Surely you don't buy into the intentional lies that Muslims fabricate in order to pretend that "baca" is Mecca. Look at the number of times I corrected their bible verse, and the number of times those liars scrubbed out my correction. The Old Testament scriptures indicate the pilgrimage to have been to the temple that God had His people build IN ZION.
What do you think about a bunch of people that feel compelled to intentionally lie for Muhammad?
http://www.petewaldo.com/baca_mecca.htm
Although Zion is often used as a synonym for Jerusalem, the fact is that, etymologically, it contains other meanings as well:
"Because Zion was originally not Israeli, the name Zion comes to us probably from a language other than Hebrew. HAW Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament mentions an Arabic root s-w-n, meaning to protect or defend, which may give Zion the meaning of fortress. Others (says HAW Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament) suggest derivation from a root saha, be bald. Spelled the way it is, however, the name Zion is identical to the Hebrew word ציון (sayon) either meaning place of dryness, or monument."
http://www.abarim-publications.com/Meaning/Zion.html#anc2
If we take the word to mean "a dry place," then the location can be best described as being in Arabia, not in Jerusalem. On the other hand, if the word means a "temple," then the question is, what temple was there in Jerusalem when David wrote Psalms 84? You wrote, "The Old Testament scriptures indicate the pilgrimage to have been to the temple that God had His people build IN ZION." So, exactly what temple is it referring to?
Before you answer that question, read this. Abdus Sattar Ghauri, in his book, The Only Son Offered for Sacrifice: Isaac or Ismael, makes the following points:
"It would be appreciated that ‘dry place’ or ‘parched ground’ can be only applied to arid, barren, and sterile land of ‘Makkah’. It can by no means be applied to the verdant and fertile land of ‘Jerusalem’. Like other Bible names ‘Zion’ may also have more than one significations. There may have been a ‘Zion’ of Makkah and the other of Jerusalem. But in the sense of ‘dry place,’or ‘parched ground’ it can only be applied to ‘Makkah’ in the present context. It is not possible for the writer of this book to dilate upon this theme here. It may, however, be noted that the implication of the Zion of Jerusalem is to be ruled out due to the fact that there did not exist any sanctuary at Jerusalem at that time. The rest of the Psalms depicts the strong yearnings of King David to have some opportunity to visit the sanctuary of the Lord like other pilgrims."
http://www.javedahmadghamidi.com/books/view/the-actual-site-of-baca-bakkah
Your false presumptions arise from abject ignorance to scripture and geography. The term "Zion" occurs 152 times in the King James Bible and here's why:
"Zion is a place name often used as a synonym for Jerusalem.[1][2] The word is first found in Samuel II, 5:7 dating to c.630–540 BCE according to modern scholarship. It commonly referred to a specific mountain near Jerusalem (Mount Zion), on which stood a Jebusite fortress of the same name that was conquered by David and was named the City of David. The term Tzion came to designate the area of Jerusalem where the fortress stood, and later became a metonym for Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem, the city of Jerusalem and generally, the World to Come."
http://www.historyofzionism.com/But if you disagree, then you need to justify what temple in Jerusalem the pilgrims were all traveling to, in David's time. It can't be Solomon's temple because the temple wasn't even built when David was alive. It was only after his death that his son, Solomon, took over the throne and commenced the building of the First Temple. This is written one of the links that you posted in your own website: "After the death of his father David, Solomon issued the orders for the building of the First Temple to commence. [...] Construction began in the fourth year of Solomon's reign and took seven years."
http://www.templemount.org/solomon.html
But all of the Psalms are not attributed to David, so you can throw out your nonsense about Pslams 84 not referring to the temple "
IN ZION",
just like the passage states.
Given that information, and given that the valley of Baca is mentioned in Psalms 84..........
http://www.historyofmecca.com/baca_mecca.htm#valley_of_baca..........(keeping also in mind that Baca in an ancient name for Mecca per the Quran), and given that the passage is describing a pilgrimage to the House of God (or a temple), it all strengthens the possibility that David was describing a pilgrimage to Mecca. But I'd like to see if you or anyone else can refute this.
