Blockbuster
About Jesus Raises Passions
The famous actor-director Mel Gibson's
film The Passion of the Christ has finally gone on
general release after months of debate. Watched with enormous
interest in the USA, the film caused some cinemas to assume
the air of churches. Millions of Christians have queued
to watch this important work about Jesus (peace be upon
him), the corner stone of their beliefs.
One of the aspects most concentrated on
by film critics is the way that this film is not pure "entertainment,"
unlike classic Hollywood movies. On the contrary, there
are suffering and even torture in a great many scenes. Christians
believe that Jesus was killed by the Romans by being crucified,
and Mel Gibson shows what a dreadful form of torture crucifixion
and the cruelty that went before it were.
The Jewish Reaction
The greatest reaction to Mel Gibson's film
came from Jews, and is indeed still doing so. Why is that?
The answer to that question lies in the history of Christianity
as described in the Bible.
According to the Bible, Jesus is the savior
whom the Jews had been awaiting for centuries, in other
words the Messiah. When he began to preach his message,
however, he both called on the Jewish people to believe
in God and also criticized the hypocrisy of various men
of religion who enjoyed great prestige among the Jews. For
that reason, although a large part of the Jewish people
came to love Jesus, the men of religion in question had
enormous hostility towards him and decided to set a trap
to kill him. Eventually they decided to complain to the
Romans, who ruled Palestine at the time. Appearing before
the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate, they told him Jesus
claimed to be a king whereas their king was Caesar, and
was causing political unrest. Pilate questioned Jesus, and
seeing that he had committed no crime wanted to set him
free. The Jewish religious leaders insisted, however. They
demanded he be crucified, and Pilate accepted that demand.
Again according to the Bible, it was the Jews who were actually
responsible for the decision to execute Jesus.
This led to some Christians harboring an
enmity for the Jews throughout history. One of the reasons
for the emergence of "anti-Semitism," or hatred of Jews,
is that Christians regarded the Jews as "Christ-killers."
The reaction of Jewish leaders to Mel Gibson's
film in recent months has been that the film has revitalized
this concept, which has persisted for the last 2,000 years.
In many scenes in the film the hatred and anger of some
Jewish religious figures towards Jesus are depicted. This
is an important point of conflict which divides Christianity
and Judaism, which have a great deal in common, and even
sets them in opposition to one another.
The Truth Revealed in the Qur'an
However, there is a most important truth
behind the current debate over Jesus between Jews and Christians.
This truth is revealed in the Qur'an. According
to the verses of Almighty God, Jesus was not actually put
to death by being crucified. The Jews set such a trap for
him, but God foiled that trap with a miracle and rescued
Jesus, with someone else being crucified in his place. This
truth is described in Surat an-Nisa':
And [on account of] their
saying: "We killed the Messiah, Jesus son of Mary, Messenger
of God." They did not kill him and they did not crucify
him, but it was made to seem so to them. Those who argue
about him are in doubt about it. They have no real knowledge
of it, just conjecture. But they certainly did not kill
him. (Qur'an, 4:157)
The expression, "they
did not kill him and they did not crucify him" reveals
that Jesus was not killed and crucified. The next statement
also contains very important information: the person crucified
was not Jesus, but somebody else, although those who performed
the crucifixion believed that he was Jesus. That was because
this person resembled Jesus, or was made to look like him.
(Only God knows for certain.)
This information in the Qur'an has been
the subject of debate between Christians and Muslims for
hundreds of years. Christians say that Jesus was crucified
before hundreds of witnesses, that the gospels and other
Christian authors are agreed on this, and that this is a
certain and attested truth believed in by millions over
hundreds of years.
The fact is, however, that some Christians
have also accepted the fact that Jesus was not crucified.
Christians Who Have Not Believed
in the Crucifixion
Christians have provided different answers
to the question of who it was who was crucified. These possessed
a belief regarded as "heretical" according to Catholic doctrine.
That movement is known as "Docetism."
