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11-09-2006, 12:12 AM
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#1 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 165
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Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
This question has been bothering me lately, if somebody could illumine this thread with their knowledge i'd appreciate it
-Seeker_of_truth
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11-09-2006, 12:18 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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A friend
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Sunny Southern California
Posts: 1,531
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
What Baha'is accept is the Shiah version of events in early Islam...and not the current practices or doctrines. So in other words we Baha'is accept that Ali was the rightful successor to Prophet Muhammad rather than Abu Bakr, Omar or Uthman... After Ali was assasinated we would accept Ali's son Hasan... and his younger son Husayn and so on down to the twelfth Imam.
As to the four Babs that came later we wouldn't accept that or that the Twelfth Imam was somewhere alive physically hidden awaiting appearance or that he was guiding the state. So all we do accept is that Ali and his descendents down to the twelfth Imam were the rightful successors and not Muawiyyih and his descendents...
Since we accept the Bab Siyyid Ali Muhammad as a descendent of Prophet Muhammad it is also reasonable I would maintain that we would accept a Shiah version of the early history of Islam.
- Art
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11-09-2006, 10:19 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Posts: 607
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
It's rather like the split between Protestantism and the Roman Church, or the earlier split between the Roman and Eastern Church.
All those who profess Christ as the Son of Man and the Son of God are Christians despite their differences.
All those who profess Muhammed as the Apostle of God are likewise Muslims.
In a Baha`i view of course . . .
Regards,
Scott
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11-30-2006, 10:44 AM
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#4 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 222
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Quote:
Originally Posted by arthra
What Baha'is accept is the Shiah version of events in early Islam...and not the current practices or doctrines. So in other words we Baha'is accept that Ali was the rightful successor to Prophet Muhammad rather than Abu Bakr, Omar or Uthman... After Ali was assasinated we would accept Ali's son Hasan... and his younger son Husayn and so on down to the twelfth Imam.
As to the four Babs that came later we wouldn't accept that or that the Twelfth Imam was somewhere alive physically hidden awaiting appearance or that he was guiding the state. So all we do accept is that Ali and his descendents down to the twelfth Imam were the rightful successors and not Muawiyyih and his descendents...
Since we accept the Bab Siyyid Ali Muhammad as a descendent of Prophet Muhammad it is also reasonable I would maintain that we would accept a Shiah version of the early history of Islam.
- Art
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Why is it that one will accept Shiah history which has also come to us through traditions, but not accept Shiah traditions about the Mahdi. The occultation o the 12th Imam and its meaning were explained by the Prophet - 260 years before it actually happened. Is'nt there a contradiction of sorts here? Also, how can one accept Ali was right and accept all his words except for those which are about the Mahdi?
Regards
Imran
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11-30-2006, 02:31 PM
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#5 (permalink)
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Baha'i
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Rockville, Maryland (a suburb of Washington, DC)
Posts: 450
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Hi again!
[quote=imranshaykh;81791The occultation o the 12th Imam and its meaning were explained by the Prophet - 260 years before it actually happened. [/quote]
Kindly post the relevant Qur'anic passage(s).
Thank you! :-)
Bruce
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11-30-2006, 05:32 PM
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#6 (permalink)
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A friend
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Sunny Southern California
Posts: 1,531
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Why is it that one will accept Shiah history which has also come to us through traditions, but not accept Shiah traditions about the Mahdi. The occultation o the 12th Imam and its meaning were explained by the Prophet - 260 years before it actually happened. Is'nt there a contradiction of sorts here? Also, how can one accept Ali was right and accept all his words except for those which are about the Mahdi?
Regards
Imran
My reply:
We're pretty much in agreement that Muawiyyih and Yazid took Islam off on the wrong tangent...Had it followed Imam Hasan and Imam Husayn history would probably be quite different but the issue of succession is the topic here.
I responded to you as I recall some months ago about the issue of the Mahdi and the Twefth Imam...that we believe Bab fulfilled that.
You may not accept that and that is indeed your choice!
- Art
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12-01-2006, 04:23 AM
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#7 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 222
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Quote:
Originally Posted by BruceDLimber
Hi again!
Kindly post the relevant Qur'anic passage(s).
Thank you! :-)
Bruce
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Surah Ahzab (No 33, verse no 33). The word Ahlul Bayt comes in this verse. The Holy Prophet clarified that his Ahlul Bayt includes Ali, Hasan, Husain, Fatemah and the nine children from the loins of Husain by name till Mohammed Ibnil Hasan - the same Mohammed ibnil Hasan who the Bab refers to reverentially in Dalaelus Sabah, Tafseere Surah Kausar, Sahifae' Adaliyah and other books.
