Much like Catholicism, the religious system known as Islam whose believers are called Muslim dates back to around 610 A.D. when the prophet Muhammad allegedly was visited by the angel Gabriel who spoke to him and conveyed the actual words of Allah Himself (i.e., Allah as God). Muhammad was also told that he had been chosen by Allah as a prophet and that he must write down everything he had been told. Shortly before his death in 632 A.D., these writings became the Holy Quran, the sacred scriptures of Islam.
One of the most important similarities between Islam and Catholicism is that both are founded on monotheism or the belief in one God, a God who is believed to be "personal, righteous and holy" (Corbett, 2001, p. 233). Of course, one of the most contrasting differences between Islam and Catholicism is that Islam was founded in the Middle East as a Semitic monotheistic religion, comparable to the faith of Judaism, while Catholicism is a strictly Western-based religion.
In addition, Islam, much like Catholicism, has what is known as the Five Pillars of Islam, comparable to the seven sacraments of the Catholic faith. These pillars include faith as shown in the repetition of the creed called shahadah, being "There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is the Prophet of Allah;" prayer five times daily, either at home or in a mosque, an Islamic church; the giving of alms to the poor, fasting during the holy month of Ramadan, and the hajj or pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca, a journey that all faithful Muslims are required to take at least once in their lifetimes if they are physically and financially able to do so.
But unlike Catholicism, there is no one single leader or ruler in Islam, at least not of earthly origin, due to the fact...
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