⚡ Sexual Ethics in Islamic Sources — Quick Reference
Use this when: responding to claims that Islam has a high view of sexual ethics or when engaging the topic of slavery, captive women, and age of consent in Islamic jurisprudence. These sources are from canonical texts, not fringe interpretations.
Pastoral note: This is sensitive material. Engage it with precision — the goal is not mockery but honest examination of what the texts say and what it means for Islam's claim to be the final, morally perfect revelation.
8.1 — Slavery, Captives, and Sexual Ethics
| Claim | Source |
|---|---|
| Muhammad gifted Fatimah (his daughter) a slave | Abu Dawud 4106 |
| Intercourse with married captive women is permitted | Tafsir Tabari on Quran 4:24 |
| Quran 4:24 permits intercourse with married captive women ("what your right hands possess") | Quran 4:24 |
| "What your right hand possesses" (slave women) — intercourse permitted | Quran 70:29–30 |
| Muslims sold slave women and mothers of their children | Ibn Majah 2517 |
Note: The phrase "what your right hand possesses" (mā malakat aymānukum) appears 15 times in the Quran. Classical Islamic jurisprudence universally interprets it to include sexual access to female slaves and captives without additional consent. This is not a conservative fringe interpretation; it is the mainstream classical position.
8.2 — Controversial Quranic Verses
| Claim | Source | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-pubescent wives: Quran 65:4 regulates divorce for wives "who have not yet menstruated" | Quran 65:4 | Implies the marriage of pre-pubescent girls was legally permitted |
| Quran 42:11 mentions "mates from among yourselves and from among the cattle" | Quran 42:11 | Arabic: جَعَلَ لَكُم مِّنْ أَنفُسِكُمْ أَزْوَاجًا وَمِنَ الْأَنْعَامِ أَزْوَاجًا — "He made for you from yourselves mates and from the cattle mates" |
| Classical commentary (Qurtubi) on Quran 25:54 discusses intercourse with daughters | Qurtubi commentary | From major classical tafsir — not a modern fabrication |
8.3 — Hadith on Sexual Ethics
| Claim | Source |
|---|---|
| Coitus interruptus (azl) — withdraw before Muhammad | Abu Dawud 2172 |
| "Umar approached his wife from the back and was distressed" — question about Q2:223 | Tirmidhi 2980 |
| Muhammad sought refuge from the evil of semen | Abu Dawud 1551 |
| If bismillah is not said before intercourse, a demon will share in the intercourse and harm the child | Bukhari 6388 |
8.4 — Adult Breastfeeding
| Claim | Source |
|---|---|
| Muhammad commanded Salim (an adult man) to be breastfed by Sahla so he could enter her house freely | Muslim 1453b |
| Contemporary Islamic jurisprudence on taking hormones to produce milk for adult breastfeeding | IslamQA 173123 |
Note: The Salim incident is in Sahih Muslim and is a genuine historical puzzle for Islamic jurisprudence. It was considered operative by Aisha but rejected by other wives of Muhammad. Contemporary fatwas on hormone-induced lactation for the purpose of establishing a legal "milk kinship" between adults are a direct extension of this hadith.
8.5 — Marriage Rules and Relationships
| Claim | Source |
|---|---|
| Contradiction: Quran limits men to four wives, yet Muhammad had more | Bukhari 3246 |
| Muhammad asked why a man did not marry a young girl (criticising the choice of an older widow) | Bukhari 5080 |
| Mutah (temporary marriage for hours, days, or weeks in exchange for goods) was practised during Muhammad's time | Muslim 1405c / Muslim 1405d |
Biblical Contrast
Scripture's sexual ethics flow from the nature of persons as image-bearers of God (Genesis 1:27) and the covenant model of marriage as a picture of Christ's love for the church (Ephesians 5:25–32). Sexual union is exclusively between one man and one woman in permanent, faithful covenant (Matthew 19:4–6). Slavery, captive concubinage, and child marriage are not permitted by any honest reading of the New Covenant ethic.
Paul's letter to Philemon is the most concentrated New Testament statement on slavery: the slave Onesimus is to be received "no longer as a slave, but better than a slave, as a dear brother" (Philemon 16). The trajectory of the New Testament is the abolition of the slave/free distinction, not its codification as a sexual permission.