The five Islamic doctrines are the fastest growing religions in the world today. They reach 2 billion people, accounting for about 22% of the world's population. Muslims are the second largest religion in the world, accounting for only 33% of Christianity. This is based on the 1999 World Yearbook and Facts Book (724). What is Islam? Who is Muslim? They believe in how to become Muslims. In 1964, Philip K. Hitti explained the rapid rise in the Islamic world in his book "History of Arabia".
The reformers believe in the basic principles of Islam, such as the six elements of faith and five pillars, but there are two major differences in conservative interpretation. One is to include how Islam's core value is applied to modern life, and second is to include dialectical participation rather than criticizing its obligation to obey traditional stories. This means that the Quran can be interpreted freely regardless of hadeeth. My argument historically tended to use materialism and economics as the basis of Middle Easternism and Islamic dilemmas, but it seems to be a conceptual problem. Muslims need global reforms to internalize modernity while abandoning cultural subsidies leading to women and oppression
In Muslim, the Quran is the most famous source of the Bible. But the teachings of Hadith - Muhammad, the record of action and proverb - are the second major sources of Islam teachings. Muslim scholars evaluate these hadeeths according to the reliability that they can trace back to the prophets and claim that the chain of evidence is from reality to forgery. The power of evidence determines the weights given to Hadith in Islamic law and doctrine. Different scholars have different ratings for individual hadeeth, and different Hadith collections are used for different branches of Muslims.
Islam believes that Allah is the only true god and Muhammad is his prophet. People who practice Muslim faith are also required to carry out the five pillars of faith. These pillars are Karima, a testimony of faith, praying five times a day, Zakut, giving a punishment, Sawing fasting during Ramadan, and pilgrimage to Mecca. Christina Toren is a professor at the University of St. Andrews and has studied Christianity in Fiji. She found that people changed Christina 's teachings to meet their cultural needs. By participating in the observation, Torun summarizes ritual Christian compliance as an important sign that one believes in God. The belief that people can be saved is not based on accepting God, but based on their concern for God. Fijian Christians can follow their religious teachings while maintaining their cultural value