“Thieves of God” is one of the most famous works of the Iraqi writer “Abdul Razzaq Al-Jubran”, which is classified by many as a student within the school of the Iranian writer and thinker Ali Shariati, and continues to follow the steps of his renewal project, and this may appear evident from another book by the author entitled “Ali Shariati and the renewal of religious thinking.” ”
The book revolves around the idea that God sends prophets and humans follow jurists, and that what the jurists wrote is the same as what religion came to overturn, so it is not possible for a person to be a believer before atoning for "the temple and the rulings of the priesthood," which are the two terms that algebra uses to describe the traditional understanding of religion. And doctrine, in exchange for "the Republic of the Prophet", which is the first Islam that God sent and the prophets walked.
Throughout the book’s 230 pages, the author criticizes many traditional concepts of religion, defending the Sufi principle of taking religion from the heart, whereby jurisprudence is the jurisprudence of existence and not the jurisprudence of texts, “the thieves inhabit the texts” as he put it, making the word “the Prophet” satisfied Your heart ”is the focus of his words.