The most important information about Docetism
comes from the document Adversus Haereses (Against
Herecies) written by the priest Irenaeus (115-202) at the
end of the second century CE. Irenaeus refers to one Basilides,
one of the representatives of this movement. According to
Irenaeus, Basilides, a historian from Alexandria, insisted
in his writings between 130 and 150 CE that Jesus had not
been crucified. He maintained that somebody else, one Simon
of Cyrene, had been crucified and that God had miraculously
altered Simon's appearance to resemble that of Jesus, and
that the Jews and Romans thus thought they were crucifying
Jesus himself. Basilides even wrote that Jesus watched as
Simon of Cyrene was being crucified, and that he then moved
away and was raised alive into the presence of God. (William
Smith, D., A Dictionary of Christian Biography, Volume
1, p. 768)
Where might this information have reached
Basilides from? According to the writings of a 3rd century
Christian theologian, Clement of Alexandria (150-215), Basilides
claimed to have received secret information. According to
his account, an individual called Glaucius, who had acted
as interpreter for Simon Peter, one of Jesus' disciples,
learned this secret from Peter, and Basilides heard it from
him. Basilides wrote a new "Bible," in which the gospels
were corrected in the light of the information he had received
from Glaucius.
Basilides was not the only Docetist to
support this claim. In addition to him, various individuals
or sects regarded as "heretics" by the Church also supported
the view that Jesus was not crucified, but was replaced
by someone bearing a resemblance to him. In Was Christ
Really Crucified? The Christian writer Faris al-Qayrawani
writes:
In the year A.D. 185 a sect of the descendant
of the priests of Thebes who embraced Christianity claimed
that "God forbids that Christ should be crucified. He
was safely lifted up to heaven." Also in the year A.D.
370 a hermetic Gnostic sect that denied the crucifixion
of Jesus taught that He "was not crucified but it seemed
so to the spectators who crucified Him." Again, in the
year A.D. 520 Severus, bishop of Syria, fled to Alexandria
where he encountered a group of philosophers teaching
that Jesus Christ was not crucified but that it only appeared
so to the people who nailed Him on the cross. About A.D.
610 Bishop John, son of the governor of Cyprus, began
to proclaim that Christ was not crucified but that it
only seemed so to the spectators who crucified Him. (Faris
al-Qayrawani, Was Christ Really Crucified?, Villach:
Light of Life, 1994, p. 23)
As of the 4th century, however,
when the absolute dominion of the Catholic Church was established,
Docetists gradually disappeared just like the other movements
regarded as "heretical." The teaching that Jesus was crucified
confirmed its place as a fundamental dogma of the Christian
world by being imposed by the Church.
Mankind only learned the truth about this
subject by means of the revelation of the Qur'an to the
Prophet Mohammed. In the Qur'an God has revealed this about
Jesus:
"… They did not kill him
and they did not crucify him, but it was made to seem so
to them..." (Qur'an, 4:157)
THE LIFE OF JESUS ACCORDING TO THE
QUR'AN
According to the historical records of
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, Jesus lived approximately
2,000 years ago. He was a chosen messenger of God and is
held in honor both in the world and the Hereafter. The Gospel
of Mathew states that he was born either during the reign
of Herod l or in a period of the regime change (4 BCE).
According to the Gospel of Luke, he was born during the
reign of Emperor Augustus (27 BCE-14 CE) when a census was
being conducted in Judea (6 CE). Such information cannot
be verified. However, experts analyzing various sources
believe that Jesus was born around 7-6 BCE.
The true religion brought by Jesus, God's
chosen Messenger who was rewarded with Paradise and special
gifts, exists today. However, it does so in name only, for
it has been tampered with and falsified. Likewise, the revelation
given to Jesus by God exists only in name and certainly
not in its original, for the Christian scriptures have been
tampered with and altered. As we cannot acquire any true
knowledge about Jesus from this source, we turn to the only
source that can provide true information: the Qur'an, which
God promised to protect until the Last Day. The Qur'an reveals
much about Jesus' birth, life, examples of his encounters
with other people, the situation of those living around
him, and many other subjects. It also provides many examples
of his efforts to invite the Jewish people to faith. The
Qur'an relates the following words of Jesus:
"I come confirming the Torah
I find already there, and to make lawful for you some of
what was previously forbidden to you. I have brought you
a Sign from your Lord. So fear God and obey me. God is my
Lord and your Lord so worship Him. That is a straight path."
(Qur'an, 3:50-51)
Only a few Jews answered his call and became
his followers. The Qur'an reveals the existence of these
devout believers as follows:
When Jesus sensed unbelief
on their part, he asked: "Who will be my helpers for [the
cause of] God?" The disciples said: "We are God's helpers.
