Pico
Well-Known Member
Hello, last thursday, I was talking to some Muslims at my school about Islam, but there were some things about it that didn't really make sense to me. I am a Christian, and I was wondering if anyone can help clarify these for me:
1) Muslims belive that to get to heaven all you have to do is ask God to forgive your sins; that's all you have to do and he will. Now what I don't get is this: if God made it that from day 1 (considering that God is un-changing) that by simply asking for forgiveness he will forgive you, why would he withhold such valuable information from the Jews (his "chosen people")? That seems like a cruel thing for a loving god to do. Not only that, but Jesus would never have had to, nor been wiling to give up his life for humanity.
God made it clear that without the shedding of blood, there can be no forgiveness of sins. The Jews would sacrifice animals to forgive their sins, Christians have Jesus, who took the punishment of all humanity's sins on the Cross. Where's this "shedding of blood" in Islam?
2)Muslims believe that Jesus was not the son of God and did not die for forgiveness of our sins. Yet in the Old Testament, there are some 200 prophecies about the Messiah, who will save God's chosen people so that they will not have to be separated from Him forever. All these prophecies were fullfilled by Jesus, which talk about his life, lineage, where he would be born, how he would die, and how people would react to him. Many of those are completely out of Jesus' controll.
Now other prophets were able to perform miracles with the power granted to them by God, yet none of them claimed to be God like Jesus did (there are many documents, including non-Christian documents about Jesus doing things only God has the authority to do, like telling people their sins are forgiven). Now, if Jesus was not the Son of God like he claimed it would be blasphemy, and why would God give him the authority to do such miracles as raising the dead, healing the sick, paralized, blind, lame, etc.?
3) The Muslims I talked to said that the other 2 religions--Judaism, and Christianity--really got it wrong, and that Islam is the clarification of what really is. But the Bible was written by some 60 authors (about 20 for the New Testament) and is very consistent with itself, plus there are around 100,000 sources that have been found that back up what the Bible says (with about 30,000 about Jesus alone); whereas the Quaran was written by 1 man (Muhammad? I read that the oldest manuscript of the Quaran was dated to 100+ years after the death of Muhammad). What seems more likely: that 60 people got it wrong, or that 1 person got it wrong?
1) Muslims belive that to get to heaven all you have to do is ask God to forgive your sins; that's all you have to do and he will. Now what I don't get is this: if God made it that from day 1 (considering that God is un-changing) that by simply asking for forgiveness he will forgive you, why would he withhold such valuable information from the Jews (his "chosen people")? That seems like a cruel thing for a loving god to do. Not only that, but Jesus would never have had to, nor been wiling to give up his life for humanity.
God made it clear that without the shedding of blood, there can be no forgiveness of sins. The Jews would sacrifice animals to forgive their sins, Christians have Jesus, who took the punishment of all humanity's sins on the Cross. Where's this "shedding of blood" in Islam?
2)Muslims believe that Jesus was not the son of God and did not die for forgiveness of our sins. Yet in the Old Testament, there are some 200 prophecies about the Messiah, who will save God's chosen people so that they will not have to be separated from Him forever. All these prophecies were fullfilled by Jesus, which talk about his life, lineage, where he would be born, how he would die, and how people would react to him. Many of those are completely out of Jesus' controll.
Now other prophets were able to perform miracles with the power granted to them by God, yet none of them claimed to be God like Jesus did (there are many documents, including non-Christian documents about Jesus doing things only God has the authority to do, like telling people their sins are forgiven). Now, if Jesus was not the Son of God like he claimed it would be blasphemy, and why would God give him the authority to do such miracles as raising the dead, healing the sick, paralized, blind, lame, etc.?
3) The Muslims I talked to said that the other 2 religions--Judaism, and Christianity--really got it wrong, and that Islam is the clarification of what really is. But the Bible was written by some 60 authors (about 20 for the New Testament) and is very consistent with itself, plus there are around 100,000 sources that have been found that back up what the Bible says (with about 30,000 about Jesus alone); whereas the Quaran was written by 1 man (Muhammad? I read that the oldest manuscript of the Quaran was dated to 100+ years after the death of Muhammad). What seems more likely: that 60 people got it wrong, or that 1 person got it wrong?