Heresy in Islam:
by Maulana Muhammad Ali
A Refutation of Declaring a Muslim an Unbeliever (Kafir)
Heresy in Islam [PDF
] (3.87 MB)
Table of Contents:
- Introduction:
- Faith and Action
- Iman (Faith) in the Quran
- Iman (Faith) in the Hadith
- Kufr or Unbelief
- A Muslim cannot be Called a Kafir
- Iman and Islam
- No Dogmas in Islam
- Principles of Faith
- Significance of Faith
- Chapter 1:
- Heresy as Defined in the Quran and Hadith
- Chapter 2:
- Views of the Founder of the Ahmadiyya Movement
- The Qadiani Belief
- The Founder Disowns
- Denouncement of Founder's Claims
- Chapter 3:
- The Rule of Interpretation
- Decisive and Allegorical Statements
- Interpretation of the Founder's Writings
- No Absolute Negation
- Chapter 4:
- Views Expressed in Tiryaq al-Qulub
- Assertion in Tiryaq al-Qulub is Decisive
- Abundance of Evidence
- Clarity and Equity
- Chapter 5:
- Denunciation of a Muslim is against Islam
- Chapter 6:
- Founder's Views on Funeral Prayers
- Funeral Prayers of non-Ahmadi Children
- Persons Unaware of the Promised Messiah
- Violation of Founder's Practice
- Mian Mahmud Ahmad's Dilemma
- Practice of the Founder
- Funeral Prayer for Fazl-i-Ahmad
- Evidence on Solemn Affirmation
- The Issue: For and Against
- Chapter 7:
- Chapter 8:
- Prayers Led by a non-Ahmadi Imam
- Islamic Fraternity
- An Earnest Appeal for Muslim Unity