We believe in God. Bear witness that we are Muslims. Our
Lord, we believe in what You have sent down and have followed
the Messenger, so write us down among the witnesses." (Qur'an,
3:52-53)
According to the New Testament, Jesus traveled
to all corners of Palestine with his 12 disciples to call
people to faith. On this journey, God allowed him to perform
many miracles. He healed the sick and disabled, cured people
suffering from leprosy, brought sight to those who had been
blind from birth, and raised the dead. The Qur'an reveals
these miracles in the verses below:
"I have brought you a Sign
from your Lord. I will create the shape of a bird out of
clay for you and then breathe into it, and it will be a
bird by God's permission. I will heal the blind and the
leper and bring the dead to life, by God's permission. I
will tell you what you eat and what you store up in your
homes. There is a Sign for you in that if you believe."
(Qur'an, 3:49)
Remember when God said: "Jesus,
son of Mary, remember My blessing to you and to your mother
when I reinforced you with the Purest Spirit so that you
could speak to people in the cradle and when you were fully
grown; and when I taught you the Book and Wisdom, and the
Torah and the Gospel; and when you created a bird-shape
out of clay by My permission, and then breathed into it
and it became a bird by My permission; and healed the blind
and the leper by My permission; when you brought forth the
dead by My permission; and when I held back the Children
of Israel from you, when you brought them the Clear Signs
and those who did not believe said: 'This is nothing but
downright magic.'" (Qur'an, 5:110)
Jesus performed great miracles, and many
people were impressed by them. However, he always stated
that these miracles happened only by the will of God and,
according to the Bible, he always told the people he healed:
"Your faith has saved you." In response, the people praised
the Lord when they saw his miracles:
Jesus left there and went along the Sea
of Galilee. Then he went up on a mountainside and sat
down. Great crowds came to him, bringing the lame, the
blind, the crippled, the mute, and many others, and laid
them at his feet. And he healed them. The people were
amazed when they saw the mute speaking, the crippled made
well, the lame walking, and the blind seeing. And they
praised the God of Israel. (Matthew 15:29-31)
Despite the increasing obstacles and, in
particular among the people who suffered from oppression
and cruelty, the number of believers began to rise. At the
time, Jesus and his disciples had wandered through all of
the towns and cities in the land. Meanwhile, the priests
and scribes (teachers of the law) began to scheme and plot
against Jesus, who had been telling them of the wrongs inherent
in the traditions that they had promoted for years, reminding
them of the deviations in the order they had established
and calling them to believe only in God and to live only
for him. (Luke 22:1-2, John 11:47-53)
Like all other Prophets, Jesus called his
people to believe in God, to submit wholeheartedly to Him,
to live for His good pleasure, to refrain from sin and evil,
and to do good. He reminded them of life's impermanence
and of death's proximity, and told them that they would
have to answer for all of their deeds in the Hereafter.
He called them to worship God alone and to fear and mind
only Him. The Bible also contains much advice and educational
material (mashal) in this respect. According to the
New Testament, Jesus advised those who were "short on faith,"
brought them the good news of God's imminent dominion, and
asked them to seek God's forgiveness. This dominion is the
rule which the Jews expected to be established when the
Messiah arrived, a rule that would bring them renewed faith
and deliverance.
Jesus remained true to the Mosaic law (the
commandments of the Torah) and reprimanded the Jews for
straying from them or their hypocritical practice. According
to the New Testament, he told them: "If you believed Moses,
you would believe me, for he wrote about me" (John 5:46).
Jesus called people to return to the Torah. The Gospel of
Matthew records his order to abide by the Mosaic law ("the
holy law"):
I did not come to destroy, but to fulfill.
(Matthew 5:17)
Whoever therefore breaks one of the least
of these commandments and teaches men so shall be called
least in the kingdom of Heaven; but whoever does and teaches
them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of Heaven.
(Matthew 5:19)
The Qur'an says the following about Jesus:
[Jesus said,] "I come confirming
the Torah I find already there, and to make lawful for you
some of what was previously forbidden to you. I have brought
you a Sign from your Lord. So fear God and obey me." (Qur'an,
3:50)
THE CONFLICTING ACCOUNTS OF
THE CRUCIFIXION IN THE GOSPELS
Present-day Christians believe in the Holy
Book known as the New Testament. Many sections of this book
call people to believe in and worship God in a most sincere
manner and recommend excellent moral principles. In that
respect, much of the New Testament is compatible with the
Qur'an. Therefore Muslims and Christians have a great many
beliefs in common and believe in the same moral values.