Sure. Yahweh's people turned their backs on their temple on the temple mount
in ZION, in
THE Holy Land of the prophets and patriarchs, to wander 1200 kilometers across harsh, barren, untraveled, uncharted dry desert wasteland, to march around the pagan's Kaaba 7 times that did not exist until over a thousand years later, only to wander back up the 1200 kilometers back up to Zion, to continue to ignore their temple in THE Holy Land of the prophets and patriarchs. Makes perfect sense doesn't it?
Yet that doesn't even seem to embarrass you, the way it did the host of Muslims that tried to peddle that foolishness on YouTube until I commented on their videos, after which they realized the sheer stupidity of what they had been taught to parrot and removed their videos:
http://petewaldo.com/baca_mecca.htmIslamic history tells us that Muhammad's grandfather dug the well of zamzam to establish Hajj around Arabian jinn-devil worship of running back and forth between al-Safa and al-Marwah 7 times in worship of the most venerated priest and priestess of the Arabian jinn-devil religion Asaf and Neilah, idols of which were placed on those two hills.
http://www.islamchristianforum.com/index.php?topic=1209.0
And again you post more nonsense disguised as "facts," all cleverly fabricated by the disingenuous espouser of the" 5th century Kaabah" hypothesis.
So it's "fabrication" to recognize the sensible geographical plausibility of scripture, regarding physical locations that still exist in THE Holy Land of the prophets and patriarchs today, as opposed to the abject ignorance to geography required to vainly try to advance the geographical impossibility of shifting all those locations 1,000 kilometers to the south.
Rafat Amari tried to convey the idea that it was Muhammad's grandfather (Abdul-Muttalib) who created the well of Zamzam, which is historically false. The Zamzam well existed from the time of the Prophet Abraham.........
But only in the minds of Islam's 7th to 10th century AD fictional history creators - like Ibn Ishak:
http://www.islamchristianforum.com/index.php?topic=452.0http://www.islamchristianforum.com/index.php?topic=2309.0........ (peace be upon him). Amari cited Ibn Hisham's book - which is a reconstruction of Ibn Ishaq's biography of Muhammad - for supporting his argument, but as usual, there are flaws to be found in his overly simple-minded reasoning. Let's see what they are.
First of all, Amari knows that what Ibn Hisham wrote about the Zamzam well is that Abdul Muttalib recovered it (the Zamzam), he didn't build it. He wrote that the Jurhum tribe used to have custodianship over the Kaabah for a period of time, which ended when they were ousted by the Khuza'a tribe. So, in an act of revenge, the Jurhum blocked the water of Zamzam by burying it with things like gold, swords, armors, piles of sand, gazelles, and possibly other objects. From that time on, the Zamzam was hidden and no one knew where it was. It was only years later that Abdul Muttalib had a vision in which he was ordered to dig and recover the well.
Amari asks the following question:
"Ibn Ishak, chief Islamic biographer of Mohammed, claimed the tribe of Jurhum covered the well with the black Stone and a gazelle of gold. This was after Jurhum was defeated and driven from Mecca. How could it be possible for the only well in Mecca to be hidden from the inhabitants of Mecca and from the eyes of the Bedouins who walked miles to find water for their camels? Would they not have redug the well the same day it was buried?"
Firstly, there were enough small wells on the outskirts of the city. Zamzam was just superior to those other wells.
Which is all moot, since contrary to Islamic fables, the well that Hagar found was in the wilderness of Beersheba. After Abraham cast Hagar and Ishmael out:
Gen 21:14
And Abraham rose up early in the morning, and.....sent her away: and she departed, and wandered in the wilderness of Beersheba.15
And the water was spent in the bottle......
19
And God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water.....
http://www.falseprophetmuhammad.com/seed_ishmael_ishmaelites.htmBeersheba of course is just to the south of Hebron, where Abraham's home was.
