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General Category => Muhammad - as Revealed Through the Quran and Hadith => Topic started by: Peter on March 19, 2010, 08:38:57 AM

Title: The alleged Ascension of Mohammed to heaven
Post by: Peter on March 19, 2010, 08:38:57 AM
Best to read it from the footnoted web page
http://religionresearchinstitute.org/Mohammad/ascension.htm

The alleged Ascension of Mohammed  to heaven

By Dr. Rafat Amari

Did Mohammed ascend to heaven as the Qu'ran states? Did he do so in a trance? How much was he influenced by the occult? These questions, which are important to the credibility of Islam, are the subject of our study today.

Ascending into heaven was the common way Middle Eastern sects explained how their leaders obtained the religious laws they taught.

Sects that arose in the Middle East before Mohammed put a great deal of emphasis on ascension to heaven. Those who claimed to be prophets within their sects, whether they were mythological figures in their tradition or were given biblical names, all had ascension stories.

Yima, a mythological Persian figure who represented the sun, was visited by the angel Sraosha who accompanied Yima to heaven. Yima was subsequently commissioned to spread the religion on earth.[1]

Zoroaster claimed to have ascended into heaven to obtain a religious law from Ahura Mazda for the nation of Iran.[ii][2] In like manner, Mohammed claimed to have visited heaven where he was commissioned with a religious law for the nation of Islam.

Vohuman, who was the angel that accompanied Zoroastrian figures in their ascension to heaven, is easily compared to Gabriel, the angel of ascension in the Qu'ran.

The angel Vohuman was aledged to have accompagny Zoroaster to heaven.[iii][3] Vohuman has many affinities with Gabriel in the Quran. First of all, he is the angel who accompagnies those who ascend to heaven.  We find Vohuman descending from his golden throne to  accompany Viraz to heaven into the presence of Ahuramazda.[iv][4]

    The same thing is said concerning Gabriel in the Qu'ran. In Surah 81 and verse 20, Gabriel is described as "the personality with rank who stood before the lord of the throne." He is the one Islam claims accompanied Mohammed in his ascension.

    Another similarity between Vohuman and Gabriel is they were both huge in stature.[v][5] Vohuman is portrayed in the sacred Zoroastrian books as the judge who condemned sinners.[vi][6] In the Qu'ran, Gabriel is the judge who condemns the nations and the cities.

    The word "spirit" is used of both personalities. Vohuman is called "spirit," and the Dinkard, book nine, stresses the importance of loving Vohuman.[vii][7]

    Likewise, in the Qu'ran, we find Gabriel referred to as the "spirit" and sometimes as the "holy spirit." Many of Mohammed's Hadiths stress or focus on the love of Gabriel for mankind even for those in heaven.[viii][8]

    The angels in the Bible are agents who proclaimed a message to a few individuals,  then they returned to heaven. They never drew attention to themselves or claimed a relationship with men. The angels hide themselves, pointing only to God.

    But in the case of Vohuman and the spirit who claimed to be Gabriel in the Qu'ran, they both called attention to themselves connecting men to themselves. This indicates they were negative spirits competing with God rather than affirming Him. In reality,  they behaved like the malignant spirits that possess mediums.

Occult characteristics of Vohuman in Zoroastrianism and Gabriel in the Qu'ran point to the true identity of  both spirits.

We find Vohuman enters the mind of Zoroaster and mingled with his mind.[ix][9] Likewise, Gabriel is described by Mohammed's biographers as entering the bodies of humans.