This is an important truth which represents the groundwork
for the establishment of dialogue and cooperation between
the two faiths.
However, God also reveals in the Qur'an
that two fundamental teachings in the New Testament are
erroneous.
The first of these is the belief that Jesus
was crucified and was a kind of "sacrifice" for all mankind.
The second is the claim that Jesus is the
"son of God." (God is surely beyond that. Far exalted is
He above having a son.)
One interesting point is that the statements
in the gospels regarding these two beliefs are actually
contradictory.
The Four Gospels
The New Testament contains four separate
"gospels" which describe the life and ministry of Jesus.
The first three of these, the gospels according to Matthew,
Mark and Luke are to a large extent parallel to one another.
They are thus described as the "synoptic" gospels in the
Christian tradition. (The word "synoptic" means "taking
the same point of view, and describes the perspectives of
the first three gospels.) Despite being the second gospel
in the Old Testament, the earliest is the gospel according
to Saint Mark. It is accepted that Matthew and Luke used
the gospel according to Saint Mark as a source when writing
their own gospels, making a few additions to it.
The fourth gospel is that of John, and
this is very different to the line taken by the synoptic
gospels. Some events described by John do not appear in
the synoptic gospels, or are described in a contrary sense.
Moreover, one event described by John is described totally
differently from the way it appears in the synoptic gospels.
The Contradictory Descriptions
of the Crucifixion
As we have already stated, it is revealed
in the Qur'an that the person who was crucified was not
Jesus but, by a miracle of God, someone resembling him was
crucified and Jesus escaped the trap.
The gospels of the New Testament insist
that it was Jesus who was crucified. However, their accounts
of the crucifixion conflict with one another to an extent
far greater than in any other subject.
There are enormous discrepancies on this
subject, both among the synoptic gospels and that of John.
The account which begins with the Last Supper of Jesus and
the disciples and continues with his arrest and trial is
the subject of considerable contradiction among the gospels.
Let us now examine the major points of these contradictions:
o The synoptic gospels maintain that there
was a "ceremony of bread and wine" at the Last Supper of
Jesus and his disciples. Yet John never mentions this. Instead,
he makes an entirely different claim that the disciples
washed his feet as an expression of love and respect.
o There is a similar discrepancy with regard
to Jesus' arrest by the Romans. According to the claim in
the synoptic gospels, Judas Iscariot gave Jesus up by indicating
him to the Romans. According to John, Jesus gave himself
up. The replies given to Judas by Jesus are also described
contradictorily: According to Matthew, he said to Judas,
"Friend, do what you came for," whereas according to John
there was no dialogue between the two.
o There is also disagreement with regard
to what the disciples did after Jesus' arrest. According
to Matthew, the disciples all fled, with only Peter watching
Jesus from afar. Mark describes the odd detail of how only
"a young man, wearing nothing but a linen garment" watched
Jesus, and how he was caught but freed himself from the
garment and escaped. Like Matthew, Luke writes that only
Peter watched Jesus. John, on the other hand, writes that
Simon Peter and another disciple were following Jesus.
o The answers to the question of who judged
Jesus are also different. The synoptic gospels describe
how he was tried by the Jewish Supreme Court (the Sanhedrin).
According to John, Jesus was tried not by the Sanhedrin,
but by Caiaphas, the high priest that time, and his father-in-law
Annas.
o Jesus' trial by the Roman governor, Pontius
Pilate, is also described very differently. According to
the synoptic gospels, Jesus made no reply to the accusations
made against him by Pilate, merely saying "Yes, it is as
you say," when asked if he was the king of the Jews. John,
on the other hand, says that Jesus made a long reply to
Pilate, in a detailed statement saying, "My kingdom is not
of this world… But now my kingdom is from another place."
o Who carried the cross is also unclear.
The synoptic gospels write that a man named Simon of Cyrene
carried it, whereas John maintains that Jesus carried it
himself.
o The robbers who were crucified alongside
Jesus are also described differently, as are Jesus' last
words.
o The gospels also describe the timing
of the crucifixion differently. According to the synoptic
gospels, it was on the second day of Passover. According
to John, it was one day before the Passover.
It is clear that these discrepancies reveal
an interesting picture.
