I hope this point doesn't get lost, because I'm afraid it pulls the rug out from under all the long quotes.Physics Guy wrote: ↑Wed Dec 18, 2024 9:04 amYou have tried to support the charge "Muslims worship Muhammad" by showing "Muslims pray to Muhammad". It is not clear (a) that wishing peace upon someone is praying to them or (b) that praying to someone is worshipping them.
Why do you think (a) and (b)?
Wishing peace upon living people isn't praying to them, and it isn't worshipping them. What difference does it make if the person is dead?
Is any kind of attempt at addressing dead people automatically a prayer to them, and an act of worshipping them? What if I send a thought to Hitler or Stalin, telling them how vile they were and wishing them misery? That hardly seems like worship.
Does it somehow make a crucial difference that I wish something positive for the dead? If so, then how positive does the wish for the dead have to be for it to count as worship? If I wish Ronald Reagan an okay afterlife day, is that worship, or is it not a good enough wish? Do I have to wish him a better-than-average day? A great day? Even wishing Ronald Reagan a really fantastic slice of afterlife experience doesn't seem like worship to me.
I submit that all you have to do is think a bit about this to see that all the blessings on Muhammad really do not add up to praying to, or worshipping, Muhammad. It's nothing but a bait-and-switch fallacy, like a prosecutor who presents a lot of evidence that I verbally insulted someone, then with no further actual evidence starts calling my insult an "attack," and then starts calling the attack "murder".