Trima kasih Mas,

 

Teman saya bilanng dia pernah dengar hadist (sayang dia tidak tahu
apakah hadis ini sahih atau tidak) tentang wudhu dengan sepatu "Ali bin
Abi Thalib ditanya bagaimana wudhu nya Nabi, dia bilang (karena pakai
sepatu - kauf), kaki/sepatunya diusap bagian atasnya saja. Terus Ali
bilang, kalau saja agama itu pakai akal, mestinya yang perlu diusap
bagian bawahnya sepatu".

 

Wallahualam

 

________________________________

From: Mas Wibowo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, June 27, 2008 10:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Heri Haryadi
Subject: Re: [syiar-islam] Shut down your mind!

 

Marilah kita perhatikan ayat-ayat berikut:

 

Sesungguhnya dalam penciptaan langit dan bumi, silih bergantinya malam
dan siang, bahtera yang berlayar di laut membawa apa yang berguna bagi
manusia, dan apa yang Allah turunkan dari langit berupa air, lalu dengan
air itu Dia hidupkan bumi sesudah mati (kering)-nya dan Dia sebarkan di
bumi itu segala jenis hewan, dan pengisaran angin dan awan yang
dikendalikan antara langit dan bumi; sungguh (terdapat) tanda-tanda
(keesaan dan kebesaran Allah) bagi kaum yang memikirkan. 
QS. Al Baqarah (2):164

 

Dan Dia-lah Tuhan yang membentangkan bumi dan menjadikan gunung-gunung
dan sungai-sungai padanya. Dan menjadikan padanya semua buah-buahan
berpasang-pasangan, Allah menutupkan malam kepada siang. Sesungguhnya
pada yang demikian itu terdapat tanda-tanda (kebesaran Allah) bagi kaum
yang memikirkan. 
QS. Ar Ra'd (13):3

 

Dia menumbuhkan bagi kamu dengan air hujan itu tanam-tanaman; zaitun,
korma, anggur dan segala macam buah-buahan. Sesungguhnya pada yang
demikian itu benar-benar ada tanda (kekuasaan Allah) bagi kaum yang
memikirkan. 
QS. An Nahl (16):11

 

Dan dari buah korma dan anggur, kamu buat minimuman yang memabukkan dan
rezki yang baik. Sesunggguhnya pada yang demikian itu benar-benar
terdapat tanda (kebesaran Allah) bagi orang yang memikirkan. 
QS. An Nahl (16):67

 

Kemudian makanlah dari tiap-tiap (macam) buah-buahan dan tempuhlah jalan
Tuhanmu yang telah dimudahkan (bagimu). Dari perut lebah itu ke luar
minuman (madu) yang bermacam-macam warnanya, di dalamnya terdapat obat
yang menyembuhkan bagi manusia. Sesungguhnya pada yang demikian itu
benar-benar terdapat tanda (kebesaran Tuhan) bagi orang-orang yang
memikirkan. 
QS. An Nahl (16):69

 

Dan mengapa mereka tidak memikirkan tentang (kejadian) diri mereka?
Allah tidak menjadikan langit dan bumi dan apa yang ada diantara
keduanya melainkan dengan (tujuan) yang benar dan waktu yang ditentukan.
Dan sesungguhnya kebanyakan di antara manusia benar-benar ingkar akan
pertemuan dengan Tuhannya. 
QS. Ar Ruum (30):8

 

Dari ayat-ayat di atas, Allah memberikan petunjuk apa saja yang harus
dipikirkan oleh manusia, yaitu kebebasan untuk memikirkan tentang alam.

 

Wallahu a'lam

 

 

----- Original Message ----
From: Heri Haryadi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, June 27, 2008 9:07:42 AM
Subject: [syiar-islam] Shut down your mind!

Ass.wr.wb

Dibawah ini ada tulisan Ulil mengenai kebebasan berpikir.

Ada yang bisa membantu mengulas masalah "kebebasan berpikir" ini 

dari perpektif Al-Alquran dan As-Sunnah ?

Saya akan sangat berterimakasih.

Wassalam wr.wb.

Shut down your mind!
<http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/islamliber al/message/ 18248;_ylc=
X3oDMTJya
<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/islamliberal/message/18248;_ylc=X3oDMTJya
> 
DhqdjlsBF9TAzk3MzU5 NzE1BGdycElkAzI5 NTIyMzQEZ3Jwc3BJ ZAMxNzA1MDYzOTg1
BG1zZ
0lkAzE4MjQ4BHNlYwNk bXNnBHNsawN2bXNn BHN0aW1lAzEyMTQ0 OTgzMTg-> 

Posted by: "Ulil Abshar-Abdalla" [EMAIL PROTECTED] com
<mailto:ulil99%40yahoo.com> 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] com <mailto:ulil99%40yahoo.com> ?Subject=%20Re%
3AShut%20down% 20your%20mind% 21>
ulil99 <http://profiles. yahoo.com/ ulil99
<http://profiles.yahoo.com/ulil99> > 

Wed Jun 25, 2008 5:24 pm (PDT) 

Shut down your mind!

