by Syarif Hidayat
Jesus
is a Muslim and his religion is Islam in every sense. Here is the proof from
Al-Qur’an: Islamic view of Jesus (Jesus in Islam is Prophet Isa AS)
In
the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful. "He (Isa) said:
"Verily I am a slave of Allah, He has given me the Scripture (Injil) and
made me a Prophet; "And He has made me blessed wheresoever I be, and has
enjoined on me Salat (prayer), and Zakat*, as long as I live."
"And
dutiful to my mother, and made me not arrogant, unblest. "And Salam
(peace) be upon me the day I was born, and the day I die, and the day I shall
be raised alive (again)!" Such is Isa, son of Maryam. (It is) a statement
of truth, about which they doubt (or dispute). It befits not (the Majesty of) Allah that He
should beget a son (this refers to the slander of Christians against Allah, by
saying that Isa is the son of Allah). Glorified (and Exalted) be He (above all
that they associate with Him). When He decrees a thing, He only says to it:
"Be!" – “and it is.” (Isa
said): "And verily Allah is my Lord and your Lord. So worship Him (Alone).
That is the Straight Path. (Allah’s religion of Islamic Monotheism which He did
ordain for all of His Prophets)." Al Qur’an, Surah Maryam (Virgin Mary) 30
-36 ( Tafsir At-Tabarî )
*) Zakāt
(Arabic: زكاة
[zæˈkæː], "that which
purifies" or "alms"), one of the Five Pillars of Islam, is the
giving of a fixed portion of one's wealth to charity, generally to the poor and
needy.
Zakat, a practice initiated by Prophet Muhammed PBUH
himself, has played an important role throughout Islamic history.Initially,
Muhammed instituted zakat as a voluntary, individual offering, but during his
lifetime certain forms of zakat have been declared obligatory.
Zakat is considered to be a religious duty, and is
expected to be paid by all practicing Muslims who have the financial means
(nisab).In addition to their zakat obligations, Muslims are encouraged to make
voluntary contributions (sadaqat).The zakat is not collected from non-Muslims,
although they are sometimes required to pay the jizyah tax.
The proof from the Bible
Jesus is a Muslim and his religion is Islam in every
sense.
Jesus DID NOT eat PORK [Levictus 11:7-8]
Muslims are forbidden from eating Pork.
Jesus DID NOT drink ALCOHOL [Numbers 6:1-4]
Muslims are forbidden from drinking Alcohol.
Jesus PRAYED in PROSTRATION [Matthew 26:39]
Muslims pray in prostration.
Mary the Mother of Jesus was COVERED and Christian
women are ordered to COVER [Genesis 24:64-5]
Muslim women are ordered to cover.
Jesus greeted with ‘PEACE BE UPON YOU’ [John 20:19]
Muslims greet with PEACE BE UPON YOU (“Assalamu
Alaikum”)
Jesus FASTED [Matthew 6:16-18]
Muslims fast for Ramadan ( a main pillar of Islam) as
well as other times during the year.
Jesus talks about the kingdom of heaven; the
fulfillment of the Mosaic laws: Mathew 5:17-20 reads: “Think not that I am
come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to
fulfil. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one
tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.
Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least
commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the
kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be
called great in the kingdom of heaven.
For I say unto you, That except your righteousness
shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no
case enter into the kingdom of heaven.”
These are Jesus’ words, from his lips. But what did
Christians say? What do they believe? Do they talk about the fulfillment of
these laws? They better be because if they don’t, according to Jesus, “they
shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven”.
Jesus teaches the unity of Allah; the oneness of God.
In the 12th chapter of Mark, it was reported that a man came to Jesus and asked
him: “which is the first of all commandments”? and Jesus answered: “The
first of all the commandments is, Hear, O Israel; The Lord our God is one
Lord.”
Yet, most christians says Jesus is God. It’s an
amazing situation. Jesus says: The Lord our God is one Lord; Christians
says: no, it is the trinity in the god-head. Contradicting the messege of
Jesus. Nowhere from the lips of Jesus, did he utter trinity! And that is
the core problem of the churches: they preach what Jesus never preached.
Infact, Christianity went on deifying Jesus. They say Jesus walked down the
Palestine as a divine being. The question here is, did he says he is God? Did
he claim to be God? Did he says I am god and worship me? There is not in any
version of the bible where explicitly Jesus says listen everybody: I am
god!
