Conclusions on Slavery
Aside from many verses advocating to free who is captive, freeing of a neck, etc, is the issue that war captives were meant to be freed or if the war didn't terminate they can be ransomed. The malakat aymanihim refers to Marriage and Muta. Hajar the slave of Abraham and Sarah, didn't exist and is a fabrication Quran doesn't confirm.
The Quran and hadith from Imam Reda (as) both refute the notion of slaves by the fact we are servants of God.
Will be moving on two
[2] Show expressions like "cut off their hand" "beat her" weren't literal and had specific meanings for example "cut off their hand" meant stop them from committing the crime some way or another, and "beat her" was in context of having sex, and literally meant continue having intercourse with her. We will also look at other possibilities of metaphors, where they have been taking literally due to history but not due to the context of Quran and other verses about the same subject.
Aside from many verses advocating to free who is captive, freeing of a neck, etc, is the issue that war captives were meant to be freed or if the war didn't terminate they can be ransomed. The malakat aymanihim refers to Marriage and Muta. Hajar the slave of Abraham and Sarah, didn't exist and is a fabrication Quran doesn't confirm.
The Quran and hadith from Imam Reda (as) both refute the notion of slaves by the fact we are servants of God.
Will be moving on two
[2] Show expressions like "cut off their hand" "beat her" weren't literal and had specific meanings for example "cut off their hand" meant stop them from committing the crime some way or another, and "beat her" was in context of having sex, and literally meant continue having intercourse with her. We will also look at other possibilities of metaphors, where they have been taking literally due to history but not due to the context of Quran and other verses about the same subject.