(May 19, 2012 at 1:43 am)Polaris Wrote: Why must it be haram?
Since I have never read more than a few words of the Qu'ran, can you post some of the verses demanding that alocohol not be consumed?
This was one of several reasons I did not pursue Islam....I did go through Ramadan years ago and celebrated the end by getting drunk....one Moslem never looked at me the same way again. That was when I decided Islam was not the way for me.
So it begs the question. Can one be Moslem and still drink?
Yes, one can drink and still be moslem.
However, by doing so, you're sinning, and must make a tövbe, renounce your prior sins and ask for forgiveness, and stop doing it. Then you are absolved of all prior sins.
There are no verses in the Qur'an that strictly prohibit drinking. However, the sunnah and hadith can be explained in the form that drinking alcohol is haram.
I am a heavy drinker, and was so ever since, just as my ancestors were heavy drinkers of kumyz made of mare's milk.
However, I must say that our non-moslem ancestors have also shunned drunkards and excessive drinking. I follow their example in not becoming drunk and shaming myself in that process, for I see people that act in ways that are shameful for a person to act in a drunken haze.
In my view, also in the views of Chingiss Khan, a man who drinks not, is a man of clear mind. But with peer pressure I feel compelled to having a few glasses of beer, or going further, bottles of wine and raki, and often take part in competitions between friends.
Why it has been made haram, we can not know for sure.
But we can all agree that drinking in itself is not the best act to be encouraged.
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