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The State of Religion in Pre-Islamic Arabia,,,, the christian roots of islam

The State of Religion in Pre-Islamic Arabia,,,, the christian roots of islam

DAVID JOHNSON · Wednesday, September 3rd 2014 at 3:41PM · 3238 views
slap some truth to the people !


The period in the Arabian history which preceded the birth of Islam is known as the Times of Ignorance. Judging by the beliefs and the practices of the pagan Arabs, it appears that it was a most appropriate name. The Arabs were the devotees of a variety of “religions” which can be classified into the following categories.

1. Idol-worshippers or polytheists. Most of the Arabs were idolaters. They worshipped numerous idols and each tribe had its own idol or idols and fetishes. They had turned the Kaaba in Makkah, which according to tradition, had been built by the Prophet Abraham and his son, Ismael, and was dedicated by them to the service of One God, into a heathen pantheon housing 360 idols of stone and wood.

2. Atheists This group was composed of the materialists and believed that the world was eternal.

3. Zindiqs They were influenced by the Persian doctrine of dualism in nature. They believed that there were two gods representing the twin forces of good and evil or light and darkness, and both were locked up in an unending struggle for supremacy.

4. Sabines. They worshipped the stars.

5. Jews When the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in A.D. 70, and drove the Jews out of Palestine and Syria, many of them found new homes in Hijaz in Arabia. Under their influence, many Arabs also became converts to Judaism. Their strong centers were the towns of Yathrib, Khayber, Fadak and Umm-ul-Qura.

6. Christians. The Romans had converted the north Arabian tribe of Ghassan to Christianity. Some clans of Ghassan had migrated to and had settled in Hijaz. In the south, there were many Christians in Yemen where the creed was originally brought by the Ethiopian invaders. Their strong center was the town of Najran.

7. Monotheists There was a small group of monotheists present in Arabia on the eve of the rise of Islam. Its members did not worship idols, and they were the followers of the Prophet Abraham. The members of the families of Muhammad, the future prophet, and Ali ibn Abi Talib, the future caliph, and most members of their clan – the Banu Hashim – belonged to this group.

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Comments (2)

Helen Lofton Wednesday, September 3rd 2014 at 4:51PM

Dualism, a doctrine that the universe is under the dominion of two opposing principles one of which is good and the other evil. Sounds like real thinking to me. We have to learn to control the evil side of our nature in order to get alone with each other.

S
Sylvainy R Thursday, September 4th 2014 at 12:49PM

@ Helen Lofton
The Ancient African understood the principal of Dualism they understood you can't have wet without dry, night without day, hot without cold, evil without good they understood balance

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