Needless to say, this interpretation of the word Ahlul Bayt (lit. Family of the House, of the prophet) is not mine, but that of the Prophet himself. Left to ourselves, we would be indulging in pure conjecture about the true meaning of the word Ahlul Bayt.
Also, please read my web site, especially the part on the Bab v/s the Mahdi and the Bab v/s the Holy Prophet of Islam. At present, I do not have a section on the verses of the Quran about the Mahdi. But I have only 2 hands and can do only this much. So as and when I get time, I will put that up.
Regards, as always
Imran
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12-01-2006, 04:30 AM
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#8 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 222
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Quote:
Originally Posted by arthra
Why is it that one will accept Shiah history which has also come to us through traditions, but not accept Shiah traditions about the Mahdi. The occultation o the 12th Imam and its meaning were explained by the Prophet - 260 years before it actually happened. Is'nt there a contradiction of sorts here? Also, how can one accept Ali was right and accept all his words except for those which are about the Mahdi?
Regards
Imran
My reply:
We're pretty much in agreement that Muawiyyih and Yazid took Islam off on the wrong tangent...Had it followed Imam Hasan and Imam Husayn history would probably be quite different but the issue of succession is the topic here.
I responded to you as I recall some months ago about the issue of the Mahdi and the Twefth Imam...that we believe Bab fulfilled that.
You may not accept that and that is indeed your choice!
- Art
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Dear Art,
My posts may not convey this, but believe me, I am happy tp lap up all that you can throw at me. Just as long as there is a rational and some proof beind it. If you believe in the Shiah side of Islam, then you will know that the Holy Prophet (pbuh) and the Imams (as) were peerless and incomparable. They have set, in my view, unmatched standards of ethics, morality, knowledge and courage. If you want Shiahs to accept the Bab just like that. It will not happen. But yes, if we can see something from our Prophet and Imams that yes, someone even closely resembling the Bab will be the Mahdi, then it will be good. Till then, I will ask. Unfortunately, my questions are percieved as attacks on the Faith. It is not so. I am only asking.
As regards, your response, you only gave me an expected answer - Bahaullah says Bab is Mahdi etc. Show us where the Bab matches the Islamic prophecies of the Mahdi. The Mahdi is an Islamic concept, right? The Bahais, incl yourself are claiming that the Bab fulfilled the prophecies of the Bab. I am only asking - HOW?
Regards, as always
Imran
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12-01-2006, 04:47 AM
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#9 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 165
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
[quote=
As regards, your response, you only gave me an expected answer - Bahaullah says Bab is Mahdi etc. Show us where the Bab matches the Islamic prophecies of the Mahdi. The Mahdi is an Islamic concept, right? The Bahais, incl yourself are claiming that the Bab fulfilled the prophecies of the Bab. I am only asking - HOW?
[/quote]
I, as a young Baha'i am also interested in this topic. perhaps I should make a new thread for it?
-Seeker
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12-01-2006, 05:32 AM
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#10 (permalink)
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Posts: 607
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
So Why Do Baha`i's Accept the Shi'ih View of the Succession Above the Sunni View?
THE HOLY IMAMS
As Muhammad lay dying, He called for materials to write. He said,
"Fetch Me hither ink and paper, that I may record for you a writing
which shall hinder you from going astray forever." But 'Umar said,
"Pain is deluding Him. We have God's Book, which is enough." So
the companions wrangled at the deathbed, whether to bring the
materials and write the words, and Muhammad sent them away.
At the taking of Mecca, surih 110 of the Qur'án had been
revealed; Muhammad regarded it as the warning of His own death; it
states: "When the help of God and the victory arrive, And thou
seest men entering the religion of God by troops; Then utter the
praise of the Lord, implore His pardon; for He loveth to turn in
mercy." Tradition says that when it was revealed He called Fatimih
and said, "My daughter! I have received intimation of My
approaching end." And Fatimih wept. And he said, "Why weepest
thou....? Be comforted...."
The Hidden Words is the Hidden Book of Fatimih -- the words which
Gabriel brought to mitigate her anguish: for she had seen her
Father's death, and, forty days after the Prophet had ascended, the
schism in Islam beginning before her eyes. Those unknown words
addressed to Fatimih were believed by Shí'ah Islam to be in the
possession of the Promised One Who would come from the line of her
descendants; and they were called "Hidden" because all down the
centuries their content was unknown.
Muhammad had unmistakably appointed His successor, but nothing
had been written down. The Qur'án, so detailed in other things, is
silent here.
When the Prophet was returning from His Farewell Pilgrimage to
Mecca, He had the caravan halt; He told the concourse of people to
gather in the shade of some thorn trees, and had them build a
pulpit of saddles, near the Pool of Khumm. Then He raised 'Ali up
and said, "Whoever hath Me as his Master, hath 'Ali as his
Master...I have been summoned to the gate of God, and I shall soon
depart...to be concealed from you." Then He spoke of two treasures
He would leave them: "The greatest treasure is the Book of
God...Hold fast to it and do not lose it and do not change it. The
other treasure is the line of My descendants."
