The first sentence might be the word of Jesus, but the second is yours! Because Jesus said no one can go to God without him, he must be god! I can say that I cannot be saved if I don’t follow the path of Mohammed, but that doesn’t make Mohammed God.
If Jesus was god, he would have said that clearly. There is no reason for him not to declare it clearly. Again I will ask this, why do you think Jesus did not know the answer when he was asked about the Hour?
I think the question here is simple friend. Let us not get Theological. What is your answer to the following?
“Why should anyone believe in Prophet M.'s authority?”
The argument here is going to be along the lines of “If Prophet M. has no reasons to give us to believe that he has authority, then there is no reason to believe what he revealed about Faith and Morals”.
There are several common answers you might now give
- The Koran, which was written by him, has a lot of predictions that have come true
Possible counter-objection: But if we grant that the Koran had accurate predictions, that only proves that he was good at making some future earthly predictions. That does not give us any reason to think the rest of his book is accurate on the after-life or about God. There is nothing done by Prophet M. to make us feel that he also knows anything about the supernatural or what happens after death.
- Prophet M. couldn’t write so him writing the Koran was the miracle
Possible counter-objection: Even if we grant that it was a miracle, it still does not give us any reason to believe him regarding what he wrote about the afterlife, God, morals and the supernatural. There are people who have many other miraculous experiences in their lives like getting cured from their illness. It doesn’t mean we should believe them at all.
- What reason is there to believe the Bible is authoritative on Faith and Morals?
Possible counter-objection: Even if there was no reason to believe that the Bible was authoritative, it still won’t be a reason to believe the Koran as authoritative either. So your reasonable course of action in that case would be to abandon both faiths, Islam and Christianity.
BUT, there is good reasons to think the Bible is authoritative. Why? It comes from the Apostolic successors of the first Apostles who were taught by Christ about these truths. But why believe Christ? Because the man died and rose from the dead. I think it makes sense to believe the man who has seen what is after death and then risen again about things after death than believe in someone who made good earthly predictions. Don’t you think so?
Now as for resolving why Jesus didn’t know the hour, that is a theological question and the Church has given some good reasons for it.
newadvent.org/cathen/08675a.htm
But anyway, engaging in Theological argument is useless to decide whether the Koran is right or the Bible is right. We can both find “mistakes” in each others which are more likely due to lack of knowledge on both our parts about that of others. Even if there were no such errors in both books, it does not give us any reason to believe either of them anyway. Logical consistency by it-self is not proof that something is true.
**So the correct approach is to ask which book is the more reasonable one to believe. Or more accurately, which person/s are worthy of belief regarding faith (after-life, God etc) and morals? That is a matter of
REASON and not a matter of knowing what the Koran or the Bible teaches. In fact, one does not even need (and *should ****not *
need) to flip a single page of either book to answer the question.
I think the answer here is resoundingly clear to that question for anyone who is honestly seeking. This is what every religious person in the world should ask rather than pick a holy book and try to justify the religion using Theology which is a meaningless exercise if you already have the wrong book. So what you should find out is which book was given from a person worth believing before you pick it up in the first place.
I invite you to ponder the above question and really ask yourself why you believe in the reliability of the person who gave the holy book to you regarding matters beyond this world. As far as I can see, there is really no good reasons to believe what he has written about anything beyond this world.