Portal: Islamic Doctrine: Difference between revisions

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{{PortalArticle|title=Allah (God)|image=|description=According to Islam, Allāh is the Creator of the Universe. Allah does not mean 'God' but rather 'the God' and is thus one of the remnants of Islam's pagan origins. In the pre-Islamic era, Allah was the supreme creator god of the Arabs. Yet he was still only one god among the many others they believed in. The goddesses; Allāt (the feminine form of “Allah”, meaning 'the goddess' ), Manāt, and al-‘Uzzá were Allah's daughters. In Islamic theology, Allah is thought of as the same and singular god of the other Abrahamic traditions.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|image=|summary=|description=Tawheed (also spelled tawhid) is the Islamic monotheistic concept of god. Although the concept of monotheism is intrinsic to tawheed, tawheed encompasses more than the concept of god simply being one. It also refers to all of the implications of the existence of one god who created the universe and has very specific wishes for his creations. It stands in contrast to shirk, or polytheism, in all of its forms.|title=Tawheed}}
{{PortalArticle|title=Allah (God)|image=Allahwall.png|description=According to Islam, Allāh is the Creator of the Universe. Allah does not mean 'God' but rather 'the God' and is thus one of the remnants of Islam's pagan origins. In the pre-Islamic era, Allah was the supreme creator god of the Arabs. Yet he was still only one god among the many others they believed in. The goddesses; Allāt (the feminine form of “Allah”, meaning 'the goddess' ), Manāt, and al-‘Uzzá were Allah's daughters. In Islamic theology, Allah is thought of as the same and singular god of the other Abrahamic traditions.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|image=Tawheed.jpg|summary=|description=Tawheed (also spelled tawhid) is the Islamic monotheistic concept of god. Although the concept of monotheism is intrinsic to tawheed, tawheed encompasses more than the concept of god simply being one. It also refers to all of the implications of the existence of one god who created the universe and has very specific wishes for his creations. It stands in contrast to shirk, or polytheism, in all of its forms.|title=Tawheed}}
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{{PortalArticle|image=|title=Naskh (Abrogation)|description=Naskh, or abrogation, is the process whereby Allah is said to replace or revise his plans. Previous scriptures, such as those of Jesus and Moses, are said to have been abrogated by the Quran just as the militant Medinan revelations of the Quran are said to have abrogated the mostly theological and moralistic Meccan revelations. Here, Islam stands firmly on one side of Euthyphro's dilemma: God can and does change what is right, rather than being bound by it.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|description=The Islamic tradition holds that while god has very and perhaps infinitely many names, there are 99 special ones. Knowing these 99 in particular is said in Bukhari to guarantee heaven, but a list of these 99 is not forthcoming in scripture, which contain a cumulative 276. These names include everything from ''Allah'' (the God), ''al-Rahim'' (the Most Merciful), ''al-Noor'' (the Light) , and ''al-Walee'' (the Friend) to ''al-Mumeet'' (the Deadly), ''al-Qahhar'' (the Despot), ''al-Muntaqim'' (the Revenger), al-''Mutakabbir'' (the Arrogant), and ''al-Mudhil'' (the Humiliator)|title=99 names of Allah|image=|summary=}}
{{PortalArticle|image=|title=Naskh (Abrogation)|description=Naskh, or abrogation, is the process whereby Allah is said to replace or revise his plans. Previous scriptures, such as those of Jesus and Moses, are said to have been abrogated by the Quran just as the militant Medinan revelations of the Quran are said to have abrogated the mostly theological and moralistic Meccan revelations. Here, Islam stands firmly on one side of Euthyphro's dilemma: God can and does change what is right, rather than being bound by it.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|description=The Islamic tradition holds that while god has very and perhaps infinitely many names, there are 99 special ones. Knowing these 99 in particular is said in Bukhari to guarantee heaven, but a list of these 99 is not forthcoming in scripture, which contain a cumulative 276. These names include everything from ''Allah'' (the God), ''al-Rahim'' (the Most Merciful), ''al-Noor'' (the Light) , and ''al-Walee'' (the Friend) to ''al-Mumeet'' (the Deadly), ''al-Qahhar'' (the Despot), ''al-Muntaqim'' (the Revenger), al-''Mutakabbir'' (the Arrogant), and ''al-Mudhil'' (the Humiliator)|title=99 names of Allah|image=|summary=}}
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