He never make such claims. Infact, he rebukes such
claims. In Mark, 10 and Luke 18, when a certain ruler asked him, what to do to
inherit the eternal life, Jesus says to him:
“Why callest thou me good? none is good, save one,
that is, God. He didn’t even want to be called good much less god. But did the
christians follow this insruction? Not at all! Infact, they called him god. I
wonder if jesus was present today how he is gonna react to this blasphemy.
Propably too tense.
As a Prophet and a messenger of Allah, Jesus
explicitly declares in the 8th chapter of john: "I have not come on my
own; but he (God) sent me."
He says further, “my father is greather than I.”
Jesus’ mission was to convey the message given to him by his Lord. He was no
more than a messenger. He says:
I can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge:
and my judgment is just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the
Father which hath sent me.
The teaching of Jesus is not something new; it’s a
kind of transition from the earlier teachings beginning with Abraham. If we take
prayer for example, how the previous prophets pray to God, we will witness a
clear consistency in their message. The bible tells us: quote:
“And Abraham fell on his face and pray”
genesis 17:3, and moses and Aron fell on their faces and prayed (numbers
20:6) and Jesus fell on his face and prayed (mathew 26:38).
And that is excatly how Prophet Muhammad SAW prayed
and the whole Muslim world prays like that. The christians don’t pray like that
though. They have their own kind of worship. Who is really trying to imitate
jesus? Christians or Muslims?
And that is the main problem of christianity: its not
a religion of jesus; it’s the religion consructed about jesus.
The message of jesus is Islamic in every sense:
believing in one God, he never mention the mystery of trinity; that he’s a
preacher, teacher, messenger and no more; that salvation rests by keeping the
commandments; and son.
Infact even his diet isnt christian, jesus’ diet is Islamic
as he didn’t eat pig he kills over 2000 pigs says the bible. For we believe
that jesus was a Muslim; and his message is Islam.
Little wonder that on his second coming he is going to
rejects the christians for they misunderstood him and his message.
The bible tell us in the 7th chapter of mathew:
Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we
not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy
name done many wonderful works?
And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you:
depart from me, ye that work iniquity.
Jesus is going to rebuke the christians, and this is
in consequence of the diversion in christianity from the real message. Its like
a dialectic between the 2billion Christians and Jesus.
Christians are more concerned with the one who did the
preaching than what he preached. It’s a kind of shift from the message to the
messenger. And when this kind of shift happens, problems and misunderstanding
emerged. If the emphasis is in the preacher, racial pride and nationalism come
into play. You can’t value the message if you’re too obsessed from where it
comes from.
Christian
Prof says Jesus is Muslim
A
professor at an Iowa college says as a Christian, he has to say that Jesus was
a Muslim. Ignoring the historical timeline in which Jesus taught some 2,000
years ago in the Middle East and the advent of Islam is dated six centuries
later, after Christianity had impacted much of the known globe, Robert F.
Shedinger, who wrote “Was Jesus a Muslim?” said his research convinced
him of Jesus as aligning in thought with Islam.
In
a video report that was uncovered by CampusReform.org, the professor is
interviewed by In The Community television in Raleigh, N.C.,
Shedinger
said the issue arose when a Muslim student challenged his teaching about Islam,
and he rethought not only Islam, but all of religion.
He
came to perceive Islam as a social justice system instead of a religion, and
found that he thought the same about Jesus.
“I
had to rethink what Islam is,” Shedinger said in the interview. “I came to the
conclusion that it was a social justice movement and I think that’s who Jesus
was in the first century so I conclude Jesus is more like a Muslim.”
He
admitted it would “be a stretch” for many to follow his process and consider
Jesus a Muslim, but, “It doesn’t make me uncomfortable any more.”
“Even
as a Christian I have to answer yes to that,” he said
“We’re
not trying to aggravate nobody,” said the interviewer, Abdush Shahid Munir. Noting
that his audience included Christians, Muslims “and other denominations,” Munir
asked Shedinger to explain this book.
Shedinger
said he re-evaluated a lot of the research he’d encountered during his
training, and he suddenly recognized “there were a lot of scholars out there
who are arguing the points I make in the book.”
He
described his book as a “call for Christians and Muslims to work together to
promote social justice.”
His
book is published by Fortress Press, the academic book imprint of
Augsburg Fortress, which “is noted for its significant publishing in the areas
of religious studies, Jewish-Christian studies, African American religion,
religion and science, feminist theology, and ethics.”
