Time to dig out my books of tafseer (commentary on the Qur’an)! It’s too easy to simply cherry-pick verses out of context.
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All you’ve done is the usual trick of picking out verses to suit, out of context and with little knowledge of Islamic teaching.
I was saying in my earlier post that I would not rather reading the Quran as I don’t like what it says about the Christians (and the Jews) regardless of what Muslim apologetics may say.
In Islam, no one prophet, angel or other being is to be called a ‘son of God’ in the literal sense that Allah had sexual relations with a human, like the pagan god Zeus did. Being above and in control of all nature, it seems a gross idea that He then partakes in lower animal behaviors such as eating, drinking or sex.
As to your highlighted bit, it is a principle of Islam that anyone who teaches falsehood as truth, going rejecting truth after it is presented to them, and who dies in their disbelief, is doomed to the fires of Hell. This isn’t specific to Jews or Christians, but is a warning to all disbelievers.
Anyway, it is
Christian’s belief that Christ is the Son of God and the Quran says Allah curses the Christians for such belief. Imagine if you are a Christians who read this pronouncement. I don’t want anyone to say that I am cursed by their god just because of my belief.
The Quran is in error to say that
Ezra was known as the son of God. This is historical error as the Jews never called him as such.
One may wonder, if the Quran is from Allah, how could he do not know that the Jews never called Ezra the son of Allah? Being Allah, he should not make mistake on that obvious fact, don’t you think? He can have different belief but he should not make factual mistake on what that belief is.
You say that this isn’t specific to Jews or Christians, but is a warning to
all disbelievers. Not true as the ayah is very specific as it mentions
specifically the Jews and the Christians with their alleged specific belief of their prophets (correct for the Christian, incorrect for the Jews) so I cannot say it is not specific to them.
I can’t personally see a problem here. To my mind at least, and to any Muslim, the story of the Crucifixion makes little to no sense and seems a gross insult to Allah.
I suggest you read some Islamic material on why Muslims believe as they do about the Crucifixion. I can provide links if you wish.
Try to be in Christians’ shoes who would read such blatant error and assertion about their belief, then you would understand why reading the Quran will not be edifying at all to them.
There are many problems about this ayah and you merely seem to side-stepping in actually addressing them.
Again to me as a Christian, this ayah is just nonsensical rambling that contradict just about anything of what God is
.
First, unlike what the ayah says, the Jews did not kill Jesus but the Romans. The Quran should check on that fact first.
It also says they did not kill him nor crucify him. Goodness, don’t you want to laugh at this? What is the difference between killing and crucifying? Unless of course, if the author was not sure about what ‘crucify’ was, unless he thought it was different from ‘kill’ and it was a term the Christians used for their belief but did not know what that term was.
Second, Allah made it appeared as if Jesus was killed. How could Allah do that which by doing so, a religion (Christianity) was started based on this untruth? Why would God make a mistake and do such thing that is contradictory to his nature as truth?
This likely refers to the covenent which all of Jesus’ followers took to follow the commands he gave to worship the One True God, Allah, and to welcome and accept the Messenger of God when he came. When that Prophet DID come, they did not accept or indeed welcome him at all, apart from a few.
So when the Day of Judgement comes, Allah will ask of all Christians why they chose to discard the real Injil (Gospels) in favour of falsehood and ideas such as the Trinity and Jesus as a Son of God, and to reject the Rasullah (Muhammad, SAW) as their Messenger.
Your explanation does not address the fact that this ayah mentions** “Allah planted amongst them enmity and hatred till the Day of Resurrection”**. If you are a Christian reading this ayah, you must wonder why God would sow enmity and hatred among people of a certain religion. And if you are a Muslim and believing in this, what would your attitude would be to Christians? Certainly not much. If Allah hates them then why shouldn’t you?
And it must be said that if you look at early Church history, there were MANY warring factions, all with their own beliefs as to who Jesus was, how to worship etc. In short, the Qur’an passage you quote is correct in that there was and IS division and fighting.
Warring factions that were caused by Allah
(We planted amongst them enmity and hatred till the Day of Resurrection)? Goodness, what kind of a god is that? Can it be said that Allah also caused the warring factions among Muslims today (if this is his nature of doing thing)?
The Jews are only rebuked and shamed in the Qur’an for their theological failings to worship God in the correct manner and hold to His laws. There is no reason based on Qur’an for Muslims to actively hate Jews, and infact Jews are considered to have received a VALID revelation and so are to be given the appropriate respect and legal protection.
You are shaming people just because of their belief. Imagine if I write a book and shame Muslims as being pigs and apes just because of what they believe. And that book is supposed to be the truth and comes from divine source. How would you not follow it? Even if you do not want to hate, you being a nice person but your religious book obviously does, and what would you do eventually? How would that affect your psyche toward the Jews? Your Quran say so man, so what are you gonna do?