Gambling Salafi
Part of a series on | ||||||
Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||
| ||||||
| ||||||
| ||||||
| ||||||
| ||||||
Islamic studies |
- Salafi Hadith Scholar Ahmad Shakir's Thunderous Lightning Bolts Upon the Kharijite Terrorists Al-Ikhwan, Al-Qaidah and ISIS: Usamah Bin Ladin Did Not Venerate the Shariah and Was an Open Disputant to the Islamic Shariah: Part 2: Salafi Scholar of the Shariah, Ibn Kathir: The Kharijites Are the Strangest of Species Created by Allaah.
- Gambling is a way of obtaining undeserved money which makes man forget his Creator, prevents him from performing prayers, leads him to laziness, eliminates his strength to work and causes grudge and enmity among people. All kinds of gambling, which causes irreparable wounds in individual and social life, are haram in the religion of Islam.
- The risky nature makes the trade similar to gambling. It is in the best interest of the parties to be very specific about. What is being sold. At what price Arranging the transactions prohibited by Hadith according to their level of risk. The pure speculation. Some transactions seem intentional gambling: Sale of wholly unknown values.
The salafi community on Reddit. Reddit gives you the best of the internet in one place.
In Islam, gambling (Arabic: ميسر, romanized: maisîr, maysir, maisira or قمارqimâr),[1] is absolutely forbidden (Arabic: harām). Maisir is prohibited by Islamic law (shari'a) on the grounds that 'the agreement between participants is based on immoral inducement provided by entirely wishful hopes in the participants' minds that they will gain by mere chance, with no consideration for the possibility of loss'.[1]
Definitions[edit]
Both qimar and maisir refer to games of chance, but qimar is a kind (or subset) of maisir.[2] Author Muhammad Ayub defines maisir as 'wishing something valuable with ease and without paying an equivalent compensation for it or without working for it, or without undertaking any liability against it by way of a game of chance',[2] Another source, Faleel Jamaldeen, defines it as 'the acquisition of wealth by chance (not by effort)'.[3] Ayub defines qimar as 'also mean[ing] receipt of money, benefit or usufruct at the cost of others, having entitlement to that money or benefit by resorting to chance';[2] Jamaldeen as 'any game of chance'.[3]
In scripture[edit]
It is stated in the Quran that games of chance, including maisir, are a 'grave sin' and 'abominations of Satan's handiwork'. It is also mentioned in ahadith.
They ask you about wine and gambling. Say: 'In them both lies grave sin, though some benefit, to mankind. But their sin is more grave than their benefit.'
O believers, wine and gambling, idols and divining arrows are an abhorrence, the work of Satan. So keep away from it, that you may prevail. Satan only desires to arouse discord and hatred among you with wine and gambling, and to deter you from the mention of God and from prayer. Will you desist?
Narrated Abu Huraira: The Prophet said, 'Whoever swears saying in his oath. 'By Al-lāt and al-‘Uzzá,' should say, 'None has the right to be worshipped but God; and whoever says to his friend, 'Come, let me gamble with you,' should give something in charity.'
Grambling Salaries
See also[edit]
- Khamr (Intoxicants)
Gambling Salary
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Islamic Finance. Q&A. What is the Difference Between Qimar and Maisir?'. investment-and-finance. Nov 23, 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
- ^ abcAyub, Muhammad (2007). Understanding Islamic Finance. Wiley. ISBN9780470687710. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
- ^ abJamaldeen, Faleel (2012). Islamic Finance For Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. p. 17. ISBN9781118233900. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
- ^Quran2:219Quran Surah Al-Baqara ( Verse 219 )
- ^Quran5:90–91