“The
Fortress Press is academic, ecumenical, inclusive, and international,” the
company explains. The college lists Shedinger as associate professor of
religion, and cites his course teachings as Intro to the Hebrew Bible, The
Bible and Imperial Politics, Intro to Islam, Life After 9/11, Unity and
Diversity in Contemporary Islam, and Biodiversity.
On
Amazon, the book description questions the “convenient distinction” between
politics and religion “and the isolation of ‘religion’ from wider social and
cultural questions.” The description suggests it’s to improve understanding between
Muslims and Christians.
It
revealed that those buying the book also often picked up “Muhammad and the
Believers: At the Origins of Islam,” too. Or the Quran.
CampusReform
reported that school officials at Luther were happy with Shedinger’s work. “The
administration is very, very comfortable with the proposal, with the book, and
with what his statements about this situation are,” said Jerry Johnson, a
school spokesman.
The
school website identifies Shedinger as department head, and cites his research
interests as the Syriac versional tradition of the New Testament as well as
Christian-Muslim relations in the contemporary world.
But
he said there really wasn’t much of note in the book.
“The
ground he is breaking with this book is not anything exactly earthshaking,”
Johnson told CampusReform.
Luther,
located in Decorah, Iowa, identifies itself as an undergraduate liberal arts
institution that is affiliated with the Lutheran Church, ELCA.
“We
embrace diversity and challenge one another to learn in community, to discern
our callings, and to serve with distinction for the common good,” the college
mission statement proclaims.
The Muslim Jesus
Alayna
Ahmad in
her article titled “The Muslim Jesus”
published in Huffington
Post, wrote “The Christian world celebrates the resurrection of
Jesus in the festival of Easter. For almost all Christians, Jesus is the Son of
God who died to save mankind. Islam rejects this belief and views Jesus, also
known as Isa, as a Prophet and the Messiah of the Israelites. So who was this Muslim
Jesus?
The
Bible and the Quran both agree that Jesus was born by miraculous birth to the
Virgin Mary. There is a chapter in the Quran named Mary and she is mentioned 34
times in the Quran, which is much more than the entire New Testament. She is
honored greatly in Islam and is celebrated as a role model for Muslim women
worldwide. For Muslims, Jesus was the seal of the Hebrew Prophets and a man of
perfect purity. Unlike all other human beings, except his mother Mary, he was
not touched by Satan at his birth. In the Quran, when Satan attempted to
approach the child, he was only able to touch the covering caul. The Quran has
great regard for Jesus where he is mentioned 25 times in contrast to the
Prophet Muhammad who is only mentioned four times.
There
are many miracles attributed to the Quranic Jesus. One of these was his ability
to speak from the cradle. His mother Mary was mocked for giving birth to a
child out of wedlock. To protect his mother from the taunts of society, Jesus
spoke and said; “Lo, I am God’s servant [and] a Prophet. […] Peace be
upon me, the day I was born, and the day I die, and the day I am raised up
alive!” (Quran 19:30-34) In addition, other well-known miracles
recorded in both the Quran (with God’s permission) and the Bible include
healing the sick, giving sight to the blind and bringing the dead to life.
The
Quran makes clear that Jesus was sent to earth to preach a new gospel (Injil in
Arabic), which reaffirmed the message of ‘One True God’, given to the earlier
prophets. However, his teachings had become distorted over time. In the Quran,
Jesus foretells the coming of a messenger after him named Ahmad, which is
another name for Mohammad. Many Islamic scholars since the 8th century have
argued that this is also evident in the Bible, originally written in Koine
Greek.
The
Greek word paraklytos or paraclete refers to the Holy Spirit in Christianity
and is sometimes translated as Comforter. The word paraklytos is translated
into Arabic as ahmad which means praiseworthy and commendable. The words of the
Apostle John, “And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another
Comforter, that he may abide with you forever” (14:16) are taken by many Muslim
scholars to predict the coming of Muhammad, the new Comforter, who will renew
some of the lost teachings of the earlier Abrahamic Holy Scriptures.
In
the Bible, Jesus never calls himself the Son of God, as was confirmed to me by
Professor Chris Queen of Harvard in a lecture which I attended. He refers to
himself as The Son of Man, words which are found 81 times in the Greek
canonical Gospels. In the Quran, Jesus is similarly humble, for example, when
he calls himself the servant of God. This humility is unmistakable in the words
of Jesus, “Never could [I] say what I had no right [to say]” (Quran: 5:116). In
both religions, the Second Coming of Jesus is associated with the Day of
Judgement and the end times.
