Muslims accept there is the one all-powerful God, named Allah, who is endlessly better than and otherworldly from mankind. Allah is seen as the maker of the universe and the wellspring of all great and all insidious. Everything that happens is Allah's will. He is a capable and strict judge, who will be kind toward adherents relying upon the adequacy of their life's acts of kindness and religious commitment. An adherent's association with Allah is as a worker to Allah. 

Despite the fact that a Muslim respects a few prophets, Muhammad is viewed as the last prophet and his words and way of life are that individual's power. To be a Muslim, one needs to take after five religious obligations: 1. Rehash an ideology about Allah and Muhammad; 2. Discuss certain supplications in Arabic five times each day; 3. Provide for the penniless; 4. One month every year, quick from sustenance, drink, sex and smoking from dawn to nightfall; 5. Journey once in one's lifetime to love at a holy place in Mecca. At death - in view of one's loyalty to these obligations - a Muslim wants to enter Paradise. If not, they will be endlessly rebuffed in damnation. 

For some individuals, Islam coordinates their assumptions about religion and god. Islam shows that there is one preeminent God, who is worshiped through great deeds and restrained religious customs. After death a man is compensated or rebuffed by religious dedication. Muslims trust that surrendering one's life for Allah is a certain method for entering Paradise.