That is because these events, which comprise
the last day in the life of Jesus, from the Last Supper
to the crucifixion, took place, according to the Christian
tradition, before hundreds of witnesses. With the exception
of the Last Supper, attended only by the disciples, they
must all have taken place before large crowds. According
to the gospels, the arrest of Jesus took place before hundreds
of Romans and Jews. Again according to the gospels, the
crucifixion happened in Jerusalem, before the eyes of the
populace.
So why is it that there are such discrepancies
between the accounts of these events that happened in front
of so many eye-witnesses?
The answer is clear: The reason for these
discrepancies in the accounts of the crucifixion is that
the story is based on an error. It was not Jesus who was
crucified. God saved this blessed prophet from the trap
laid for him.
Jesus Did Not Die, but Is in
the Presence of God
The Qur'an reveals that the unbelievers
devised a plot to take Jesus' life. However, they have failed,
for the Qur'an relates:
They [unbelievers] planned
and God planned. But God is the best of planners. (Qur'an,
3:54)
As the verses reveal, they plotted and
moved to kill Jesus. However, their plot failed and they
ended up killing a look-alike. During this event, God raised
Jesus up to His presence:
And [on account of] their
saying, "We killed the Messiah, Jesus son of Mary, Messenger
of God." They did not kill him and they did not crucify
him, but it was made to seem so to them. Those who argue
about him are in doubt about it. They have no real knowledge
of it, just conjecture. But they certainly did not kill
him. (Qur'an, 4:157)
The subsequent verse says the following
about Jesus' ascension:
God raised him up to Himself.
God is Almighty, All-Wise. (Qur'an, 4:158)
The reality revealed in the verse is clear.
Those who attempted to kill Jesus did not succeed. The expression
"but it was made to seem so to them"
reveals this fact. God showed them a look-alike and raised
Jesus up to His presence. Our Lord also reveals that those
who made that claim had no knowledge of the truth.
Jesus was not killed.
The truth, clearly indicated in the Qur'an
and the hadiths (sayings) of our Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace), is that Jesus is still alive and
will return to Earth in the End Times.
JESUS WILL RETURN TO EARTH
The subject of Jesus' return to earth has
been of great interest in the world in recent weeks. In
order to learn the truth of this matter, one of course needs
to study the signs in the Qur'an.
There is important evidence in the Qur'an
regarding the second coming of Jesus. This may be set out
as follows:
1. "... I will place the
people who follow you above those who are unbelievers until
the Day of Resurrection..."
The first verse indicating Jesus' return
is given below:
When God said: "Jesus, I
will take you back and raise you up to Me, and purify you
of those who are unbelievers. And I will place the people
who follow you above those who are unbelievers until the
Day of Resurrection. Then you will all return to Me, and
I will judge between you regarding the things about which
you differed. (Qur'an, 3:55)
God mentions that a group of Jesus' true
followers will dominate the unbelievers until the Day of
Resurrection. Jesus did not have many followers during his
tenure on Earth and, with his ascension, the religion that
he had brought degenerated rapidly. Over the next two centuries,
those who believed in Jesus were oppressed because they
had no political power. Therefore, we cannot say that the
early Christians dominated the unbelievers in the sense
indicated by the verse given above.
At present, Christianity is so far removed
from its original state that it no longer resembles the
religion taught by Jesus. In this case, "And I will place
the people who follow you above those who are unbelievers
until the Day of Resurrection" carries a clear message:
There has to be a group of Jesus' followers who will exist
until the Last Day. Such a group will emerge in his second
coming, and those who follow him at that time will dominate
the unbelievers until the Last Day.
2. "There is not one of
the People of the Book who will not believe in him before
he dies..."
In the Qur'an, we read that:
There is not one of the People
of the Book who will not believe in him before he dies;
and on the Day of Resurrection he [Jesus] will be a witness
against them. (Qur'an, 4:159)
The phrase "there is
not one of the People of the Book who will not believe in
him before he dies" is very interesting. Some scholars
believe that the "him/it" in this verse refers to the Qur'an
instead of Jesus, and so understand it to mean that the
People of the Book will believe in the Qur'an before they
die. However, it is beyond dispute that the same word in
the preceding two verses refers to Jesus.
