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Hinduism is the third largest religion in the
world. There are approximately 950 million adherents, most of them in India or
Nepal. Central to Hindu worship is the image or icon, and central to Hindu
belief is the concept of rebirth or reincarnation. These two fundamental
convictions in some ways make Hinduism and Islam polar opposites.
Monotheism versus Polytheism
The most fundamental belief in Islam is
the concept of One God. He has no sons, daughters, associates or
intermediaries. He does
not have partners or underlings; therefore, there are no demi gods or minor
deities inherent in the concept of God. He is not part of His creation and God
is not in everybody and everything. Praying to images, icons,
statues, animals or stones is a grave sin. Believing that someone or something
other than God alone is able to affect your life or future is a grave sin. Worshipping something or
someone along with or instead of God and not sincerely repenting before death
is considered to be the only unforgiveable sin in Islam. The
belief in more than one god is called polytheism and the pure monotheism of
Islam is directly opposed to it.
Polytheism is the worship of many gods, demi gods or
deities and in the modern world it is epitomised in the eastern religions,
particularly Hinduism. Hindus believe that
everything is god or contains the energy of god therefore is worthy of worship,
be it icons or symbols or nature itself. The multiple heads or limbs often
seen in Hindu iconography represent divine omniscience or omnipotence, and the
use of animals represent qualities associated with that particular animal, such
as wisdom, agility or power. It is not difficult to see that the idol worship
imbedded in all branches of Hinduism is very far away from the beliefs of Islam.
Reincarnation
Hundreds of millions of people worldwide believe in
reincarnation, or cyclic rebirths based on the transmigration of the human soul
from one physical body to another. One of the principle beliefs in Hinduism is
that the soul reincarnates again and again until it becomes perfect and
reunites with the source – Brahman. The soul enters many bodies, assumes many
forms, lives many lives and has many experiences.
Just as a man discards worn out clothes and puts on new
clothes, the soul discards worn out bodies and puts on new ones. (2.22 Bhagavad
gita.)
Reincarnation is refuted by all the main Monotheistic
religions of the world. Reincarnation is against the basic teaching that the
soul inhabits one human body, whose life is finite and upon which he or she
will be judged, and punished or rewarded accordingly. The religion of Islam
unequivocally rejects the concept of reincarnation.
Until, when death approaches any of them, he prays:
“O my God! Let me return [to life], so that I might act righteously in whatever I
have failed [aforetime]!” Nay, it is indeed but a [meaningless] word that he
utters: for behind those [who leave the world] there is a barrier [of death]
until the Day when all will be raised from the dead! (Quran 23:99-100)
The words of God, in the Quran are clear. When a person
dies, he or she is unable to return to his or her old life. The soul stays in the grave
and the person experiences torment or bliss based upon his/her beliefs and
deeds until the Day of Judgment. Islam
teaches that the purpose of life is to worship God, no matter how short or long
the life may be. The soul is part of each unique created individual, it does
not move from one body to another and it will never become part of God, who is
separate from His creation.
The reasons why human beings are not sent to the world over
and over again is also explained in the Quran, when God says that if that were
to happen they would just do the same things and commit the same sins.
“But if they were
returned to the world, they would certainly revert to that which they were
forbidden.” (Quran 6:28)
Hinduwebsite explains the process
of reincarnation in the following way. ‘Hinduism
speaks of the existence of heavens above and hells below. The former are sun
filled, inhabited by gods and innumerable divine souls. The latter are dark worlds
and populated by all the dark and demonic forces. The individual souls go into
these worlds according to their deeds. But they do not stay there permanently
till the end of destruction. They go there basically as a consequence of their
actions, either to enjoy or to suffer. In either case they learn the lesson
and come back to earth to start a new earthly life all over again.’
Islam, on the other hand states
categorically that the soul cannot detach from a specially designed body and
move on to another body, or upward and downward in a chain of worlds, heavens
or hells. For our life on this earth the soul and the body belong together,
they cannot be mixed and matched. There is only one soul belonging to one
body that will be rewarded or punished on the Day of Judgement, to dwell
forever in either Paradise or Hell. This is in stark contrast to Hinduism where
heaven and hell are temporary abodes and a soul regains freedom over and over
until it reaches self realisation or oneness with the eternal life force.
Hinduism is a group of religious
traditions established over a long period of time. There are many different
forms of worship, sometimes to personal deities, sometimes in the home, at
other times in a temple. Hindus believe that there are many different paths to
many different gods but all of them lead to the eternal life force or Brahman.
Islam however teaches that there is no true deity but Allah
alone. There is nothing like Him, as God says:
There
is nothing like unto Allah, and He is all-hearing, all-seeing. (Quran 42:11)
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