Allah and Muhammad quote Babylonian Talmud instead of Hebrew Scriptures
Q5.32 Says allah commanded the Israelites that if they kill one person, it’s as if they killed all mankind and if they save one person it’s as if they saved all mankind.
Oddly enough, this quote doesn’t come from the Hebrew scriptures; it comes from the Babylonian Talmud!!! So why is allah quoting Jewish commentaries instead of Jewish scripture? Is it because Muhammad was a false prophet who repeated stories he HEARD about Judaism/Christianity, and really had no clue WHAT he was quoting?
“For this reason was man created alone, to teach that whoever destroys a single life, it is as if he has destroyed an entire world; and whoever preserves a single life, it is as if he has saved an entire world” (Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Sanhedrin, Folio 37a).
3000 years of Jews in Holy Land of Israel
In an article about a growing tide of African migrants sneaking into Israel, Joel Greenberg, the Washington Post’s Jerusalem correspondent, draws a false parallel between Israelis as a nation of recent refugees seeking to cope with a new wave of refugees from Sudan and Eritrea (“In Israel, flow of migrants poses dilemma — Some fear state’s Jewish character is threatened amid an influx of African refugees” page A8, April 16)
“Their presence,” Greenberg writes, “has created an acute dilemma for Israel, a state founded as a haven for Jewish refugees.” And he adds:”The controversy over the African migrants touches on core questions of Israel’s self-definition as both a Jewish and democratic state — a nation of immigrants created as a shelter for Jews after the Holocaust.”
A nation of immigrants created as a shelter for Jews after the Holocaust?
Greenberg simply has his history wrong by a margin of 3,000 years. The roots of Jewish nationhood go much deeper and cover a far longer historical span than the arrival of Holocaust survivors after World War 2. Jews ruled the Holy Land for a thousand years before the Common Era — with only a brief, half-century exile in Babylon. After the Roman conquest, there was a continuous Jewish presence in Palestine until modern times.
Israel as a post-Holocaust shelter for Jewish refugees? Think again. Jews have rightful claims to the Holy Land as its most indigenous people since David conquered Jerusalem.
A few historical samples that illustrate Israel’s historical ties to the land — not as immigrants, not as refugees, but as permanent local residents:
–In the 6th Century of the Common Era, there were 43 Jewish communities across all parts of the Holy Land
–In the 11th Century, Jews were among the fiercest local fighters in defending Haifa against the Crusaders.
–From 1,267 on, there were an unbroken Jewish presence in Jerusalem until Jordan briefly seized the city in 1948.
–In the 16th Century, Kabbalists flourished in Safed, whose Jewish population grew to 30,000 by the end of that century.
–By mid-19th Century — a hundred years before the Holocaust — Jerusalem was preponderantly Jewish.
When Jewish survivors of the Holocaust arrived in Israel, they were welcomed in Israel by a vibrant local Jewish community whose roots pre-dated the Holocaust by many centuries.
Jews as migrants or refugees in their own land? Greenberg needs a refresher course in Middle East history. Jews aren’t migrants or refugees when they come to settle in Israel. They may be refugees or immigrants elsewhere, but once in Israel, they’ve come home.
Thus, there’s no parallel between African migrants who cross into Israel and Israelis as a supposed post-Holocaust “nation of immigrants.”
If there’s a moral quandary in Israel about what to do with these African migrants, it’s not because both Israelis and Sudanese arrivals can be lumped together as foreign immigrants.
Rather, Israelis — as locals with an indigenous identity of three millennia — are commanded by their Creator to always be mindful, respectful and sensitive to the needs of the “stranger in your midst for you also were strangers when you were slaves in Egypt.”
As usual, the Bible has it right, while Greenberg has it wrong — Jews have been strangers, migrants, refugees not only in Egypt but around the world. Except in one place — the Promised Land. There, they have been and remain fully at home.
