T
TheSufi
Guest
None of your arguments make sense to me. They never have. There is nothing to ponder.I’ve given you some points to ponder. So im sure you can do better than that.
MJ
None of your arguments make sense to me. They never have. There is nothing to ponder.I’ve given you some points to ponder. So im sure you can do better than that.
MJ

So the apostles were mistaken from the beginning? Where were the true apostles whom were faithful to Christ? Or am I simply misreading the quran?From the get go Christians are mistaken.
They’re the ones that became dominant over the non-believers of Isa… I don’t know their names but the Qur’an says so.So the apostles were mistaken from the beginning? Where were the true apostles whom were faithful to Christ? Or am I simply misreading the quran?
Finally an open admission!None of your arguments make sense to me. They never have. There is nothing to ponder.
Islam holds to an Arian heretical view of Jesus. The Catholic Church condemned your Jesus view centuries before Islam ever came into existence. There never exist any Islam or Muslim of Islam to give an eyewitness account of the true Jesus.TheSufi;11869056]We believe in the same person, Jesus. Our differences concerning him is how we perceive him.
Your are in error. Christians never view Jesus “AS” God. We proclaim Jesus to be God incarnate, revealed to our humanity by eyewitness accounts to be fully human in every way except sin, fully divine in every way who raised the dead, healed the sick, gives sight to the blind, forgives sin, takes on death and resurrects His flesh into eternal life. We have historical facts and eyewitness accounts to these.Christians see Jesus as God.
I introduced a professed Catholic faith of Jesus as doctrine which does not change. You introduce a theology of Jesus by title references that are not Islam to interpret. Yes the Jewish scriptures records such titles which only introduce and foretell of the Messiah coming.I, as a Muslim see Jesus as a man, worthy of the Jewish titles, Son of Man, Elohim (god), Son of God, the Messiah, as understood within the Jewish theology. As well as the lofty titles within Islamic theology, the Messiah, a word of God, servant of God, Messenger of God, and Muslim.
Islam teaches you to believe in a Jesus that is never Christian and who never existed. Some heretical Arians held to only a human Jesus, this heresy rejected the incarnation of Jesus Christ. Islam can relate to this heresy because it’s faith is grounded on the natural tendencies of Muslim = those who submit to the laws of God.I do not believe Jesus is God, nor the literal son of God.
We will continue to disagree concerning these issues, so I will not go any further.
Your telling me, I have to know Arabic because Islam’s God cannot speak in any other language? In Christianity God speaks in all the languages of world who reveals Himself to His children.It is part of the eloquence of the Arabic language. One needs to know Arabic pretty well to understand that point, one needs to know Arabic Rhetoric and Grammar.
.How do you explain the details of physics if ones does not know calculus? In other words there are certain prerequisites needed in order to understand certain things
Friend, I’m with you on this point. I don’t really understand the arguments either.None of your arguments make sense to me. They never have. There is nothing to ponder.
The choice is yours. I was looking forward to further discussion. Oh well.None of your arguments make sense to me. They never have. There is nothing to ponder.
The discussion is “Jesus was a Muslim” posted on the streets of the United States respectfully.Publisher;11871765]Friend, I’m with you on this point. I don’t really understand the arguments either.
I believe each faith, no matter the affiliation, if it teaches “Truth”; should be able to stand on it’s own merit, without having to discredit or bash another faith in order to prove it’s own faith.
Both Islam and non-Catholic Christians have based their truth of their theology by trying to discredit another faith in order to prove their own faith.
“the responsible use of language”…according to you? The “responsible use” of the word “muslim” by definition should then include the depth of meaning this Arabic word conveys IS RESPONSIBLE, because the only way Islam can be understood is to seek the meaning of certain words in all of its nuances that ARE used in the Holy Book…isn’t the “responsible” thing to do us to embrace those various nuances the word conveys so we may truly understand the concepts Muslims seek to convey?Seeing as I’m arguing for a responsible use of language and not merely reducing words to their technical meaning I don’t see how by my logic we arrive at that.
So change your description to Muslim instead of quaker if you really believe this. You won’t however because you know how you would be forced to explain it every time. We have words for a reason and they mean something. It would be irresponsible to say one is a Christian, while holding to a technical meaning but in reality be a Muslim or Bahai.“the responsible use of language”…according to you? The “responsible use” of the word “muslim” by definition should then include the depth of meaning this Arabic word conveys IS RESPONSIBLE, because the only way Islam can be understood is to seek the meaning of certain words in all of its nuances that ARE used in the Holy Book…isn’t the “responsible” thing to do us to embrace those various nuances the word conveys so we may truly understand the concepts Muslims seek to convey?
That’s what I’m trying to figure out. Jesus is Muslim, so he must have listened/submitted to God who asked him to make it look like a crucifixion, either asking someone (likely one of his disciples to take his place since Jesus is the Boss of his disciples) like Moses followed Gods instruction. After all Jesus is only a prophet like Moses :ehh:^ The issue of the crucifixion is something I find baffling in Islam.
Muhammad’s heresy purports to be the final divine revelation to humanity. The Qur’an declares time and again that Christians are in error. Yet, this text, supposedly comprised of the very words of God, never tells us what really happened, and I’ve heard/read different things. Was Judas killed instead of `Isa? Or was it Barabbas? Did one of his faithful apostles volunteer to be crucified in place of their prophet? There’s no definitive answer. The irony here is that, while the Jews and Christians are said to have been engaging only in “conjecture” according to Qur’an 4:157-158, it’s actually Muslims who have nothing but speculation to offer.