Another point we need to make here has
to do with the interpretation of "before he dies." Some
believe that this stands for the People of the Book "having
faith in Jesus before their own death." According to this
view, everyone from the People of the Book will definitely
believe in Jesus before he or she dies. But so far, millions
of the People of the Book have lived and died without ever
believing in Jesus. Therefore, the verse does not speak
of the death of this group, but rather of the death of Jesus.
In the end, the reality revealed by the Qur'an is this:
"Before Jesus dies, all People of the
Book will believe in him."
This can only be possible with the return
to Earth of Jesus and all the People of the Book having
faith in him during this second life. That is in fact the
promise in the hadiths. (Only God knows for certain.)
3. "He is a Sign of the
Hour..."
In the Qur'an, we are informed of Jesus'
return to Earth. This verse states that Jesus is a sign
of the Hour:
He [Jesus] is a Sign of the
Hour. Have no doubt about it. But follow me. This is a straight
path. (Qur'an, 43:61)
The great scholars of Islam interpret this
pronoun as referring to Jesus, an opinion that they base
on other Qur'anic verses and hadiths. In his commentary,
Elmalili Muhammad Hamdi Yazir writes that:
No doubt he [Jesus] is a sign of the
Hour, one that declares that the Hour will come, that
the dead will be resurrected and stand up, because the
miracle of Jesus' second coming and his miracle of resurrecting
the dead, together with his revelation that the dead will
rise, prove that the Day of Judgment is real. According
to the hadiths, his arrival is a sign of the Last Day.
(Elmalili Muhammad Hamdi Yazir, Kuran-i Kerim Tefsiri
(Qur'an Tafsir); www.kuranikerim.com/telmalili/zuhruf.htm)
Jesus lived six centuries before the Qur'an's
revelation. Therefore we cannot consider his first life
as a sign of the Day of Judgment. The verse says that Jesus
will return toward the end of time or, in other words, during
the last period of time before the Day of Judgment. In that
context, his return is a sign of the Hour's imminent arrival.
(God knows best.)
4. "He will teach him
the Book and Wisdom, and the Torah and the Gospel."
The verses 45-48 of Sura 3 reveal that
God will teach Jesus the "Book," the Torah, and the Gospel.
Obviously, this book in question is very important. The
same expression is also used in the verse given below:
Remember when God said: "Jesus,
son of Mary, remember My blessing to you and to your mother
when I reinforced you with the Purest Spirit so that you
could speak to people in the cradle and when you were fully
grown; and when I taught you the Book and Wisdom, and the
Torah and the Gospel." (Qur'an, 5:110)
When we examine how "Book" is used here,
we see that it refers to the Qur'an in both cases. The verses
reveal that after the Torah, Psalms and the Gospel, the
Qur'an is the final divine book. Another verse uses "Book"
to denote the Qur'an, after mentioning the Torah and the
Gospel. (Qur'an, 3:2-3)
In this case, the Qur'an is the third book
that Jesus will be taught. But this will be possible only
when he returns to Earth, for he lived 600 years before
the Qur'an's revelation. The hadiths also reveal that Jesus
will rule with the Qur'an, not the Gospel, on his second
coming. This corresponds with the meaning of the verse.
(Allah knows best.)
5. "The likeness of Jesus
in God's sight is the same as Adam."
The verse "The likeness
of Jesus in God's sight is the same as Adam." (Qur'an,
3:59) could also indicate Jesus' return. Muslim scholars
who have written Qur'anic commentaries point out that this
verse indicates the fact that both Prophets did not have
a father, for God created both of them with the command
"Be!" However, the verse could also have another meaning:
Just as Adam was sent down to Earth from God's presence,
Jesus could be sent down to Earth from God's presence during
the End Times. (Only God knows for certain.)
6. "...The day I was born,
the day I die, and the day I am raised up again alive..."
Surah Maryam also mentions Jesus' death
in the following verse:
[Jesus said,] "Peace be upon
me the day I was born, the day I die, and the day I am raised
up again alive." (Qur'an, 19:33)
When this verse is considered in conjunction
with Surah Al `Imran verse 55, an important reality emerges:
While Surah Al `Imran states that Jesus was raised up to
God's presence and does not mention that he died or was
killed, Surah Maryam speaks of the day on which he will
die. This second death can only be possible after he returns
and lives on Earth for a period of time. (Only God knows
for certain.)