THIS is a lingering question that keeps haunting me time and again: if
I want to be good Muslim, should I shut down my mind and submit myself
totally to God? Can I be a good servant of God while still reserving
some space for doubt, question, and skepticism? 

The way Islam is presented in the modern discourse of Islamist
literature is very interesting. Take for example the popular work by
Abul A'la Maududi, the founder of Jamaat-i Islam-i in Pakistan, entitled
Towards Understanding Islam.

I stumbled upon this book long time ago while I was still a young
student in madrasa in Indonesia. 

Islam, in the Maududian discourse, means literally submission. "Muslim"
means some one who submits and surrenders. Islam is an act of
submission. God has laid down for humanity a set of rules that will
lead them to the path of salvation. To be a Muslim means to submit
yourself to God's sovereignty. 

Islam, for Maududi, is not a religion as it is usually understood by
western people, i.e. a personal conviction and faith that has no
bearing on the public life. Islam is a faith plus a system; a religion
that unfolds in the history of humankind in the form of complete
civilization. 

The mission of the prophet, according to Maududi, is not simply to
produce individuals who adhere to moral teachings, but also political
system in the modern sense of the word. In other words, Muhammad, in
Maududian discourse, is not merely a teacher of moral life in the way
Buddha is, but also Constantine who is taking upon himself a tremendous
task of erecting an empire, a political system, a state, a dawla.

Submission in Islam is not simply an act of personal piety, but rather
a "public" act to submit to a certain divinely sanctioned system. That
is the system of God. For people like Maududi, God is not a solitary
"father" in the dark corner of the world who cares so little about the
mundane affairs. God acts in the same manner as a CEO in the modern
companies who is busy as hell with the minutiae of human affairs,
ranging from state administration down to the trivial affairs such as
how you enter the bathroom. (Yup, even your CEO won't care how and
where the hack you pee!)

God's rule is so complete and comprehensive that it leaves no single
aspect in human life unattended. To be a good Muslim is to place
yourself under this complete and totalitarian rule of God. Yes, God has
equipped humankind with the faculty of reason. But, watch out: reason
is given by God to test human truthful allegiance to his rule. 

If we use our mind to challenge and question divine rule, that amounts
to an act of rebellion against divine sovereignty. 

In other words, if you want to be a good Muslim, you have no choice but
shut down your mind. Of course, Maududi and the likes would do their
best to repudiate any accusation that Islam is a religion that
contravenes human reason. He will show you, of course apologetically,
that Islamic history is ripe with the best instances where reason and
revelation coexists harmoniously producing the fruit of civilization
that benefit all humankind. Even Europe owes Islamic civilizations a
great deal of debt. 

Sound good argument, doesn't it?

But I don't buy it, AT ALL. Yes, Muslim generations over centuries
developed a rich and magnificent civilization. But the standard bearers
of that civilization were people of totally different breed. They are
the champions of humanism and rationalism. They were even the victim of
people of yore whose religious view was not so different from Maududi:
totalitarian, anti-intellectual, and so hostile to the "other". If
Muslim philosophers and scientists like Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Ibn Rushd
(Averroes), Ibn Baja (Avempace) and many others were ever resurrected
again from their grave, they would definitely disown people like
Maududi outright!

JOHN Shelby Spong, a Christian theologian from the US, is one of my
favorite writer. In a book that he published recently, Jesus for the
Non-Religious, he said something about religion that resonates so deeply
with my understanding of Islam. Listen to him as follows:

The Christianity that is now emerging in America and in the Third
World is something with which I do not choose to be identified. I do
not want to be filled with competing claims or disturbing anger. I do
not want to worship a God that I cannot challenge, or be loyal to a
tradition that requires me to shut down my mind. (p. 7) 

Spong is definitely a courageous man of religion. He chooses a thorny
path: a God we are able to challenge, not God who judges our allegiance
to him by how far down in the slope we can go to shut our mind down. 

Of course, this is not what Maududi thinks about God. Maududi's God is
a totalitarian God. Spong's God is a God of dialogue, a God with whom I
can negotiate. 

I submit to this type of God.[] Ulil Abshar Abdalla

 



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