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From what I know, I would say none of the above because I think the main goal of Islam is to serve/worship God. I could be wrong.
Well, this is extremely foggy. The question here is "does serving God mean carrying out his instruction too?" Consider the history....
Muhammed was a politician. He acted as a mediater between tribes to bring peaceful solution to problems. However, he also spoke out against the established hierarchy and their pagan worship. He was eventually driven out of Mecca, along with some followers who believed in the "one true God." Later, he would march an amassed military full of followers upon Mecca to establish the nation of Islam. Muhammed went on to "bring Islam to the people, but he was quite content with bringing Islam to the immediate vicinity. At the end, Muhammed had been a politician, a protestor, a soldier, a general, and a soveriegn. (This brings me to another thought about the concreted hurdles of seperation of church and state within Islam, but that's another topic.) Back on topic....
But as soon as Muhammed died, the interpretations began and the Caliphates used the guidance of "bring Islam to the people" as military conquest and Islam blew out of the Arabian desert toppling tribes and empires. Move on to the Crusades....and on to a thousand years of Ottoman rule. All mostly about economy and plunder, but "bring Islam to the people" was the spiritual and motivated force for the masses.
"Serving/worshipping God" is a nice goal for the individual Muslim. But "Islam" demonstrated something else.
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