7. "... you could speak
to people in the cradle and when you were fully grown …"
Another piece of evidence for Jesus's return
is the word kahlaan, used Surat al-Ma'ida 5:110 and Surah
Al `Imran 3:46. These verses say:
Remember when God said: "Jesus,
son of Mary, remember My blessing to you and to your mother
when I reinforced you with the Purest Spirit so that you
could speak to people in the cradle and when you were fully
grown (kahlaan)…"(Qur'an, 5:110)
He will speak to people in
the cradle, and also when fully grown (kahlaan), and will
be one of the righteous. (Qur'an, 3:46)
Kahlaan, which is used only in these two
verses, only in reference to Jesus, and to express Jesus'
adulthood means "someone between the age of 30 and 50, someone
who is no longer young, someone who has reached the perfect
age." Islamic scholars agree that it denotes the age of
35 or above. They base their views on a hadith reported
by Ibn 'Abbas that Jesus was raised up to God's presence
in his early 30s, and that he will live for 40 years when
he comes again. Therefore, they suggest that this verse
is evidence for Jesus' return, since his old age will occur
following his second coming. (Muhammed Khalil Herras, Fasl
al-Maqal fi raf`i `Isa hayyan wa nuzulihi wa qatlihi ad-Dajjal
(Cairo: Maktabat as-Sunnah, 1990), 20.)
In short, the miracle of the second coming
of Jesus, revealed in a great many hadiths, is also mentioned
in the Qur'an.
Jesus did not die, and will return to Earth
again.
THE CHRISTIAN ERROR OF THE TRINITY
The Qur'an specifically points to the positive
beliefs and moral characteristics of Christians. God has
revealed that for Muslims, Christians are "the people most
affectionate to those who believe" and "not arrogant." (Qur'an,
5:82) According to Islam, Christians are not deniers, but
are a People of the Book, together with the Jews. In other
words, they are faithful people who believe in God's earlier
revelations.
However, the Qur'an does point to one major
error by Christians. That is the error of the Trinity, the
ascribing of divinity to Jesus. God warns Christians in
this regard in the Qur'an:
People of the Book!
Do not go to excess in your religion. Say nothing but the
truth about God. The Messiah, Jesus son of Mary, was only
the Messenger of God and His Word, which He cast into Mary,
and a Spirit from Him. So believe in God and His Messengers.
Do not say: "Three." It is better that you stop. God is
only One God. He is too Glorious to have a son! Everything
in the heavens and in Earth belongs to Him. God suffices
as a Guardian. (Qur'an, 4:171)
Indeed, when we look at the historical
facts, it can be seen that the Trinity is a myth which entered
into Christianity at a later date.
Monotheism: The Essence of
Christianity
Christianity was originally born among
the Jews living in Palestine. All of those around and who
believed in Jesus were Jews and lived according to the laws
of Moses. The most fundamental feature of Judaism was monotheism,
the belief in one God.
However, Christianity began to grow rather
different after the ascension of Jesus into the presence
of God and with its spread from the Jewish world into the
pagan one. Monotheistic belief, the essence of the law of
Moses, underwent a great change and Christians began regarding
Jesus as divine.
The belief in the "Trinity" emerged at
the end of this process. This concept describes, for Christians,
a three-way belief in God as "Father, Son and Holy Ghost."
The Trinity is one of the fundamental conditions of faith
for traditional Christians. The belief in the Trinity regards
our Almighty Lord from a superstitious perspective and is
a mistaken concept which ascribes divinity to Jesus, sent
by God to mankind as a prophet. Despite harboring a great
many inconsistencies and being totally incompatible with
monotheism, it occupies a central role in the Christians'
corrupted system of beliefs. Someone who does not believe
in the Trinity, and therefore that Jesus is the son of God,
is not regarded as a real Christian by the supporters of
traditional Christianity.
The Pressure on Those Who Denied
the Trinity
One interesting point is that the various
individuals and movements which have opposed belief in the
Trinity and maintained that Jesus was only a prophet of
God were subjected to great pressure during the course of
Christian history. These monotheists fiercely opposed those
who said that Jesus was the son of God, and openly stated
that this was "ascribing partners" to God. For that reason,
they were for hundreds of years described as "heretics"
and even "enemies of Christianity," and those who supported
them met with the same reception. Yet those who believe
in the oneness of God have always been in a minority compared
to the proponents of the Trinity in the Christian world.
