Cited by the Christian side to argue that shirk is unforgivable in the Quran, challenging the claim that Muhammad’s alleged act of making something permissible impermissible cou...
Forgiveness and Consequences of Shirk
Claims
2
Moves
5
Evidence instances
14
Move edges
0
Claim
The Quran is argued to teach that shirk is unforgivable and nullifies deeds.
Several Quranic passages are cited to argue that, if Muhammad committed shirk, repentance or mercy would not remove the problem.
Moves
The Christian side replies to mistake or ignorance defenses by citing Quranic texts that say shirk is not forgiven.
- 1ChristianQuranReplyPrimary Evidence
- 2ChristianQuranReplySupporting Evidence
Cited alongside 4:116 to argue that shirk is unforgivable in the Quran, challenging the claim that Muhammad’s alleged act could be excused as a mistake or ignorance.
The Christian side cites Quranic passages to argue that, if Muhammad committed shirk, it would be the unforgivable sin.
- 3ChristianQuranEvidencePrimary Evidence
Cited from a Christian critical perspective to argue that shirk is the one sin Allah will not forgive, so Muhammad’s alleged act of making something forbidden against Allah’s la...
- 4ChristianQuranEvidenceSupporting Evidence
Cited to argue that shirk is unforgivable in Islam, supporting the Christian-side claim that Muhammad’s alleged preference for his wives over Allah’s command would make him guil...
- 5ChristianQuranEvidenceSupporting Evidence
Cited to support the Christian-side argument that shirk is not forgiven by Allah, framing Muhammad’s alleged preference for his wives’ wishes over Allah’s law as an unforgivable...
The Christian side counters Quran 39:53 by citing texts that say Allah does not forgive shirk and that association nullifies deeds.
- 6ChristianQuranReplyPrimary Evidence
Cited from a Christian perspective to argue that Allah does not forgive shirk, challenging the claim that repentance can secure forgiveness for all sins.
- 7ChristianQuranReplySupporting Evidence
Cited by the Christian side as one of several Quranic texts used to argue against the claim that Allah forgives all sins, especially shirk.
- 8ChristianQuranReplySupporting Evidence
Cited to argue that Allah does not forgive shirk, challenging the appeal to Quran 39:53 as proof that all sins can be forgiven.
- 9ChristianQuranReplyPrimary Evidence
Cited by the Christian side to argue that associating others with Allah nullifies one's deeds and makes one a loser, countering an appeal to Allah forgiving all sins and applyin...
The Christian side summarizes that the Quran does not forgive polytheism and argues this makes Muhammad’s alleged sin fatal within Islam.
- 10ChristianQuranSummarySupporting Evidence
Cited as one of several Quranic texts used from a Christian critique to argue that polytheism is unforgivable and that Muhammad therefore committed an unforgivable sin according...
- 11ChristianQuranSummaryPrimary Evidence
Cited to support the Christian-side claim that the Quran says Allah does not forgive polytheism, framing Muhammad as having committed an unforgivable sin.
- 12ChristianQuranSummarySupporting Evidence
Cited from a Christian critique to support the claim that Allah does not forgive polytheism, forming part of an argument that Muhammad committed an unforgivable sin according to...
- 13ChristianQuranSummarySupporting Evidence
Cited to support the Christian argument that, according to Islam, associating partners with Allah is unforgivable and Muhammad therefore committed an unforgivable sin.
- No move edges yet. 4 moves in this claim have no saved in-topic edge relationships.
Claim
A Muslim defense appeals to Allah forgiving all sins for repentant servants.
A Muslim participant cites Quran 39:53 to argue that Allah forgives all sins, prompting the Christian side to challenge whether this includes shirk.
Jan 8, 2025 - 5 moves - 14 references