Take Jesus for example.
Where in the Qu’ran are the parables, for example, the Sermon on the Mount, the merciful attitude towards adulterous Samaritans and sinners, the anger at those who put their laws and rules and regulations over and above the humanity of others?
Instead the references to Jesus focus on his fashioning birds out of clay, his speaking from his cradle as a new-born, and the fact that he set down a table from heaven, and various other diverse and random miracles provided without any of the context that we are exposed to in the Bible.
So where is the context for these miracles? What is the point of him being born of a virgin, for example, .other than miracle for the sake of miracle? There is all the fantastic and the amazing, but devoid of any depth. There is none of that great Biblical struggle in which the disciple is involved in grasping to understand if there is a reason for that miracle in the first place.
Awareness is shown for sure of Jewish rumours that Jesus’s father was a Roman centurian rapist (Panthera) and his mother a whore —by extension of rape victims being labelled as such in those kind of societie—, which is denied by the Koran. But there is no real understanding or even curiousity shown of who Jesus’s real father would be, as a result of those exclusions.
Rather there is repeated denials. A lot of the verses on Jesus are polemics on who Jesus is not, not a son of a rapist and a whore as the Jews contend, not Divine as Christians contend, not killed on the cross, not resurrected therefore; but ascended, to come again and to die and be resurrected supposedly in the end times.
But again, to what point? God himself becomes vague and unexplainable in such a mish-mash of dodges around the orthodox Christian doctrine.
This is all very good as a political attempt to bring Jews and Christians and Ishmealis together around a common creed, with a little snip of Jewish attitudes here, a huge snip of the basic Christian message there, while all the time stroking the egos of Ismaeli Arabs as the ones in control.
The verse below is a good summary of what I am
saying (note hyperlink embedded):
We got all the names; the skeleton of the faith is presented, but where is the meat?
Where are the Psalms even?
Well, they are in the Bible of the Peoples of the Book, which has been rejected as unfitting reading for Muslims due to supposed corruption.