Even those neutrals who have researched
the subject have established that real Christianity is the
monotheistic Christianity that was suppressed throughout
history. A large part of the independent Bible researchers,
which began in the 18th century in particular, concluded
that the Trinity, confession of sins and other Christian
dogmas had no place in true Christianity. In their studies
of the Old and New Testaments and other Christian sources,
experts have revealed that traditional Christianity has
very different features to that of the time of Jesus, and
was shaped centuries after that time.
Christians Who Have Denied
the Trinity
It is under the influence of these sources
that some Christian sects today reject the Trinity. The
Unitarian Church, for example, which maintains churches
all over the world, is one major Christian community which
rejects belief in the Trinity. Although they may hold various
different views, the members of that congregation deny that
Jesus is the son of God and say that Christianity demands
belief in a single God. Many of them emphasize the mistaken
nature of the claim that Jesus was crucified to redeem the
sins of the world.
One can find opponents of the Trinity among
Christians of various different persuasions and churches.
The opponents of the Trinity are growing in numbers, particularly
in America, every day, and there is a rapid rise in the
numbers of people who are openly expressing the truth in
the Christian world. Among these, the "Worldwide Church
of God" is particularly noteworthy. Herbert W. Armstrong,
the founder of the church, maintains that the Trinity is
a pagan doctrine which entered Christianity from pagan cultures.
The most noteworthy point on this subject
is that there is no trace of the belief in the Trinity,
portrayed as the foundation of Christianity, anywhere in
the Bible. It appears neither in the Old Testament, the
holy book of the Jews, nor in the New Testament, the Christian
sacred text. Belief in the Trinity depends on the interpretation
of a number of statements in the Bible, and the word itself
was first used by Theophilus of Antioch at the end of the
2nd century. This belief became fully incorporated into
Christian belief long after that. For that reason, Bible
researchers and those opposed to the Trinity concentrate
on the questions of "Should not belief in the Trinity,
described as the basis of the Christian religion, be openly
stated in the Bible?" and "If this belief were really true,
should not Jesus have openly spoken of it?" The answer
they provide is clear: No belief which does not appear openly
in the Bible and was thus unknown to the first Christians
can form the basis of Christianity. This is nothing more
than a myth which formed after Jesus and under the influence
of Greek culture. It has nothing to do with the essence
of Christianity.
This truth can be seen from a careful reading
of the Bible.
The Basis of the Bible Is Also
"Belief in One God"
It is revealed in the Qur'an that Jesus
issued the following message to the Jews:
..."O Tribe of Israel! Worship
God, my Lord and your Lord…" (Qur'an, 5:72)
The expressions of Jesus calling to oneness
of God are present even in the gospels of the New Testament,
which were exposed to distortion and falsification. For
instance, Jesus answered a teacher of law who asked him,
"Of all the commandments, which is the most important?"
as "The most important one is this: 'Hear, O Israel, the
Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with
all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
mind and with all your strength.' (Mark 12:28-30)
The following passage, again from the gospel
according to Mark, shows that Jesus prevented not just the
ascription of divinity to him but even praise of him:
As Jesus started on his way, a man ran
up to him and fell on his knees before him. "Good teacher,"
he asked, "what must I do to inherit eternal life?" "Why
do you call me good?" Jesus answered. "No one is good-except
God alone." (Mark 10:17-18)
In fact, this passage alone is sufficient
to show that belief in the Trinity is a violation of the
New Testament. Rejecting praise and stressing that only
God is worthy of praise Jesus openly stated that he too
was a servant of God.
In fact, Jesus is a prophet of God, sent
to tell people of the oneness of God following the corruption
of the revelation brought by Moses and that there is no
other god but him. He called upon the Jews, who had corrupted
the true religion brought by Moses, to abandon their bigoted
traditions and superstitions and to submit solely to God.
This message of Jesus to the Children of Israel is revealed
thus in the Qur'an:
And when Jesus came with
the Clear Signs, he said, "I have come to you with Wisdom
and to clarify for you some of the things about which you
have differed. Therefore fear God and obey me. God is my
Lord and your Lord so worship Him. This is a straight path."
(Qur'an, 43:63-64)
"I come confirming the Torah
I find already there, and to make lawful for you some of
what was previously forbidden to you. I have brought you
a Sign from your Lord. So fear God and obey me. God is my
Lord and your Lord so worship Him. That is a straight path."
(Qur'an, 3:50-51)
It is the duty of Muslims, Christians,
Jews and everyone in the world to abide by this divine call.