Still not answering the question then. I'm not going to ask again, I think it's now quite clear to all that you're just using your religion as post hoc justification for your own selfishness. Doesn't surprise me, religion is mostly post hoc justification for something. — Isaac
Therefore, any conclusion is obviously premature at this point. — alcontali
Do you support universal healthcare? — frank
Health as a Human Right in Islam. Responsibility of state. As he passed through Al-Jabiyah, Umar passed by a group of Christians suffering from leprosy. He ordered that they be given a portion of zakat and a food allowance. — Dr M.H. Al-Khayat
Islamic Perspective to Health Care Facility Design, paper presented at UIAWP Public Health, 17-27th July 2002, Berlin, German.
“You shall not attain virtue unless you spend (for the welfare of the poor) from the choicest part of your wealth” (Quran 3:92)
“ O You who believe! Spend (for the poor) from the worthiest part of (the wealth) you have earned and crop-yields, and do not give away from its unworthy parts-such that you yourselves will not take until you examine (its quality) minutely-and know that God is not in your need and all praise belongs to Him” (Quran 2:267)
Hospitals. In Mansuri Hospital, men and women were admitted in separate wards. All races, creed, and sex, age group, single or in groups, foreigners or local citizens, Muslim or non-Muslims, were accepted without any limit to their inpatient stay until they are fully recovered.
The Funding of the Establishment. Islamic hospitals were established in charitable principles, run by the government and financed by the wealthy members of the society as part of their obligatory duties from the Five Pillars of Islam - zakat, and were therefore free. These hospitals were financed from revenues of pious bequests called waqfs. Wealthy men, especially rulers, donate property as endowments (property could consist of shops, mills, caravans era is or even the entire village), whose revenue went toward building and maintaining the institution. The income from this endowment would pay for the maintenance and running costs of the hospital including stipends for patients upon discharge. Part of state budget also went toward the maintenance of hospital. — Norwina Mohd. Nawawi, International Islamic University Malaysia
So, if any conclusion is premature at this point, why have you opted to err on the side of doing as little as possible for your fellow man? Is that what you take to be the general gist of the Quran? "Do as little as possible for others, keep as much of your own wealth as you can get away with". How many clerics do you think would agree with that summary? — Isaac
Voluntary charity ("sadaqah") is not mandatory. Therefore, according to Islamic law, it is perfectly legitimate to limit one's charitable contribution to mandatory charity only ("zakaat").
It is not me who made the rules. — alcontali
I asked you why you chose to err on the side of doing as little as you can get away with. — Isaac
I asked you why you do not advise doing more, contrary to the advice of your religion. — Isaac
- Every Muslim has to give sadaqah. — Isaac
Do they still do it that way in Malaysia? — frank
There's a third option, which is that you give out of a feeling of obligation because it's your duty. I'd submit that is the highest option and the one you summarily reject. — Hanover
Voluntary charity ("sadaqah") is not mandatory. Therefore, according to Islamic law, it is perfectly legitimate to limit one's charitable contribution to mandatory charity only ("zakaat").
It is not me who made the rules. — alcontali
The trouble is, Hanover, that there’s nothing for them in that. They want immediate satisfaction, not a better world down the line. Maybe they don’t even know what they want. They reject the past and everything about it forgetting how they got here. — Brett
Tzedakah is the Hebrew word for charity, and it is mandatory, and it generally agile should be 10% of your income under the tithe rules. That's the Jewish rule. — Hanover
Hans Joachim Schoeps observes that the Christianity Muhammad was likely to have encountered on the Arabian peninsula "was not the state religion of Byzantium but a schismatic Christianity characterized by Ebionite and Monophysite views."[115] Thus we have a paradox of world-historical proportions, viz., the fact that Jewish Christianity indeed disappeared within the Christian church, but was preserved in Islam and thereby extended some of its basic ideas even to our own day. According to Islamic doctrine, the Ebionite combination of Moses and Jesus found its fulfillment in Muhammad.[116] — Wikipedia on the original 'congregation of the poor'
I am just an utmost humble servant of our Master, Lord of both worlds — alcontali
I asked you why you chose to err on the side of doing as little as you can get away with. — Isaac
Because I can. — alcontali
So doing as little as you can possibly get away with is your definition of an utmost humble servant? — Isaac
“[Allah] said, “Descend from Paradise, for it is not for you to be arrogant therein. So get out; indeed, you are of the debased.” — Quran 7:13
Much better to give because you care, not because you are playing a game quid pro quo.
— Wheatley
There's a third option, which is that you give out of a feeling of obligation because it's your duty. I'd submit that is the highest option and the one you summarily reject. — Hanover
Wouldn't an even "higher" option be to do what is right (what we think is right) even though you are not "obligated"? — ZhouBoTong
Islamic law is a "self-obligation", i.e. self-discipline. Nobody in particular told me to start keeping its rules. If I break these rules, I do not expect anybody to show up at my house to blame and shame me. Still, self-discipline gives a lot of satisfaction. It mostly makes you feel better, and in that way, contributes to your happiness. The idea of "fitrah" is that we are naturally predisposed to enjoy keeping Islamic law. Of course, you can only figure that out by trying ... — alcontali
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