No Such Thing as a Palestinian (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
Palestine 2.0 a Gun Aimed at Every Jew (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
Fastest Growing Religion
The Numbers
Overview
The largest overall religions:
| 1900 | 1) Christianity | 2) Chinese folk-religions | 3) Hinduism |
| 1970 | 1) Christianity | 2) Islam | 3) Hinduism |
| 1990 | 1) Christianity | 2) Islam | 3) Hinduism |
| 1995 | 1) Christianity | 2) Islam | 3) Hinduism |
| 2000 | 1) Christianity | 2) Islam | 3) Hinduism |
| 2025 | 1) Christianity | 2) Islam | 3) Hinduism |
| 2050 | 1) Christianity | 2) Islam | 3) Hinduism |
The five fastest growing religions in terms of absolute numbers (new adherents per year, in millions):
| 1. | Christianity | 25,210,195 |
| 2. | Islam | 22,588,676 |
| 3. | Hinduism | 12,533,734 |
| 4. | Chinese folk-religions | 3,715,548 |
| 5. | Buddhism | 3,687,527 |
The five fastest growing religions in terms of relative growth compared to existing size of religion:
| 1. | Zoroastrianism | 2.65% |
| 2. | Bahá’í | 2.28% |
| 3. | Islam | 2.13% |
| 4. | Mandeans | 2.12% |
| 5. | Sikhism | 1.87% |
The five fastest growing religions by conversions (new adherents per year, in millions):
| 1. | Christianity | 2,501,396 |
| 2. | Islam | 865,558 |
| 3. | Buddhism | 156,609 |
| 4. | Sikhism | 28,961 |
| 5. | Baha’is | 26,333 |
The five fastest growing religions by births (new adherents per year, in millions):
| 1. | Christianity | 22,708,799 |
| 2. | Islam | 21,723,118 |
| 3. | Hinduism | 13,194,111 |
| 4. | Ethnoreligionists | 4,098,003 |
| 5. | Animists | 3,985,506 |
Overall size, absolute numbers
World Christian Encyclopaedia
The World Christian Encyclopaedia (see background), lists the size of the 12 classic world religions.
| Religion | Numbers | % | Countries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christianity | 1,999,563,838 | 33.0% | 238 |
| Islam | 1,188,242,789 | 19.6% | 204 |
| Hinduism | 811,336,265 | 13.4% | 114 |
| Buddhism | 359,981,757 | 5.9% | 126 |
| Sikhism | 23,258,412 | 0.4% | 34 |
| Judaism | 14,434,039 | 0.2% | 134 |
| Bahá’í | 7,106,420 | 0.1% | 218 |
| Confucianism | 6,298,597 | 0.1% | 15 |
| Jainism | 4,217,979 | 0.1% | 10 |
| Shinto | 2,761,845 | 0.0% | 8 |
| Taoism | 2,654,514 | 0.0% | 5 |
| Zoroastrianism | 2,543,950 | 0.0% | 24 |
| Other | 1,632,648,595 | 26.9% | - |
| Total | 6,055,049,000 | 100% | 238 |
• The largest religion (Christianity) is aprox. 68% larger than the second largest religion (Islam) and 246% larger than the third largest religion (Hinduism).
• The nine smallest religions combined have fewer adherents than the third largest (Hinduism).
• And the eight smallest religions combined have fewer adherents than the fourth largest (Buddhism).
• The combined adherents of the three primary Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, makes up approximately 52.8% (3,202,240,666 persons) of the total population – more than half. Some times also Sikhism and the Bahá’í faith are counted as Abrahamic religions, in which case that number will be slightly higher.
• Non-religious people and people belonging to religions not part of the 12 world religions makes up slightly less than 27%. A smaller number than the largest religion, Christianity, but larger than the second largest religion, Islam.
| Affiliation | Numbers | % | Countries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Roman Catholics | 1,057,328,093 | 17.5% | 235 |
| Independents | 385,745,407 | 6.4% | 221 |
| Protestants | 342,001,605 | 5.6% | 233 |
| Orthodox | 215,128,717 | 3.6% | 135 |
| Anglicans | 79,649,642 | 1.3% | 166 |
| Marginal Christians | 26,060,230 | 0.4% | 215 |
Britannica Encyclopedia
The Britannica Encyclopedia has some slightly different estimates. And for the year 2005.
