Glad I found this thread, this is exactly on my mind right now.
I was invited to lunch by a Muslim coworker, a nice guy and we’ve had some good conversations. I was expecting a conversation on our personal spirituality and our experience - instead, it was like an Islamic version of the “Roman Road” that the Campus Crusade for Christ evangelists walked around the dorm using. I did some research here and found “The Call of the Minaret”:
catholic.com/thisrock/1992/9204fea1.asp
This read just like a script and its exactly what my coworker said, down to citing Deut 18:18 to refer to Mohammed. Although what’s interesting is that he said this is a proof text that any prophet who says a falsehood is not a prophet. So when Jesus said “Before Abraham was, I AM”, was Jesus lying or was He being a prophet? Wish I would have thought of that at the itme …
So how to refute him … that’s what I’m going to spend some time working on. He challenged me, specifically, on Jesus’ divinity, asking essentially where does Jesus say that He is God? I’m ashamed to say i wasn’t ready, and my best refutation was Jesus statement “Before Abraham was, I AM” (Jn 8:58) but I also argued that Revelation holds that Jesus will return to judge the quick and the dead, defeat Satan, and reign forever. Also that the 12 Elders bowed down before the Lamb of God (whom we coequate with Jesus).
But as I think on it, the exchange was again one of those proselytic “scripts” rather than a true conversation. Really disappointing. And he paid for lunch so I told him I’d treat next time … well, we need a follow-up.
Anyway, back to point. Yes, we do
need to correct and refute the errors in Islam. Partly to affirm ourselves in faith, partly to defend others, and mostly because when the Truth is challenged it must be defended.