I believe you miss the big picture here. There is never a question of a Muslim’s expression of faith when it comes to Islam via Aramaic language or practices.Publisher;11872346]Offence was not intended yet even knowing no offense was made responses tend to indicate the Muslom bill board WAS an intention to offend
Your are mistaken, my posts never reflect your opinion of Christians responding in kind. I put the question of how is Charity viewed by you on both sides of the fence?We DO NOT live in a “CHRISTIAN” nation so your " yeah but look what happens in Muslim countries". Why should Chriastans respond in kind?
No offense is ever taken, when Islam teaches Islam. Islam draws attention to itself, when It makes the false claim that “people of the book” = Christians and Jews got it all wrong.The depth of layers of meaning in the holy book was the “intent” and a commonality, no matter how imperfect that concept may be…no offense was intended.
Christians shouldn’t “respond in kind”, but we should acknowledge that Christians and other minorities aren’t well treated in Muslim-majority countries, and we should confront our Muslim interlocutors about this problem. If their religion is so peaceful and tolerant, where’s the evidence? If Islam’s source texts permit or encourage minorities to be oppressed and discriminated against, the world should be made aware of this fact so that it can make an informed decision about whether or not to embrace Islam.We DO NOT live in a “CHRISTIAN” nation so your " yeah but look what happens in Muslim countries". Why should Chriastans respond in kind?
But Christians can’t sweep under the rug that we differ with Muslims on fundamental points about who Jesus was. Imagine if, six centuries down the line, some group writes a poem that lauds Catholic Answers founder and apologist Karl Keating as a faithful Muslim journalist who exposes human rights abuses around the world. Clearly, those who know Keating or follow his activities during his lifetime are, in a sense, talking about someone completely different from the one that his hypothetical fans would be six hundred years down the line. What do the two groups have in common, apart from a positive appraisal of Keating?“I have become all things…so that some can be won”…
I just fail to see how refusing to understand the Muslim view and intent…even the Muslim belief that Jssus was “muslim”…a word that is Arabic in origin THAT INDEED DOES CARRY with it the concept of “one who submits to the Will of God”, which indeed both Christians and Muslims can agree Jesus did indeed seek to be submissive Nd was submissive to the will of God…" Not as I wll but as you will it,". Arabic concepts and beliefs seeking to be understood in English words, that may lack the layered meaning and concepts which Arabic does in the Holy Qur’an…a book of poetry…a song that is mult-layered…and this multi-layered depth of meaning that was sought to open a new idea that may not be easily conveyed in English.
We understand the Muslim view, and strongly disagree with it. Also, Arabic isn’t some kind of alien tongue that can’t be translated. Poetry in one language isn’t easy to render into another, but methinks the line, “You have to read the Qur’an in Arabic or your interpretation is invalid,” is simply a cop-out behind which to hide when non-Muslims ask difficult questions.The depth of layers of meaning in the holy book was the “intent” and a commonality, no matter how imperfect that concept may be…no offense was intended.
But we have a right to be irked. Islam is a religion which emerged over half a millennium after Jesus lived, yet claims to know better what happened than those who wrote in the decades after the Lord’s ascension. And we can’t forget that its holy book condemns Christians (and Jews) based on serious misconceptions of their (orthodox) beliefs, and requires that they be subjugated as dhimmis if those poor misguided souls refuse to accept the religion brought by Muhammad.Seem to me based on my several years here at CAF the negative responses at CAF on this subject are based on prejudice and underlying “anger” at Islams claims…or even their “audacity” to speak/write of Isa/Jesus… Even some claiming that “Isa” is not “Jesus” of the Christians…which is not true…Muslims are not discussing a different character in world and religious history…BUT THE SAME CHARACTER… Just different understanding in their religious explanations…
It’s hard to carry on a “dialogue” and increase “understanding” when one party sees the other as inferior, not just in error, and deserving of second-class status in an Islamic state.seems to me not recognizing our commanities stifle dialog and understanding one another…no wonder tensions on a much larger scale exist in the Middle East…the burden to understand others should rest on our shoulders not theirs…seems the “Christian” thing to do…
How can God be God? If God has to deceive man to fake a crucifixion? Does God have any reason to lie and deceive man? I can’t figure that out myself? How can the crucifixion be a hoax according to Islam, when non-Christian Jews, pagan Romans give eyewitness accounts to the crucifixion taken place?That’s what I’m trying to figure out. Jesus is Muslim, so he must have listened/submitted to God who asked him to make it look like a crucifixion, either asking someone (likely one of his disciples to take his place since Jesus is the Boss of his disciples) like Moses followed Gods instruction. After all Jesus is only a prophet like Moses :ehh:
Can someone fill in the blanks?
MJ
I am not “Muslim” friend…my formal faith tradition is Friend aka Quaker. I would like to believe I am “muslim” however.So change your description to Muslim instead of quaker if you really believe this. You won’t however because you know how you would be forced to explain it every time. We have words for a reason and they mean something. It would be irresponsible to say one is a Christian, while holding to a technical meaning but in reality be a Muslim or Bahai.
The thing is, when Muslims say Jesus is muslim. They mean to say that he believed in certain things, he did not just submit to God, but rather he denied himself being God, he was not raised from the dead and etc. Your refusal to acknowledge this is startling.