:Islam'', Hodder & Stoughton, pg 1. ISBN 0-340-58795-4</ref> | ||
==Structure and Content of the Qur'an== | ==Structure and Content of the Qur'an== |
Revision as of 20:48, 27 December 2013
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Cos'è il Corano?
Il Corano (القرآن) è il testo religioso principale dell'Islam. I Musulmani credono che il Corano sia il libro della guida divina e della condotta per gli esseri umani. Inoltre credono che tale testo nell'originale Arabo, sia la parola letterale di Allah[1] rivelato dall'angelo Jibreel (Gabriele) a Maometto per un periodo di ventitre anni[2][3], e considerano il Corano come ultima rivelazione di Dio.[4][5]
Structure and Content of the Qur'an
In length, the Qur'an is slightly shorter than the Christian New Testament (at approximately 165,000 words in English).[6] The text is not in chronological order, but arranged roughly longest surah (chapter) to the shortest. Ayahs (verses) are written in the first person (spoken by Allah), thus they generally lack context. For context, Muslims use Hadith collections (oral traditions which record Muhammad's words and actions) and the Sirat (biography of Muhammad). With these, the surahs can be separated into two categories; Meccan and Medinan.
Love and Fear in the Qur'an
"While there are over 300 references in the Koran to Allah and fear, there are only 49 references to love. Of these love references, 39 are negative such as the 14 negative references to love of money, power, other gods and status.
Three verses command humanity to love Allah and 2 verses are about how Allah loves a believer. There are 25 verses about how Allah does not love kafirs (unbelievers)
This leaves 5 verses about love. Of these 5, 3 are about loving kin or a Muslim brother. One verse commands a Muslim to give for the love of Allah. This leaves only one quasi-universal verse about love: give what you love to charity and even this is contaminated by dualism since Muslim charity only goes to other Muslims."[7]
Non-Muslims and Punishment in the Qur'an
Approximately 67% of the Meccan verses deal with punishing unbelievers for disagreeing with Muhammad, and more than 50% of the Medinan verses deals with hypocrites and jihad against unbelievers.[7] Also, there are nearly 500 verses (roughly one out of every twelve) in the entire Qur'an which speak of Hell, and over 400 teachings of hate of Jews, Christians, Idolaters and Kafirs.[7]
Jihad
Not including verses which deal with heavenly rewards for Jihadists, generic mentions of "victory", and Muhammad's negative opinions of those who do not participate in Jihad, there are roughly 164 Jihad verses in the Qur'an.[8] These speak clearly and directly of military expedition, fighting, spoils of war, etc.
Immorality
Not only critics, but even practicing Muslims agree that the Qur'an justifies and permits things such as; hatred of Homosexuals, lying, pedophilia, polygamy, racism, religious discrimination, terrorism, violence against women, slavery and rape.
On the plan to burn Qurans this weekend, I say to Muslims: Let's get over the symbolic insult and deal with the very real issues of literal interpretations of the Quran that are used to sanction domestic violence, terrorism, militancy, and suicide bombings in the name of Islam.
Gen. David Petraeus has weighed in, saying that the planned burnings by the Rev. Terry Jones' congregation in Florida will endanger U.S. soldiers fighting in Afghanistan. But I believe that there is something that endangers Americans and American soldiers even more: certain passages that—when read literally—pit Muslims against Americans and the West.
I believe the Qurans are being burnt because we, as Muslims, haven't dealt sincerely and intellectually with very serious issues that certain Quranic passages raise, particularly in the West. These include verses—when literally read—that say that disobedient wives can be beaten “lightly,” that Muslims can't be friends with the Jews and the Christians, and that it's OK to kill converts from Islam.
We, as Muslims, need to tear a few pages out of the Quran—symbolically, at least, by rejecting literal adherence to certain problematic verses.Asra Q. Nomani, The Daily Beast, September 8, 2010
Video
The famous video by British atheist, Nick Gisburne, which got him banned from Youtube.
See Also
Translations
- A version of this page is also available in the following languages: French and Czech. For additional languages, see the sidebar on the left.
External Links
- Qur'an: A Work of Multiple Hands? - Denis Giron
- Cruelty in the Quran - Skeptic's Annotated Quran
- Chronology vs Violence - FFI forum post on why there is more Violence near the end of the Qur'an
Translations
- Master Ayat (Verse) Index - From the people at Islam Awakened. Roman transliteration of the Arabic Qur’an and a massive 34 compared English translations
- iKnowledge Literal Qur'an - Muslim website which provides the English literal translation of the Qur'an. Also shows that Allah is the "best deceiver" in verses 3:54, 7:99, 8:30, 10:21, and 13:42
Downloads
- English Qur'an: (Yusuf Ali translation), (Pickthal translation), (Shakir translation)
References
- ↑ [[[Corano]] 2:23 Corano, Sura 2, Versetti 23-24]
- ↑ Living Religions: An Encyclopaedia of the World's Faiths, Mary Pat Fisher, 1997, page 338, I.B. Tauris Publishers,
- ↑ [[[Corano]] 17:106 Corano, Sura 17, Versetto 106]
- ↑ [[[Corano]] 33:40 Corano, Sura 33, Versetto 40]
- ↑ Watton, Victor, (1993), A student's approach to world religions:Islam, Hodder & Stoughton, pg 1. ISBN 0-340-58795-4
- ↑ Could Joseph Smith have written the Book of Mormon? - The Hundredth Sheep
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Bill Warner - LOVE VERSUS FEAR IN THE KORAN: A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS AND REFORM ACCORDING TO GOLDEN RULE
- ↑ 164 Jihad Verses in the Koran - Yoel Natan
[[Category:Qur'an]] [[Category:Literature]] [[Category:Downloads]]