| Religion | % |
|---|---|
| Christianity | 33.06% |
| Islam | 20.28% |
| Hinduism | 13.33% |
| Buddhism | 5.87% |
| Sikhism | 0.39% |
| Judaism | 0.23% |
| Bahá’í | 0.12% |
| Confucianism | 0.10% |
| Jainism | 0.07% |
| Shinto | 0.04% |
| Taoism | 0.04% |
| Zoroastrianism | 0.04% |
| Other | 26.43% |
| Total | 100% |
The CIA World Fact Book
The CIA World Factbook is an annual publication of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of the United States with almanac-style information – including demographics & faith statistics – about the 266 U.S. recognized countries of the world and a number of smaller areas. The Factbook only tabulate seven world religions. The numbers only differ slightly from the WCE and The Britannica Encyclopedia.
| Religion | size | % |
|---|---|---|
| Christianity | 2,234,770,118 | 33.32% |
| Islam | 1,409,139,261 | 21.01% |
| Hinduism | 889,347,292 | 13.26% |
| Buddhism | 391,688,400 | 5.84% |
| Sikhism | 23,474,476 | 0.35% |
| Judaism | 15,426,084 | 0.23% |
| Bahá’í | 8,048,392 | 0.12% |
| Other (incl. non-religious & atheists) | 1,735,099,128 | 25.87% |
| Total | 6,706,993,152 | 100% |
Adherents.com
Adherents.com is a website that aims to collect and present information about religion, including statistics on size. Adherents.com collects the information from a large number of census reports, surveys &etc.
| Religion | size | % |
|---|---|---|
| Christianity | 2,100,000,000 | 33% |
| Islam | 1,500,000,000 | 21% |
| Hinduism | 900,000,000 | 14% |
| Buddhism | 376,000,000 | 6% |
| Sikhism | 23,000,000 | 0.36% |
| Judaism | 14,000,000 | 0.22% |
Growth
The World Christian Encyclopaedia has estimated the growth of the 12 classic world religions in the decade 1990-2000 (anual change in new adherents and percentage):
| Religion | Total | Natural (births) | Conversions | Growth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christianity | 25,210,195 | 22,708,799 | 2,501,396 | 1.36% |
| Islam | 22,588,676 | 21,723,118 | 865,558 | 2.13% |
| Hinduism | 12,533,734 | 13,194,111 | -660,377 | 1.69% |
| Buddhism | 3,687,527 | 3,530,918 | 156,609 | 1.09% |
| Sikhism | 392,638 | 363,677 | 28,961 | 1.87% |
| Judaism | 124,515 | 194,962 | -70,447 | 0.91% |
| Bahá’í | 143,491 | 117,158 | 26,333 | 2.28% |
| Confucianism | 44,305 | 55,739 | -11,434 | 0.73% |
| Jainism | 34,951 | 74,539 | -39,588 | 0.87% |
| Shinto | -31,993 | 8,534 | -40,527 | -1.09% |
| Taoism | 25,242 | 25,397 | -155 | 1.00% |
| Zoroastrianism | 58,471 | 45,391 | 13,080 | 2.65% |
| Global population | 78,860,791 | 78,860,791 | - | 1.41% |
• Christianity is the fastest growing religion both in the number of new adherents due to natural growth (births minus deaths) as well as in number of new converts (converts in minus converts out).
• The total growth of Christianity (25,210,195) adds the equivalent of more than the population of Australia (21,555,500) or the U.S. State of Texas (23,904,380) of new Christians to Christianity. Every year.
• The number of new converts to Christianity is more than twice the combined number of new converts to all the other tabulated religions, even if we take out those with negative numbers (2,501,396 vers. 1,090,541).
• The new converts to Christianity (2,501,396) adds the equivalent of more than the population of Latvia (2,268,000) or almost the U.S. State of Nevada (2,565,382) of new Christians to Christianity. Every year.
