Religionsphilosophie

Here you'll find religious philosophy on the topic of Christian slavery in Islam. The topic is somewhat sensitive, given the "Islamic State"

Christians were actually captured in the wilds of Kurdistan. The justification: Christians were cross-border and spread many lies about Islam. The Turks were also heavily affected by this Christian propaganda, as they were the native population of the Ottoman Empire. Turkish caliphs also kept Christian slaves, such as the Caliph of Baghdad, who kept male and female Christian slaves in his harem.


Here we see two German Christians who want to become Möselfaus.

Muslims like the desert Arabs. Or like the harem slaves of the jihadist Turkish caliph. In the Muslim series.

What does "Muselman" actually mean? Someone who is subjugated through violence.

And we ask ourselves, why did the Ottoman Caliph submit to God through violence?

Answer:

Like every human being, he was created solely to serve God.

Even the Sultan in Istanbul will die. Just like every other person. Because:

God has the right to kill.

only

God has the right to create life.


This fundamental theological standpoint, however, comes into conflict with the progress of science, for example, with medicine. People have themselves cryogenically frozen in the hope of being thawed out in a thousand years and then no longer having to die. This conflicts with the human right to eternal life. Scientists conduct experiments on the origin of life. They don't have to create a homunculus, an artificial human, like Goethe's Faust; the simplest form of life suffices: a bacterium or an amoeba. The argument, "I have created life, and now we let evolution take its course," is well-known, particularly among the Transylvanian scientists who are known for such experiments.

Frankenstein

The two potential Muslims can only be Muslims if they are slaves. However, they only want to be slaves temporarily. This too is a problem of religious philosophy.

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This determines whether they are allowed on the earthly/heavenly slave market. It's a vicious cycle. Being on the slave market is humiliating. And ultimately, the slave possesses the slavish quality of humility.

In contrast, the Pope has something