Peace Aryan Warrior, redsulpher
Quote from: Aryan Warrior on February 21, 2012, 04:16:55 PM
Realize that the Trinity the Quran talks about is FAR different from the Trinity we see. The Trinity the Quran talks about has God, Jesus and Mary and describes it where God is considered equal to those other two. That there is pure polytheism, and they worship them as three separate beings. The Trinity we see has God, Jesus and The Holy Spirit in modern times. That has God who is above all and infinite and eternal like we know and Jesus is like a human puppet who is controlled move by move, word by word to transmit where God would speak through that body to the people. Thus that is monotheism still as the Jesus they recognize is just a shell that talks to them while knowing and only worshiping one God in the end. That is how I believe the modern Trinity works at least (though I may be wrong, might wanna double check with a Christian)
Regardless if the Quran was talking about only a super small handful and Jews and Christians who aren't like that, then it would not have mentioned them repeatedly over and over as being monotheists regardless of the fact. Otherwise why not throw in that small sect of that old Egyptian religion that turned monotheist for a while (though it might have been completely dead by then) or frankly any religion that is Pagan might have had people that only believed in one despite what their religion says?
Also note that the Quran never once calls them polytheists or idol-worshippers and only as People of the Book. No such title was branded on them once even if they their beliefs are off as they still worship only one God irregardlessly.
Whether the Trinity in the Qur'an is talking about Father, Son, Holy Ghost or Father, Son, Mary it is all the same. The Qur'an doesn't explicitly name many things, but based on all the verses in the Qur'an, using ijtihad, we get our answer. It's like you telling me that it doesn't say that smoking is haram when the Qur'an states that one should not seek his/her own destruction.
Also, the Qur'an doesn't necessarily say that the Trinity is only the Father, Son, Mary version. It just says stop saying Three in general.
If you referred to the ayat that I posted earlier, the Qur'an explicitly says they have committed shirk. What's your definition of shirk if it is not polytheism?
Quote from: redsulphur@ a muslim
agreed - we are not to create partners with God - from that perspective, one can refer to the Trinity as incorrect, but the Trinity itself is not explicitly mentioned in the Quran. I try to give Christians some leeway as they always defend the Trinity as a monotheistic concept, but I have never understood how they achieve that. Perhaps they have lost the true meaning of this doctrine and the Quran is correcting a misunderstanding on the part of Christians regarding Jesus' spiritual status. While the Quran says that it is incorrect to say that Allah is none but the Messiah, it does not preclude the other way around. I am not saying that Jesus is Allah, but perhaps something akin to Ibn al-Arabi's concept of the "Perfect man" can be resorted to - the notion that one adopts the attributes of Allah so perfectly from a human perspective that he is "god-like" and thus viewed as one with Him. The Quran refers to Jesus as "blameless" after all. But perhaps I am delving too far into Sufi territory here.....
Of course, the notion of Jesus being worshipped is condemned by the Quran (as evidenced by God's questioning of Jesus and Mary on the day of Judgement and Him asking them if they authorized for them to be worshipped, a charge which they deny).
I see what you are trying to say however that is not in line with the Trinitarian creed. They state that Jesus is co-eternal with the Father and Holy Spirit. If one doesn't exist, the other cease to exist. The Father is a person, the Son is a person, and the Holy Spirit is a person. However, they are not three persons but one person.
Peace