Future estimations based on current size and growth numbers:
| 2000 (estimated) | 2025 (projected) | 2050 (projected) | Delta (Δ) 2000-2050 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Religion | Adherents | % | Adherents | % | Adherents | % | Adherents | Growth | Wrld |
| Christianity | 1,999,563,838 | 33.0% | 2,616,670,052 | 33.4% | 3,051,564,342 | 34.3% | 1,052,000,504 | 52.61% | 1.3% |
| Islam | 1,188,242,789 | 19.6% | 1,784,875,653 | 22.8% | 2,229,281,610 | 25.0% | 1,041,038,821 | 87.61% | 5.4% |
| Hinduism | 811,336,265 | 13.4% | 1,049,230,740 | 13.4% | 1,175,297,850 | 13.2% | 363,961,585 | 44.86% | -0.2% |
| Buddhism | 359,981,757 | 5.9% | 418,344,730 | 5.3% | 424,607,060 | 4.8% | 64,625,303 | 17.95% | -1.1% |
| Sikhism | 23,258,412 | 0.4% | 31,377,860 | 0.4% | 37,058,960 | 0.4% | 13,800,548 | 59.34% | 0.0% |
| Judaism | 14,434,039 | 0.2% | 16,053,350 | 0.2% | 16,694,500 | 0.2% | 2,260,461 | 15.66% | 0.0% |
| Bahá’í | 7,106,420 | 0.1% | 12,062,150 | 0.2% | 18,000,900 | 0.2% | 10,894,480 | 153.30% | 0.1% |
| Confucianism | 6,298,597 | 0.1 | 6,817,950 | 0.1 | 6,952,900 | 0.1 | 654,303 | 10.39% | 0.0% |
| Jainism | 4,217,979 | 0.1 | 6,115,650 | 0.1 | 6,732,770 | 0.1 | 2,514,791 | 59.62% | 0.0% |
| Shinto | 2,761,845 | 0.0% | 2,122,950 | 0.0% | 1,655,400 | 0.0% | -1,106,445 | -40.06% | 0.0% |
| Taoism | 2,654,514 | 0.0% | 3,066,300 | 0.0% | 3,272,200 | 0.0% | 617,686 | 23.27% | 0.0% |
| Zoroastrianism | 2,543,950 | 0.0% | 4,439,930 | 0.1% | 6,964,700 | 0.1% | 4,420,750 | 173.78% | 0.1% |
| Others | 1,632,648,595 | 27.0% | 1,872,525,685 | 24.0% | 1,931,011,808 | 22.0% | 298,363,213 | 18.27% | -5.6% |
| Total | 6,055,049,000 | 100% | 7,823,703,000 | 100% | 8,909,095,000 | 1000% | 2,854,046,000 | 47.13% | - |
• The “Δ growth” is the size of the religion in 2050 compared to the year 2000.
• The “Δ wrld” is the growth from 2000 to 2050 in the size of the religion of the world population.
• In the period 2000-2050, in terms of absolute numbers, Christianity is predicted to be the fastest growing religion (1,052 billion more adherents). Closely followed by Islam (+1.041 billion) – though the difference between the two numbers is so small that any difference easily lies within the statistical uncertainty.
• Since Islam from the base point in 2000 is a smaller overall religion than Christianity (about 60% the size of Christianity) the same (roughly) growth in absolute number of adherents translate into a larger relative growth. Respectively 87.61% versus 52.61% in relation to the initial size of the religion & 5.4% versus 1.3% as a proportion of the religions size compared to the global human population.
• In terms of growth in percentage, Zoroastrianism (+173.78%) & Bahá’í (+153.30%) are the two fastest growing religions. But since their base size is comparatively small (respectively 0.12% & 0.36% the size of Christianity), this strong growth has only a small influence on the relative size of tabulated religions (both gain 0.1% “market share”).
Analyses, Growth pattern:
Conversion
Only religions with a positive number of converts (i.e. more converts into, than converts out from) are included.
| Religion | Conversions | Rate to total growth | Rate to size | Number of adherents to each new convert |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christianity | 2,501,396 | 9.92% | 0.13% | 799 |
| Islam | 865,558 | 3.83% | 0.07% | 1,373 |
| Buddhism | 156,609 | 4.25% | 0.04% | 2,298 |
| Sikhism | 28,961 | 7.38% | 0.12% | 803 |
| Bahá’í | 26,333 | 18.35% | 0.37% | 270 |
| Zoroastrianism | 13,080 | 22.37% | 0.51% | 194 |
• Rate to total growth is the size of the total growth of the religion which comes from converts. A high number can signify many converts or a low natural growth, conversely a low rate can signify few converts or high natural growth.
• Rate to size is the relative size of the number of converts to the size of the whole religion.
• Number of adherents to each new convert is the number of adherents of a religion to the number of new converts. This and the previous column (“Rate to size”) illustrate the same information.
• Christianity is by far the fastest growing religion in regard to new converts. The number of new converts to Christianity is more than twice the combined number of new converts to all the other tabulated religions, even if we take out those with negative numbers (2,501,396 vers. 1,090,541).
• Zoroastrianism followed by Bahá’í are the two religions which springs the largest part of their total growth from new converts (22.37%, 18.35%).
• Zoroastrianism and Bahá’í have the highest number of converts in relation to the size of the religions (0.51%, 0.37%). Buddhism and Islam manage the least new converts in relation to this size (0.04%, 0.07%).
Natural growth
| Religion | Natural growth total | Rate to total growth | Rate to size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christianity | 22,708,799 | 90.08% | 1.14% |
| Islam | 21,723,118 | 96.17% | 1.83% |
| Hinduism | 13,194,111 | 100% | 1.63% |
| Buddhism | 3,530,918 | 95.75% | 0.98% |
| Sikhism | 363,677 | 92.62% | 1.56% |
| Judaism | 194,962 | 100% | 1.35% |
| Bahá’í | 117,158 | 81.65% | 1.65% |
| Confucianism | 55,739 | 100% | 0.88% |
| Jainism | 74,539 | 100% | 1.77% |
| Shinto | 8,534 | 100% | 0.31% |
| Taoism | 25,397 | 100% | 0.96% |
| Zoroastrianism | 45,391 | 77.63% | 1.78% |
• Rate to total growth is the part of the total growth which comes from natural growth. I.e. subtracted the part coming from growth due to new converts.
• Rate to size is the natural growth compared to the size of the religion. Says something of the overall fertility of the people in the religion.
• Christianity is the fastest growing religion in terms of the growing number of new Christians due to a positive population growth (22,708,799 new Christians / year).
• Islam followed by Zoroastrianism are the religions with the highest natural growth in relation to their overall size. i.e. have the highest population growth rate (1.83%, 1.78%).
Demographic transition and declining fertility
Total fertility rate (TFR)(Term 14) is measured as the average number of children women from a particular country will bear if she lives to the end of her childbearing years and bear children according to a given fertility rate at each age. TFR is the best predictor of future population growth. In Western and industrialised countries a TFR of approx. 2.1 – i.e. each women in generally giving birth to 2.1 children (or rather a random sample of 100 women giving birth to 210 children) – is considered the replacement level(Term 16). The birth level where the population over time is stable, neither growing nor shrinking, but exactly replacing itself. In less developed countries with higher mortality rate, the replacement level can be higher, someplaces as high as 3.5. A growing population can be achieved by raising the fertility rate (quantity) or lowering the replacement level (quality). Countries with a sub-replacement fertility – a TFR below the replacement level – can still grow their population over a relative short period due to a population momentum, caused by a previous above replacement fertility resulting in a high number of young people in the child bearing age. But over a sustained period a sub-replacement fertility will always result in a shrinking population.