Traditional
Christian belief is that Jesus had died on the cross. Among early Christian
sects were the followers of the Docetic view, whereby the crucified Jesus was
an image, a phantom or perhaps even a replacement. Their justification came
from the Acts of John 97-102, “And my lord stood in the middle of the cave
[and] said, ‘John for the people below in Jerusalem I am being crucified and
pierced with lances and reeds and given vinegar and gall to drink. But to you I
am speaking […] nor am I the man who is on the cross” (New Testament
Apocrypha).
Similarly,
in the Quran, Jesus was not crucified but instead “they did not slay him,
neither crucified him, only a likeness of that was shown to them” (Quran
4:157). Allah had raised Jesus to himself saving his Prophet the suffering of a
terrible death. Professor Lawson argues that “such belief frankly serves to
diminish Islam in the eyes of Christianity and so-called ‘Westerners’ whose
cultural identity is bound up, whether they are believers or not, with the
axiomatic and unquestionable ‘myth’ of the death and resurrection of Jesus”.
The
Islamic mystics have a deep love for Jesus and his ascetic lifestyle. In his
book, “The Revival of the Religious Sciences,” the Sufi mystic and brilliant
philosopher, Al Ghazali, quotes Jesus as saying, “You shall not attain what you
desire except by suffering what you do not desire.” Furthermore, on a gate to
the city of Fatehpur-Sikri, the Muslim Mughal Emperor Akbar inscribed the words
of the Muslim Jesus, “This world is a bridge. Pass over it, but build not your
dwelling there.”
Islam
is a deeply monotheistic religion and thus forbids any partners or associations
with God. Although all prophets including Jesus were mortal and gifted in their
own way, they could not be part of the divine. The life of Jesus has always
been an inspiration although many of its aspects remain obscure factually; yet
we cannot doubt the significance of this remarkable man even 2000 years after
his death.
Whilst
recognising the validity of Professor Lawson’s argument, I sincerely believe
the shared love Muslims and Christians feel for Jesus can be the basis for
mutual understanding and inter-faith dialogue. The three Abrahamic religions of
Judaism, Christianity and Islam are undoubtedly linked. However, even though
the Judaic tradition rejects Jesus, Islam has always accepted him. Given that belief
in Jesus is central to the Muslim faith, why does the West persist in remaining
so hostile to Islam?
About the so-called “crucifixion” of Jesus, the God Almighty
Allah in the Quran says what means:
“And
because of their saying (in boast), "We killed Messiah 'Īsā (Jesus), son
of Maryam (Mary), the Messenger of Allâh," - but they killed him not, nor
crucified him, but the resemblance of 'Īsā (Jesus) was put over another man
(and they killed that man), and those who differ therein are full of doubts.
They have no (certain) knowledge, they follow nothing but conjecture. For
surely; they killed him not [i.e. 'Īsā (Jesus), son of Maryam (Mary) A.S.]: But
Allâh raised him ['Īsā (Jesus)] up (with his body and soul) unto Himself (and
he A.S. is in the heavens). And Allâh is Ever All-Powerful, All-Wise.” (Al-Qur’an, Surah An Nisa, Verses: 157-158).
Muhammad
PBUH is The Last Prophet
Jesus
(Prophet Isa AS) also speaks about the last prophet in Al-Qur’an : "And
(remember) when 'Īsā (Jesus), son of Maryam (Mary), said: "O Children of
Israel! I am the Messenger of Allâh unto you confirming the Taurât [(Torah)
which came] before me, and giving glad tidings of a Messenger to come after me,
whose name shall be Ahmed. But when he (Ahmed i.e. Muhammad SAW) came to them
with clear proofs, they said: "This is plain magic."
(Al-Qur'an, Surah As-Saff, Verse: 6)
Al-Qur’an
reminds the people of the Scripture (Jews and Christians) about Prophet
Muhammad PBUH: "O people of the Scripture (Jews and Christians)! Now
has come to you Our Messenger (Muhammad SAW) explaining to you much of that
which you used to hide from the Scripture and pass over (i.e. leaving out
without explaining) much. Indeed, there has come to you from Allâh a light
(Prophet Muhammad SAW ) and a plain Book (this Qur'ân). Wherewith Allâh guides
all those who seek His Good Pleasure to ways of peace, and He brings them out
of darkness by His Will unto light and guides them to a Straight Way (Islâmic
Monotheism)" (Al-Qur'an, Surah Al-Maeda, Verses: 15-16) (HSH)
Sources:
4. http://www.wnd.com/
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