Posted on 03/21/2015 9:30:48 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
The Muslim who said this meant that he considers God’s Law superior to Man’s. So do most Christians. At least if they follow the Bible.
“The apostles were brought in and made to appear before the Sanhedrin to be questioned by the high priest. We gave you strict orders not to teach in this name, he said. Yet you have filled Jerusalem with your teaching and are determined to make us guilty of this mans blood. Peter and the other apostles replied: We must obey God rather than human beings!”
When God’s law and man’s law directly conflict, any Christian should follow God’s law, accepting the legal consequences cheerfully.
the important part of the issue is that whether they follow sharia or not does not affect their legal position in this country in any way.
If someone is accused, arrested and indicted on rape charges, the local DA will prosecute.
See the link in my #59.
Sharia is -Not- what one would want if faced with a situation as those girls in britain.
That’s because you didn’t post three replies, you posted one reply three times.
It doesn’t change the obvious fact that these are not courts in any meaningful sense, they are at best arbitration boards. If and when someone tries to enforce their rulings on unwilling people, I’ll be glad to stomp all over them.
Until then, it’s much ado about nothing at all.
That is, of course, the defining characteristic of Law, that it can be imposed on you against your will. If it doesn’t have that, it’s a suggestion, not a Law.
“Sharia is -Not- what one would want if faced with a situation as those girls in britain.”
I would then advise you that if you are indicted by a voluntary Muslim court that you not show up it trial.
I would agree if this person had not stated that Sharia is above US law.
If it is a moral or religious matter...who cares? But it doesn’t appear to be the case.
I don’t like sharia law principles.
But they have no legal power, and rape is a crime under our laws and will be handled accordingly, whether the Muslims involved like it or not.
They may of course refuse to cooperate or testify, but then people do that all the time for all sorts of reasons.
BTW, the present common interpretation of sharia law with regard to rape is not only a corruption, it’s an exact reversal of the clear intent of the Koran.
many thanks;
the important part was in the “rest of the story”.
No sharia law ! Not now, not ever!
America, wake up! I hope the new President confronts this head on. 597 more days of this crap. .
You posted three replies to my one posting. Why would you do that? Other than being neurotic?
As long as it is voluntary, they have no power and no party can be completed to attend or punished.
The city will lose in a real US Court.
It's the same exact thing.
Three different comments?
Racists.
You replied three different times to my comment. You’re the one who started it.
The public disgrace associated with being branded a “racist” is not (yet) a crime.
If I’m having a dispute with my neighbor on the west and the two of us agree to accept the arbitration of the guy across the street, it’s simply nobody else’s business.
Now if I refuse to accept the ruling, and my two neighbors band together to try to force me to accept it, that’s a crime, and they can be prosecuted if they break the law.
Up until these courts break the law, they should be beneath the notice of our legal system. When they do break the law, nail em.
From the article:
“...By their own websites admission, if U.S. law conflicts with Sharia law, we follow Sharia law.
It also openly admitted separate rules for men and women in their proceedings, discriminating and humiliating women which is against the U.S. Constitution.
The Islamic Tribunal also openly declared that they hope will set a precedence that will be emulated and duplicated throughout the country. ....”
OK, what about the statements made by the group trying to become a supposed voluntary place of arbitration?
they plainly state that they don’t care about the u.s. or state constitution.
I must respectfully disagree with your position.
Most Christian law and US law are in agreement, is it not?
After reading the Koran and seeing the bastardization of it’s translations I don’t accept the teachings. I, nor does the law of the land, accept their teachings.
We must absolutely obey God over man, I agree. But whose God should we obey?
The fact that this made to court at all tells me that there is a problem. Or we wouldn’t know anything about it.
Since you posted multiple responses to my previous post and blamed me, I understand that it would be confusing for you, Ahmed.
“OK, what about the statements made by the group trying to become a supposed voluntary place of arbitration?”
If they sent you summons, would you feel compelled to attend the proceedings?
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