Over the last 22 years (1989 – 2010) the average fertility rate of the whole word declined from 3.50 to 2.56. A fall of 0.94 children per. women or 27% less children per women over the 22 years. The weighted average fertility rate for Christian nations(Term 12) declined from 3.26 to 2.56. A fall of 0.7 children per. women, or 21% less children per women over the 22 years. The weighted average fertility rate for the Muslim nations(Term 13) declined from 5.17 to 3.00. A fall of 2.17 children per. women or 42% less children per women over the 22 years. The fertility gap of 0.24 children per women, which existed between the world average and the average for Christian countries disappeared. The fertility gap between the Muslim countries and the Christian average declined from 59% in 1989 to 17% in 2010, a narrowing of the gap of 71%. If the trends of the last 22 years continue – which they are likely to do, since population trends tend to be fairly predictable in the near future – the Muslim and world/Christian fertility will converge in around 2015. Revised down from 2022/3 from last projection, made with numbers available until 2008.
| 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avg. world fertility | 3.50 | 3.40 | 3.30 | 3.30 | 3.20 | 3.10 | 3.10 | 2.90 | 2.90 | 2.90 | 2.80 |
| Avg. Christian fertility | 3.26 | 3.14 | 3.08 | 2.95 | 2.87 | 2.84 | 2.84 | 2.66 | 2.62 | 2.63 | 2.61 |
| Avg. Muslim fertility | 5.17 | 5.25 | 5.05 | 4.92 | 4.78 | 4.75 | 4.60 | 4.28 | 4.18 | 4.05 | 3.81 |
| 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avg. world fertility | 2.80 | 2.73 | 2.70 | 2.65 | 2.62 | 2.60 | 2.59 | 2.59 | 2.61 | 2.58 | 2.56 |
| Avg. Christian fertility | 2.62 | 2.55 | 2.54 | 2.51 | 2.49 | 2.46 | 2.50 | 2.52 | 2.60 | 2.58 | 2.56 |
| Avg. Muslim fertility | 3.69 | 3.62 | 3.56 | 3.56 | 3.52 | 3.47 | 3.44 | 3.37 | 3.30 | 3.23 | 3.00 |
Orthodox Rabbi & ‘Kosher Sex’ Author Wins NJ GOP Primary
See on Scoop.it – Islam Revealed
On Tuesday, Orthodox Rabbi Shmuley Boteach’s run for New Jersey’s 9th congressional district took a favorable turn. Boteach, the sex book writer, therapist and former spiritual advisor to Michael Jackson, among other stars, won the GOP primary.
See on www.theblaze.com
Proof Islam is Peaceful NOT
Obviously, the religion of peace is being demonstrated here by Asif Khan’s desire to have more sons to die to kill Jews.
Doesn’t sound like she believes the nonsense that Christians and Jews are people of the book to be treasured, but rather true Islam’s call to kill all Jews and Christians. THIS is the true face of Islam as taught by every imam because this is what the qu’ran teaches, what mohammad taught and that all true muslims believe.
And yes, before some points out, back when mohammad actually thought he could fool Jews and Christians into accepting islam, he recited peaceful semi-remembered Christian and Jewish suras that he later replaced (or aborgated) with oppression and violence and murderous suras against all who will not accept islam. If only deceived muslims truly understood this. But, they are brainwashed from birth to believe so many lies that they truly do not know the truth when they hear and see it.
Related articles
- True Nature (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
- Pray for those lost in Islam (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
- What Does the Qur’an Say About the Jewish and Christian Scriptures (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
- 20 Reasons to Abandon Islam (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
- Questions for Islam to Answer about Bible Corruption (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
PLAGIARISM BY Mohammad in the Quran
The story of the she-camel which leapt out of a rock and became a prophet was known in Arabia long before Muhammad (Suwar 7:73-77; 54:27-29; 91:13-14).- The story of an entire village of people who were turned into apes because they broke the sabbath by fishing was a popular legend in Muhammad’s day (Suwar 2:65; 7:163-166).- The story of Moses and the gushing twelve springs is found in Surah 2:6 0ff and comes from pre-Islamic Arabian legends.- In what is called the “Rip Van Winkle” story, seven men and their animals slept in a cave for 309 years and then woke up perfectly fine (Surah 18:9-26)! This was also a popular story in Arabia at and before Mohammed’s time. This legend was also found in Greek and Christian folks fables from that time and before.- The fable of the pieces of four dead, cut-up birds getting up and flying was well known in Muhammad’s time (Surah 2:260).- The story about the birth of Mary in Surah 3:35-37 appears to be loosely based off of an apocryphal 2nd century work, The Protevangelion of James the Lesser.