The great tragedy of Islam is that three men, one after the
other, took over the headship of the Faith for a period of twenty-
four years, and that all this time the Imam 'Ali was forced to
stand aside. He must have suffered untold agonies as He watched the
irreparable damage being done, knowing all the time in His heart
that He was the intended of God -- the Imam, the one who stands
before the people, the divinely ordained, divinely inspired.
Muhammad was dead. The people could not accept this. They had seen
Him in the mosque, only a little time before; His voice still
echoed there. 'Umar came into the room and lifted the sheet which
covered the Prophet; then he stood at the street door and
proclaimed to the people that Muhammad had only swooned away; 'Ali
simply looked at 'Umar and wept; Abu Bakr entered, lifted the
striped sheet, and kissed the dead face. And he said, "Sweet Thou
wert in life, sweet in death." Then he hurried to the mosque and
remonstrated with 'Umar and said, "Let him then know, whosoever
30
worshippeth Muhammad, that Muhammad is dead; but whoso worshippeth
God, let him know that the Lord liveth." And while 'Ali, the
appointed Imam, was grieving over the body of His Beloved, and the
funeral washings had not yet been made, 'Umar and Abu Bakr were
seeing to their appointment as caliph (successor). In the mosque,
the leaders of the various groups were proposing 'Ali and others
as successor, when 'Umar settled the matter by swearing allegiance
to Abu Bakr, who had himself proposed 'Umar; each seems to have
been in collusion with the other, against 'Ali.
The Prophet was washed for burying by 'Ali, without removal of
His garment, while some held the water vessels; then He was wrapped
in three shrouds, two of white material and one striped, and
covered with fragrant ointments; then the grave was dug in the same
room of 'Ayishih's house where the deathbed had been. The people
came to pray beside the Body, as it lay by the grave, and when all
this was done, a few of them lowered it down: 'Ali was the last to
climb up out of the grave, before it was filled with earth. (Cf.
M. Tabari, III, 217 ff.).
(Islamic Miscellaneous, Gail - Six Lessons on Islam, p. 28)
Regards,
Scott
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12-01-2006, 06:45 AM
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#11 (permalink)
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A friend
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Sunny Southern California
Posts: 1,531
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Seeker of truth.. There's a good overview of the issues at Wikipedia... over the past few years I've noticed that the articles are fairly impartial and informative... Scroll down at the bottom of the article for the Baha'i view:
Muhammad al-Mahdi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Art
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12-01-2006, 06:57 AM
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#12 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 165
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Quote:
Originally Posted by arthra
Seeker of truth.. There's a good overview of the issues at Wikipedia... over the past few years I've noticed that the articles are fairly impartial and informative... Scroll down at the bottom of the article for the Baha'i view:
Muhammad al-Mahdi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Art
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Many thanks friend. I was wondering if you knew of an in-depth analysis of specific prophecies that the Bab fulfiled.
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12-01-2006, 07:21 AM
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#13 (permalink)
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General Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 222
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Quote:
Originally Posted by arthra
Seeker of truth.. There's a good overview of the issues at Wikipedia... over the past few years I've noticed that the articles are fairly impartial and informative... Scroll down at the bottom of the article for the Baha'i view:
Muhammad al-Mahdi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Art
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Thank you for a very good link. The Shiite point of view is perfect. One can expand on it a lot more. But overall very good link.
The ciritical question is in the bahai viewpoint - Bahais believe that Bab fulfilled the prophecies of the 12th Imam. Obviously these were Islamic prophecies. Which were these?
Regards, as always
Imran
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12-01-2006, 07:33 AM
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#14 (permalink)
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A friend
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Sunny Southern California
Posts: 1,531
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seeker_of_truth
Many thanks friend. I was wondering if you knew of an in-depth analysis of specific prophecies that the Bab fulfiled.
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Try reading the book "Thief in the Night" by Bill Sears. It's more from a Christian perspective but still excelllent! It's very inexpensive and can be obtained through many outlets and the Baha'i Distribution Trust:
Bahai Distribution Service
This site has a wealth of other material as well.
- Art
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12-01-2006, 07:36 AM
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#15 (permalink)
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A friend
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Sunny Southern California
Posts: 1,531
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Re: Why does Baha'i accept Shia and not Sunni?
Imran wrote:
If you want Shiahs to accept the Bab just like that. It will not happen. But yes, if we can see something from our Prophet and Imams that yes, someone even closely resembling the Bab will be the Mahdi, then it will be good.
My comment:
What I would want is for there to be more freedom of worship in Iran so people could independently find truth by themselves without state intervention or coercion.
- Art
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