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NPOV disputes

This article forms part of the series
Islam
Vocabulary of Islam
Five Pillars
Profession of faith
Prayer – Alms
Fasting
Pilgrimage to Mecca
Holy Cities
Mecca – Medina
Jerusalem
Najaf – Karbala – Kufa
Events
Hijra – Islamic calendar – Eid ul-Fitr
Eid ul-Adha – Aashura – Arba'in
Buildings
Mosque – Minaret
Mihrab – Kaaba
Islamic architecture
Functional Religious Roles
Muezzin – Imam – Mullah
Ayatollah – Mufti
Interpretive Texts & Practices
Qur'an – Hadith – Sunnah
Fiqh – Fatwa – Sharia
Sects
Sunni: Hanafi – Hanbali
Maliki – Shafi'i
Shi'a: Ithna Asharia
Ismailiyah – Zaiddiyah
Others: Mu'tazili – Kharijite
Movements
Sufism
Wahhabism – Salafism
Non-Mainstream Sects/Movements
Ahmadiyyah – Nation of Islam
Related Faiths
Druze – Bahα'ν Faith
A Muslim is a believer in or follower of Islam. The word Muslim means one who submits and implies complete submission to the will of God ( Allah). Muslims believe that nature is itself Islamic, since it follows natural laws placed by God. Thus, a Muslim strives to surrender to God's commands every step of the way.

The holiest book for Muslims is the Qur'an, or the 'Koran' in English. Muslims consider the Arabic Qur'an as the direct revelation of God; translations do exist to other languages but are not regarded as the literal word of God.

Other holy books of the Muslim include the hadith which are recordings of the life of the prophet made by the people who were around him. Many matters not specifically mentioned in the Qu’ran are covered in the hadith. The degree to which the hadith are authoritative depends on the sect which a Muslim is from.

The basic beliefs of Muslims are: belief in God, His angels, His revealed Books, His Messengers, the Day of Judgement, and the Al Qadar (which is a form of divine pre-destination). The revealed books of Islam also include the Injil (Christian Gospels), the Torah and the Pslams .

The Five Pillars of Islam on which a Muslim's life is founded are:

Until recently the word was also spelled Moslem. Muslims do not recommend this spelling because it is often pronounced "mawzlem," which sounds like an Arabic word for "oppressor." Many English-language writers used to call Muslims "Mohamedans" or "Mohametans", meaning "followers of Mohammed", but this terminology is considered incorrect and insulting, because Muslims think it implies that they worship the prophet Muhammad, contrary to the fundamental principles of Islam itself.

Muslims share many prophets in common with both the Jews and the Christians. However, neither the Jewish nor the Christian faiths recognize Muhammad.

Jesus (" Isa") is believed by Muslims to have been a prophet of God. The virgin birth is also accepted by Muslims Quran 3:45-48. Muslims do not consider Jesus as divine but do believe that he was born without sin Qu'ran 19:19. Muslims do not believe in orginal sin, so everyone according to Islam is born sinless.



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