- The Second Targum of the Book of Esther supplied the non-biblical details of the Queen of Sheba‘s visit to King Solomon(Surah 27:17-44).- The Testament of Abrahamprovided the teachings of the Qur’an found in Surah 42:17 and Surah 101:6-9, which relate that on the judgment day, a scale of balance will be used to weigh good and bad deeds, and to make the determination of whether people will be sent to heaven or hell. This Jewish work is also apparently quoted in Surah 87:19.- The story of murderous Cain and the raven (Surah 5:30-31) is found in several Jewish writings, such as the Pirqe of Rabbi Eleazer and the Targum of Jerusalem, both of which pre-date the Qur’an.- The tale of Abraham being delivered from Nimrod’s fire (Suwar 21:51-71; 37:97-98) originated in the Midrash Rabbah on Genesis.
- The Talmud provided the Qur’an with the story of Moses’ resurrection (Surah 2:55-57)
- The story of the golden calf which was made by Israel in the wilderness, in which the image actually leaps out of the fire and moos (Surah 20:80-98), comes from the Pirqe of Rabbi Eleazer.
- Lastly, the seven heavens and hells described at various points in the Qur’an can also be found in the Zohar and the Hagigah, and the hells are further described in the Midrash on the Psalms.
Related articles
- Multiple ARABIC Quran Versions (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
- Contradictions in the Qur’an (paulmarcelrene.wordpress.com)
The Big Religion Chart
The Big Religion Chart
The ReligionFacts “Big Religion Chart” is an attempt to summarize all the complexities of religions and belief systems into tiny little boxes on a single, quick-reference comparison chart. Yes, of course this is impossible. As we always warn with our comparison charts, this is no substitute for reading about religions in greater detail, talking with religious adherents, etc. But this religion comparison chart can (hopefully) be a useful and accessible way to “get the gist” of some unfamiliar groups and compare basic beliefs and practices of the world’s religions and belief systems. Currently, 43 belief systems are listed.
Despite the chart’s simplistic title, we have been very inclusive with what is regarded as a “religion” for purposes of this comparison chart. Basically, the grounds for a group’s inclusion are that it provides a set of teachings and/or rituals that deal with the traditionally “religious” issues of ultimate reality, the meaning of life, and/or how to find fulfillment, spiritual health or salvation. Also, all the groups listed below can be found in dictionaries of religion.
Inclusion of a group on this list does not mean that the group is a “religion” per se (note that atheism is listed) or a “true religion” or that one group is just as much a religion as another group. Similarly, if a group does not appear on this chart it doesn’t mean it’s not a religion or doesn’t matter; the chart is not comprehensive and will continue to grow. Finally, listing groups separately does not mean they are mutually exclusive, nor does grouping them together mean that they are basically the same thing. This is not an authoritative list of religions, simply a resource on some worldviews and ways of life that hopefully some will find useful.
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Recent
- The not defendable borders of lesser Israel
- Allah and Muhammad quote Babylonian Talmud instead of Hebrew Scriptures
- Prominent U.S. Imam: New Caliphate Should Wage Jihad
- Yes, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is a Muslim Terrorist
- The Islam Bomb
- Islamicized Sweden Has Declared War on the Jews
- Beck Breaks Exclusive Information on Saudi National Once Considered a Person of Interest in Boston Bombings
- FBI Informant Claims Taliban Members Are Living In America
- The Home Counties girl training female suicide bombers for Al Qaeda
- Boko Haram Muslim Terrorists Murder More Than 1,500 Christians and Destroy 400 Churches
- UK: Jihad terror plotters who wanted to carry out another 9/11 and outdo 7/7 will be free by July
- Jihad Movement leader calls for applying Sharia
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