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Question/Advise to Shia

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Taha

Re: Question/Advise to Shia
« Reply #20 on: January 09, 2015, 11:28:07 AM »
Well shia believe hadith which mentioned the name of all 12 imam is also mutawwatir. So? Hey, if you want to believe they are taqiyah freak, its up to you, but I see them as honest, brave & honourable people who would never let the ummah let alone his students misguided even for a second.

To say they were righteous guide but then also believe they mixed truth & falsehood which caused confusion in religion is an oxymoron (eq righteous liar)


I'm just trying to understand your perspective, I'm done debating in this thread but if you could elaborate I would really appreciate it.


There are many saheeh hadeeths from the Imams that are very contradictory.  How can you reconcile this without taqiyyah?  Either they were in taqiyyah or they were unrighteous liars, the way I see it.  How do you see it/reconcile the contradictions?


Righteous liar isn't an oxymoron.  If someone comes to your house and asks for a family member so he can kill them, the righteous thing to do is lie and say that person isn't home.  Or is it better to just let the person get slaughtered, according to you?

Husayn

Re: Question/Advise to Shia
« Reply #21 on: January 09, 2015, 04:02:00 PM »
Quote
Hypothetically, if Musa Al Kazhim (a.s) was the divine religious guide for Muslims and had knowledge of the unseen (as per Shia beliefs), then it makes perfect sense.  He knew that `Abd Allah would die soon and that if he opposed him during his lifetime, it would have caused a great controversy and split in the Ummah (again).

This is a poor explanation, because it does not make up for the failings of Ja'far as-Sadiq. The majority of Shiis took Abdullah as the Imam after Ja'far as-Sadiq, hence, he did a poor job informing his followers as to who was the next Divinely Appointed Infallible Imam (DAII).

Did the 'ilm al-ghayb of Ja'far as-Sadiq fail? Didn't he know what would happen after he died? Maybe it was eventually made up - but it caused much fitna for the Shias.

Also - the reaction of the Shiis after the death of Ja'far as-Sadiq demonstrates what Ahlul Sunnah believe - that initially the Shiis were mainly a political group, who supported the Hashimis against Banu Ummayah, and then the 'Alawis against Banu 'Abbas.

Quote
I am a bit confused by what you mean here.  If he and his father (Ja'far Al Sadiq) didn't believe in this, why do we have so many hadeeths attributed to them that proclaim it?  Al Kafi, for example, is 2-3 times as large as Al Bukhari and the vast majority of narrations go back to Muhammad Al Baqir, Ja'far Al Sadiq, Musa Al Kazhim, and Ali Al Rida (asws).  Is it even fathomable that every single one of these was forged?  I don't think so, personally.  Can you demonstrate that these 4 people did not believe they were divinely appointed Imams?  There's tons of evidence in Shia books to support that they did believe in it and teach it.

There are tons of fabricated ahadith, both Sunni and Shi'i.

Imam al-Bukhari reportedly collected hundreds of thousands of narrations, and only included a small % in his Sahih.

So no, it is not un-imaginable that the Shii books are full of 1000s of fabricated narrations (when we know that the initial Shii hadith collectors had no standards with regards to 'ilm al-Rijaal).

Quote
Ja'far had to be absolutely secretive about the next Imam after him.  Otherwise, the `Abbasids would have killed his successor as quickly as they could have.  Do you know of what happened with Ismail b. Ja'far died?  The Abbasids went through every possible precaution to make 100% sure that Ismail had died (because there was rumors circulating that he would be the next Imam, so they had a vested interest in making sure he was dead).


As for the other children of Ja'far Al Sadiq, I am not knowledgeable on.  I only know of Ismail, Abdullah, and Musa. 

Brother - this is such a ridiculous argument. I know that this is what Shiis claim, as I heard it often as a Shii. But let us think about it.

Why would Ja'far as-Sadiq need to be "secretive" about who the next Imam is? Is it really that hard for Banu 'Abbas to just kill all of his male children?

No, instead, a better tactic for the Imams would be to keep in total secret the very existence of their children.

Look - the reason why Banu 'Abbas killed the "Imams" was not because they believed them to be DAII. No, they killed them because all the descendants of 'Ali (RA) were potential rivals to their political power - i.e. the 'Alawis.
إن يتبعون إلا الظن وما تهوى الأنفس

Hani

Re: Question/Advise to Shia
« Reply #22 on: January 09, 2015, 04:50:42 PM »
Although me and Farid thought of researching the truth of this claim that all Imams were "assassinated", yet putting this aside, the Shia Imams that I know were killed died because the following reasons:


1- They died after declaring military revolutions against the Imams of their time and losing those battles. (Like many of Hasan and Zayd's children)


2- They died after declaring military revolutions and got abandoned by their Shia right before battle. (Like Zayd and Husayn)


3- They died after starting negotiations with their enemies and some extremists from their Shia would assassinate them. (Like `Ali and Hasan)


4- They died because their Shia would attribute to them that they are claiming to be the rightful leaders and get them in trouble with authorities. (Like Musa bin Ja`far)


This issue needs to be researched though.
عَلامَةُ أَهْلِ الْبِدَعِ الْوَقِيعَةُ فِي أَهْلِ الأَثَرِ. وَعَلامَةُ الْجَهْمِيَّةِ أَنْ يُسَمُّوا أَهْلَ السُّنَّةِ مُشَبِّهَةً. وَعَلامَةُ الْقَدَرِيَّةِ أَنْ يُسَمُّوا أَهْلَ السُّنَّةِ مُجَبِّرَةً. وَعَلامَةُ الزَّنَادِقَةِ أَنْ يُسَمُّوا أَهْلَ الأَثَرِ حَشْوِيَّةً

Religion = simple & clear

Ameen

Re: Question/Advise to Shia
« Reply #23 on: January 09, 2015, 09:42:55 PM »
Although me and Farid thought of researching the truth of this claim that all Imams were "assassinated", yet putting this aside, the Shia Imams that I know were killed died because the following reasons:


1- They died after declaring military revolutions against the Imams of their time and losing those battles. (Like many of Hasan and Zayd's children)


2- They died after declaring military revolutions and got abandoned by their Shia right before battle. (Like Zayd and Husayn)


3- They died after starting negotiations with their enemies and some extremists from their Shia would assassinate them. (Like `Ali and Hasan)


4- They died because their Shia would attribute to them that they are claiming to be the rightful leaders and get them in trouble with authorities. (Like Musa bin Ja`far)


This issue needs to be researched though.

Absolutely! It does need to be researched. Most definitely. It also requires references to justify it. It's like saying that a Sunni killed Hazrath Umar (ra) and Hazrath Usman (ra). Just words.

 

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