Yes..
That is interesting, makes me wonder why it doesn’t show.
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Yes..
So, you believe what Jesus says in the Bible?
Why is his name mentioned so many times in the Quran?Muslims dont believe Jesus is represented in the Bible. Maybe some remnants. A little.
Yes..
Most hadiths cannot be authenticated.. and most of them show up 200 years after the death of Muhammed.
Why is his name mentioned so many times in the Quran?
He is thus the most mentioned person in the Quran by reference; 25 times by the name Isa, third-person 48 times, first-person 35 times, and the rest as titles and attributes. Wilikpedia
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@sooda Looks like a dilemma to me: You say Muslims believe what Jesus said, BUT firedragon (a Muslim) says that Muslims don't believe Jesus is represented in the Bible.
On another matter:
Your "source" for that claim? [Hopefully, your source is orthodox Islamic.] (Note: I'm not disputing your claim; I just want to see it "authenticated".)
And finally, what date do you have or know of regarding Uthman's standardization of the text of the Qur'an?
You are making unwarranted associations.
Really?
Conversation A:
Conversation B:
- 1234 posts in #5: "Only thing I wonder is, why don’t Muslims believe Jesus, even though that is what Quran says they should."
- sooda posts in #10: "All the Muslims I have ever talked with believed in Jesus they just don't believe God had a human child... and they don't believe in original sin or blood sacrifice."
- 1234 posts in #30: "So, are you saying they believe what God’s prophet Jesus says?"
- sooda posts in #51: "They believe in all the prophets."
- 1234 posts in #95: "Does that mean they believe what Jesus said?"
- sooda posts in #96: "Yes.."
- 1234 posts in #121: "That is interesting, makes me wonder why it doesn’t show."
- 1234 posts in #31: "So, you believe what Jesus says in the Bible?"
- firedragon posts in #122: "Muslims dont believe Jesus is represented in the Bible. Maybe some remnants. A little."
Me:
- 1234 in Conversation A is the same 1234 in Conversation B.
- I'm going to go way out on a limb here and speculate that
- the Jesus that 1234 talks about in Conversation A is the very same Jesus that he refers to in Conversation B.and
- that the Bible 1234 refers to in both Conversation A and Conversation B is, at the very least, the canonical Bible recognized and used by many folks who characterize themselves as "Christian".
- 1234 identifies himself as a "Disciple of Christ". Until I 1234 or someone who is acquainted with him tells me differently, I'm going to assume that when he talked about what, in Jesus' words, Muslims believe Jesus said, he was specifically and unambiguously referring to THE words of Jesus, recorded in at the very least the gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
- So, when 1234 asked sooda, in Conversation A, #5: "Does that mean they [i.e. Muslims} believe what Jesus said?", he was asking for a factual answer, NOT an opinion.
- sooda, in #6 of the same conversation, answered "Yes", 1234 scratched his head and said (#7): "That is interesting, makes me wonder why it doesn't show."
- Then, in Conversation B, 1234 asks [in #1] someone unknown to me (probably because I have them on "Ignore") "So, you believe what Jesus says in the Bible" which, correctly or incorrectly, I take to be his request for a factual answer, not an opinion.
- And how do you answer that question? Either your answer is, like sooda's, a simple "yes" or it isn't.
- So, tell me, is your answer to 1234's question: "Yes" or "No"?
- If your answer to 1234's question was a straightforward, unambiguous "Yes", then I was indeed mistaken: there is no dilemma.
- But if your answer was, "We Muslims would acknowledge as Jesus' words such words that are indisputably Jesus' words; we just don't believe that all of the words attributed to Jesus in the canonical Christian gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John are actually Jesus' words," then your answer was NOT precisely the same simple "Yes" that sooda gave 1234.
- Ergo, that sure looks like a dilemma to me.
- Of course, it's quite possible that "dilemma" where you come from does not correspond to what that word means where I come from, in which case, until we find an interpreter for our continued conversation, one of us is on the wrong bus.
Can you sum up?
It isn't a yes or no answer. Demanding one you are trying to create a dilemma.
- And how do you answer that question? Either your answer is, like sooda's, a simple "yes" or it isn't.
- So, tell me, is your answer to 1234's question: "Yes" or "No"?
- If your answer to 1234's question was a straightforward, unambiguous "Yes", then I was indeed mistaken: there is no dilemma.
- But if your answer was,
- "We Muslims would acknowledge as Jesus' words such words that are indisputably Jesus' words; we just don't believe that all of the words attributed to Jesus in the canonical Christian gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John are actually Jesus' words," and
- The Qur'an records words spoken by Jesus which are not stated in the Bible,
- Then your answer was NOT precisely the same simple "Yes" that sooda gave 1234.
- Ergo, that sure looks like a dilemma to me.
- Of course, it's quite possible that "dilemma" where you come from does not correspond to what that word means where I come from, in which case, until we find an interpreter for our continued conversation, one of us is on the wrong bus.
LOL! Sure, you're mistaken: I made no unwarranted assumptions. But you sure did.
If you say so.
I did and I do.
Muslims dont believe Jesus is represented in the Bible...
I know why, but I'd like to hear your answer too.Do you know why? And if Bible Jesus is not the prophet of God, who is the Jesus Muslims should believe according to the Quran?
I disagree, actually.The Qu’ran differs from the Hebrew and Christian Bibles in its preoccupation with rules and codes. In distinct contrast to the historical, storytelling nature of both Bibles, the Qu’ran (and Islamic philosophy in general) devotes a significant portion of its space to laying down rules for Muslims to follow.
Actually Muhammad stole material from the Jews and Arian Christians, changing a few things around. No angelic revelation necessary. And don't buy the rumor that he was illiterate.It is my understanding that Muhammad received the revelations from an unidentified voice while in the cave.
Yes, I read the Quran cover to cover as part of my study of Islamic culture and religion.A simple question:
Has one tried to read Quran from cover to cover to form one's own experience with Quran*, please?
Well that is the convenient rumor. Kind of like Jesus being born of a virgin.Muhammed couldn't read and write.