Cited and read from a Christian critique to argue that Islam teaches a person's deeds and final destination are predetermined by Allah's written destiny rather than freely chose...
Free Will and Destiny in Islam
Claims
1
Moves
2
Evidence instances
6
Move edges
0
Claim
Islamic sources teach divine determination of belief, deeds, and destiny in a way that undermines human free will.
The Christian side argues from hadith and Qur’anic passages that Allah determines who believes and where people end up.
Moves
The Christian side argues that Islamic sources make deeds, belief, and final destiny depend on Allah’s determination.
- 1ChristianHadithEvidencePrimary Evidence
- 2ChristianHadithEvidenceSupporting Evidence
Cited by the Christian side to argue that Islamic predestination includes Allah creating some people for hell before birth, undermining claims of human free will.
- 3ChristianQuranEvidenceSupporting Evidence
Cited to support the Christian argument that in Islam a person cannot desire to follow Allah unless Allah wills it, reinforcing a claim about divine determination over belief.
- 4ChristianQuranEvidenceSupporting Evidence
Cited to argue that in Islam belief depends on Allah's permission, supporting the claim that Allah determines who can believe rather than merely foreknowing outcomes.
The Christian side challenges a Muslim free-will argument by citing Qur’anic statements that belief depends on Allah’s will or permission.
- 5ChristianQuranObjectionPrimary Evidence
Cited from a Christian perspective to argue that Islam denies free will because a person cannot believe unless Allah permits it.
- 6ChristianQuranObjectionSupporting Evidence
Cited by the Christian side to argue that if Allah had willed everyone on earth would believe, so belief ultimately depends on Allah’s will rather than human free will.
- No move edges yet. 2 moves in this claim have no saved in-topic edge relationships.
Dec 30, 2024 - 2 moves - 6 references