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Friday, March 20, 2026

The Truth of Islam

                                                     


The ultimate goal of Islam  is not just personal piety — but societal transformation under Allah’s rule.

Islam as System: The Legal and Political Machine

Islam is not merely concerned with how you pray or fast — it tells you:

How to govern.

Who to marry.

What to eat, say, wear, and believe.

What to do with apostates, blasphemers, critics, and unbelievers.

The Shariah is not optional. It is the codified will of Allah, based on:

The Qur’an

The Hadith

The consensus of jurists (ijma’)

                                             


And it has real-world consequences:

Amputations in Nigeria.

Stonings in Iran.

Apostasy executions in Afghanistan.

Blasphemy trials in Pakistan.

Hijab mandates in Saudi Arabia.

This is not “spiritual law.” It is civil and criminal governance — a system designed to replace man-made law with divine decree.

What sets Islam apart from most other religions is its ideological scope.

                                       


Islam is not a religion in the Western sense. It is a total system: legal, political, economic, cultural, and military.

In classical and modern texts alike, Islam is portrayed as:

A civilization that must dominate others (Qur’an 9:33).

A state project (Caliphate) that must be revived.

A worldview that must be protected from critique (blasphemy laws).

A social order in which believers are superior and unbelievers subdued (Qur’an 9:29).

                                       


Islam does not separate mosque and state, religion and law, private belief and public enforcement. This is not accidental — it is structural.

The ultimate goal is not just personal piety — but societal transformation under Allah’s rule.

                        


If you treat Islam as only a religion, you misunderstand its legal demands.

If you treat it as just a legal system, you miss its doctrinal justifications.

If you recognize it as an ideology, you begin to understand the threat it poses to pluralism, secularism, and freedom.

Islam is a unified system. Its power lies precisely in its fusion of:

Theological certainty

Legal enforcement

Political ambition

                                        


It is not enough to say “Islam is peaceful” because a Muslim prays. Nor is it sufficient to call it “misunderstood” because not all Muslims are terrorists.

What matters is not what individual Muslims believe.

What matters is what the system of Islam commands, and how that system functions when it gains power.

Until Islam is disentangled — until its religious elements are separated from its legal and ideological machinery — it will continue to clash with the values of open societies.

                                     


To tolerate Islam as a personal faith is just.

To ignore Islam as a political ideology is dangerous.

To critique Islam’s legal system is not Islamophobia — it’s rational defense of liberty.

Know the difference. And never confuse ritual submission with peaceful coexistence. 

(Spotlight on Islam)

Jesus said to them, “If God were your Father, you would love Me, for I proceeded forth and came from God; nor have I come of Myself, but He sent Me.  Why do you not understand My speech? Because you are not able to listen to My word.  You are of your father the devil, and the desires of your father you want to do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own resources, for he is a liar and the father of it. 45 But because I tell the truth, you do not believe Me.  (John 8:42-45)


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