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Yeni sayfa: "{{İslam}} '''''{{transl|ar|Dīn}}''''' ({{lang|ar|دين}}, also anglicized as '''Deen''') is an Arabic word which is commonly associated with Islam, but i..."
 
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'''''{{transl|ar|Dīn}}''''' ({{lang|ar|دين}}, also anglicized as '''Deen''') is an [[Arabic language|Arabic]] word which is commonly associated with [[Islam]], but it is also used in [[Arab Christian]] worship. The term is sometimes translated as "[[religion]]", but as used in the [[Qur'an]], it refers both to the path along which righteous Muslims travel in order to comply with divine law, or [[Sharia|Shari'a]], and to the divine judgment or recompense to which all humanity must inevitably face without intercessors before [[Allah|God]].<ref>e.g. 1:4, 2:256, 4:46, 8:72, 9:11, 9:122, 15:35, 22:78, etc.</ref> Thus, although secular Muslims{{who|date=December 2010}} would say that their practical interpretation of ''Dīn'' conforms to "religion" in the restricted sense of something that can be carried out in separation from other areas of life, both mainstream and reformist Muslim writers take the word to mean an all-encompassing way of life carried out under the auspices of God's divine purpose as expressed in the [[Qur'an]] and [[hadith]]. As one notably progressive Muslim writer puts it, far from being a discrete aspect of life carried out in the [[mosque]], "Islam is Dīn, a complete way of life"<ref>"Inside the Gender Jihad", p. 92, Amina Wadud, Oneworld Publications, 2006</ref>
 
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