Eid Al-Adha
People wait to offer Eid al-Adha prayers outside a mosque in Ahmedabad, India September 13, 2016.Reuters

A top scholar from Saudi Arabia has said that Islam is a religion of tolerance and mercy and that Muslims should spread true Islam and should be tolerant in their treatment of people from different religions.

Abdullah bin Sulaiman Al-Manea, a member of the Council of Senior Scholars, said that Islam does not support violence, intolerance or terror. Al-Manea gave a fatwa (religious advisory opinion), stating that Muslims may pray in Shiite or Sufi mosques, churches or synagogues, according to reports by Al-Anba' Kuwaiti newspaper.

He added that all the land belong to God and cited the Prophet's words:  "The earth has been made a place of prostration and a means of purification for me."

The Saudi scholar said that Islam is a religion of tolerance that Muslims cannot have differences in the basic principles of Aqidah (creed) of Islam, but they may differ in the branches, according to Arab News reports.

Citing an occasion where the Prophet received a delegation of Christians from Najran in his mosques, and allowed them to perform their own prayers, Al-Manea said that this is how non-Muslims should be treated by followers of Islam. He also cited several other sayings of the Prophet which reflected his kindness and mercy on non-Muslims.

The scholar said that Islam spread in several countries like Indonesia and Malaysia, because of the good manners of Muslim merchants. He said the behaviour of the merchants attracted the citizens of these countries to embrace the religion.

Clergymen and faithfuls gather outside the Roman Catholic Transfiguration Church during the Holy Saturday service
Clergymen and faithfuls gather outside the Roman Catholic Transfiguration Church.REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin

The office of Al-Manea had issued a statement nearly 10 years ago stating that Muslims were allowed to  enter churches to look around and gain more knowledge about these places of worship.

Muslims "may enter churches to learn about them, and Christians are allowed to enter mosques — except the Grand Mosque in Makkah — and pray in them," Al Maeya had said.