As Ibn Ishaq wrote:
"There were some old wells outside Mecca dating from the time of Murra b. Ka`b and Kilab b. Murra from which the first princes of Quraysh used to draw water, namely Rumm and Khumm. Rumm was dug by Murra b. Ka`b b. Lu'ayy, and Khumm by Kilab b. Murra, and so was al-Hafr. [...] Zamzam utterly eclipsed the other wells from which the pilgrims used to get their water, and the people went to it because it was in the sacred enclosure and because its water was superior to any other; and also because it was the well of Ishmael, son of Abraham. Because of it the Banu Abd Manaf behaved boastfully towards the Quraysh and the other Arabs." (A. Guillaume, translator, The Life of Muhammad: A Translation of Ibn Ishaq's Sirat Rasul Allah. Oxford University Press, 1967. p 65)
Secondly, Amari asks us, how is it possible that the most important and honored well in Mecca remained hidden from the eyes of its inhabitants for so long?
Well, see this: 34 Lost Cities Forgotten by Time
"It's hard to imagine how an entire city can get lost but that’s exactly what has happened to the lost cities on this list. There are actually many reasons why a city has to be abandoned. War, natural disasters, climate change and the loss of important trading partners to name a few. Whatever the cause, these lost cities were forgotten in time until they were rediscovered centuries later."
So, if an entire city can stay lost for centuries, then it is also perfectly possible that the same thing can happen to a well in a desert.
There were no "early Muslims" prior to Muhammad. There were only Arabian pagans, engaged in pagan Arabian worship. Like sacrifice of she-camels at Al-Ula and worship of the Nabatean deity Dushara and such. Or as Muhammad detailed Lat, Uzza, Manat and Allah.
http://www.petewaldo.com/oldest_mosque_qibla.htm
Lat, Uzza, and Manat as the "daughters" of Allah was something that was believed only by the pagans, but in fact Allah doesn't actually have any sons nor daughters according to Islamic belief, as the Quran states, "Say: He is God, the One and Only God, the Eternal, Absolute. He begets not, nor is He begotten. And there is none like unto Him!" (Surah 112:1-4).
You're ignoring the "satanic verses" from back when Muhammad was trying to be more inclusive of the pagans in his newly invented "religion".
http://www.islamchristianforum.com/index.php?topic=2274.msg11772#msg11772The pagans in Arabia recognized Allah as the supreme creator god, but they believed Him to be a sort of remote god who retired from and was aloof from his creation. Therefore, the pre-Islamic pagans of Arabia focused their cultic worship on lesser gods represented by over three-hundred idols in the Kaaba, which would act as intermediaries to Allah. But, later, it was Muhammad who cleansed the Kaaba by destroying all of these idols, rejecting all the false deities, and called everyone to the worship of Allah alone, as Abraham did.
"The pre-Islamic Kaaba housed the Black Stone and statues of pagan gods. Muhammad reportedly cleansed the Kaaba of idols upon his victorious return to Mecca, returning the shrine to the monotheism of Ibrahim. The Black Stone is believed to have been given to Ibrahim by the angel Gabriel and is revered by Muslims."
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-islam/beginners-guide-islamic/a/the-kaaba
The reference to dressing the kaaba for the first time was not pre-4th century, but happened in the early 5th century AD, and could have been collected by people that were contemporary to that time, that could have been transmitted orally. That is what history is. It is collected by people that were contemporary to the times they wrote about. Even oral tradition like from someone's grandfather, that he got from his grandfather.
Then by that definition of history, you should agree that all oral traditions ought to be more or less classified as historical records, regardless of the date. As you said, if something happened in the 5th century AD, "and could have been collected by people that were contemporary to that time, that could have been transmitted orally," then why can't the same be applied to events in the 4th century AD, the 3rd century AD, the 2nd century BC, or the 10th century BC, or even earlier? Why does the historicity of the oral traditions have to emerge only after the 4th century AD?
Weren't there people who were contemporary during and before the 4th century, who could have transmitted their knowledge of things orally?
What you are wishing, and even ridiculously claiming, is the insane notion that 4500 years of pre-Muhammad history
dating from Adam, was orally transmitted through a bunch of illiterate pagans that Muslims themselves admit worshiped 360 idols in as late as the 7th century AD. A desperate desolate isolated backwater that the civilized world had left behind.
Compare the engineering of the kaaba that Quraish pagans cobbled together in the 6th century - unable to even get two sides to come out the same length - to the Antikythera mechanism of about 600 or 700 years earlier.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism