Portal: Muhammad: Difference between revisions

[checked revision][checked revision]
No edit summary
Line 34: Line 34:
<div class="articleSummaryColumnsWrapper">
<div class="articleSummaryColumnsWrapper">
<div class="articleSummaryColumn">
<div class="articleSummaryColumn">
{{PortalArticle|image=Dhalikaljaysh.jpg|title=Prophecies in the Hadith|description=Muhammad's prophecies are predictions attributed to him and generally written 150-200 years after his death. Many prophecies are considered "signs of the Hour" (Islamic eschatology). Some prophecies are general statements that may apply to times even before Islam, other prophecies predict early Islamic history (which happened before the predictions were written) and some prophecies make predictions about the the future to come after the hadiths were written.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|title=The Farewell Sermon|summary=|image=Arafah.jpg|description=The Farewell Sermon (خطبة الوداع‎, Khuṭbatu l-Wadā') is purported to be the Prophet Muhammad's final sermon to his followers before his death in 632 CE. However like most elements of the Islamic tradition our sources for this are extremely late, in this case At-Tabari writing in the late 800's CE about an event which is purported to have taken place in 632 CE. The mention of "the Sunnah of the prophet" is clearly apycrophal, as Patricia Crone has shown in pathbreaking ''God's Caliph''.}}
{{PortalArticle|image=Dhalikaljaysh.jpg|title=Prophecies in the Hadith|description=Muhammad's prophecies are predictions attributed to him and generally written 150-200 years after his death. Many prophecies are considered "signs of the Hour" (Islamic eschatology). Some prophecies are general statements that may apply to times even before Islam, other prophecies predict early Islamic history (which happened before the predictions were written) and some prophecies make predictions about the the future to come after the hadiths were written.|summary=}}{{PortalArticle|title=Farewell Sermon|summary=|image=Arafah.jpg|description=The Farewell Sermon (خطبة الوداع‎, Khuṭbatu l-Wadā') is purported to be the Prophet Muhammad's final sermon to his followers before his death in 632 CE. However like most elements of the Islamic tradition our sources for this are extremely late, in this case At-Tabari writing in the late 800's CE about an event which is purported to have taken place in 632 CE. The mention of "the Sunnah of the prophet" is clearly apycrophal, as Patricia Crone has shown in pathbreaking ''God's Caliph''.}}
</div><div class="articleSummaryColumn">
</div><div class="articleSummaryColumn">
{{PortalArticle|summary=|title=Satanic Verses (Gharaniq Incident)|description=The Satanic Verses (also the Gharaniq incident) was an incident where Prophet Muhammad acknowledged Allat, Manat, and al-Uzza, the goddesses of the Pagan Meccans in a Qur'anic revelation, only to later recant and claim they were the words of the Devil. The incident, recorded in the earliest Islamic scriptures, has proven theologically controversial in the extreme, with some theologians denying its possibility outright.|image=Gharaniq.jpg}}{{PortalArticle|description=Al-Burāq (البُراق‎ "lightning") is a mythological steed comparable to the Greek Pegasus, believed to be a creature from the heavens which transported the various Islamic prophets. Islamic scriptures report that Muhammad mounted Buraq, which then transported him to the al-Aqsa mosque (supposedly already extant) and subsequently through the seven heavens to meet with Allah in person.|title=Buraq|image=Buraqpic.jpeg|summary=}}
{{PortalArticle|summary=|title=Satanic Verses (Gharaniq Incident)|description=The Satanic Verses (also the Gharaniq incident) was an incident where Prophet Muhammad acknowledged Allat, Manat, and al-Uzza, the goddesses of the Pagan Meccans in a Qur'anic revelation, only to later recant and claim they were the words of the Devil. The incident, recorded in the earliest Islamic scriptures, has proven theologically controversial in the extreme, with some theologians denying its possibility outright.|image=Gharaniq.jpg}}{{PortalArticle|description=Al-Burāq (البُراق‎ "lightning") is a mythological steed comparable to the Greek Pegasus, believed to be a creature from the heavens which transported the various Islamic prophets. Islamic scriptures report that Muhammad mounted Buraq, which then transported him to the al-Aqsa mosque (supposedly already extant) and subsequently through the seven heavens to meet with Allah in person.|title=Buraq|image=Buraqpic.jpeg|summary=}}
Line 43: Line 43:
*[[Muhammad's Miracles]]
*[[Muhammad's Miracles]]
{{col-float-break|width=25em}}
{{col-float-break|width=25em}}
*[[Farewell Sermon]]
 
{{Col-float-break|width=25em}}
{{Col-float-break|width=25em}}
{{col-float-end}}
{{col-float-end}}
Editors, recentchangescleanup, Reviewers
6,633

edits