The Quran contains extensive references to Jesus (25 mentions) and Mary (34 mentions), including an entire chapter dedicated to Jesus's birth that preserves the virgin birth doctrine with more detail than the Bible, uses the same divine titles (Messiah, Word of God) as the Gospel of John, attributes miracles to Jesus that are unique to him in Islamic theology, and describes Jesus as the only sinless human while Muhammad is instructed to seek forgiveness for his sins. Most significantly, the Quran denies Jesus's crucifixion and resurrection, claiming he was raised alive to heaven, which directly contradicts the foundational Christian belief in the resurrection. This reveals that both religions share literary traditions about Jesus rather than being completely separate, and that the wall between Christianity and Islam is maintained by institutional silence rather than theological incompatibility.
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What the Quran Says About Jesus Is So DARK Both Church and Mosque Want You to Forget | SpinozaAdded:
two billion Christians and two billion Muslims pray to two different versions of the same man. You weren't taught that. You were taught the two religions are opposites. That Islam rejects Christianity.
That whatever Jesus is in the Quran, he's some downgraded prophet barely worth a footnote. So, I went and read it [music] with the Bible open on the other side. And what's in the Quran about Jesus, I'll just put it this way, is not what you were told it was. The Quran mentions Jesus by name 25 times. It mentions Muhammad four. I count it.
Jesus's mother, Mary, is mentioned by name 34 times. And she's the only woman named in the entire book. There's a chapter of the Quran called Medium.
There's no chapter named after Muhammad's mother. The book you were taught to fear as an attack on Christianity gives more page space to Jesus and his mother than it does to the prophet of Islam. And buried in chapter 4 of that book, [music] there is a single sentence, one sentence about the morning 2 billion Christians stake their faith on. A sentence that depending on how you read it, ends one of the two religions. Both books are making historical claims about the same hill on the same Friday at the same hour.
[music] And the church doesn't quote that sentence. The mosque doesn't put it on the front page. We're going to get there. One of these facts is that the only sinless human in the entire Islamic universe is not the founder of Islam.
We'll get to him. This is not content for people who need their religion left alone. [music] But if you're still here, if the question of what the other book says about your savior or your [music] prophet has ever crossed your mind, you're going to walk out of the next 20 minutes with a wall in your head dismantled. The first thing the Quran says about Jesus that ends a piece of what you were taught is about his birth.
You were raised believing, whether you grew up Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, or anything in between, that the virgin birth is what makes Christianity Christianity. It's the dividing line, the doctrine that proves Jesus is unique, the miracle that separates him from every other religious figure in human history. No other religion has it.
That's been the line for 2,000 years.
The Quran has it. Not a watered down version, not a partial reference, the whole thing with details the Bible doesn't even include. There's an entire chapter of the Quran, chapter 19, called [music] Medium, named after Mary, that walks through Jesus's birth from the announcement of the angel to the moment the infant Jesus opens his mouth in the cradle and tells his mother's confused neighbors who he is. I want to take you through it because the only way to understand what the Quran preserves about Jesus is to actually read it.
Chapter 19.
The angel comes to Mary. The Quran says she had withdrawn from her family. She is alone. The angel appears and she is afraid. The angel tells her not to be afraid. And then [music] the words, I'm quoting the Quran here, straight English translation. The angel announces, "I am only a messenger of your Lord to give you the gift of a pure boy." A pure boy.
The word the Quran uses there means morally clean, untouched by sin, set apart from birth. Then verse 20, Mary asks the question Mary asks in the Gospels, too. How can I have a son when no man has touched me and I have not been unchased? The Quran's answer is the same as Luke's. With God, it is easy.
[music] He has decreed it. She conceives without a man. And here's where it gets stranger. Because the Quran doesn't just preserve the virgin birth. It expands it. In Luke, Mary travels to Bethlehem with Joseph for a census, gives birth in a stable, lays the baby in a manger, the shepherds come, the angels sing. In the Quran, none of that. Mary is alone. She withdraws to a remote place. The pains of childbirth drive her to the trunk of a date palm tree.
Just a tree, by the way, in the middle of nowhere. No inn, no stable, no Joseph anywhere in the scene. The Quran has her say, "And look, this is the Quran I'm quoting, not some apocryphal text." Oh, I wish I had died before this and been forgotten.
That's in the Holy Book of Islam. Mary's grief, her shame, her isolation, her wish to be erased rather than face her family carrying a child she can't explain. A voice calls to her from beneath her. The Quran says the voice tells her not to grieve. There's a stream beneath her. The palm tree above her will drop fresh dates if she shakes it. Eat, drink, be comforted. Then Mary returns to her people carrying the baby.
Her people accuse her. They say, and again this is the Quran, "Oh sister of Aaron, your father was not an evil man and your mother was not unchased. She is being accused of fornication in front of her village." And then the part that has no parallel in the Bible. Mary points to the baby. The crowd says what crowds say, "How can we speak to one who is a child in the cradle?" The infant Jesus speaks. He says and the Quran puts the words in his mouth in chapter 19:30.
Indeed, I am the servant of Allah. He has given me the scripture and made me a prophet and he has made me blessed wherever I am. And then verse 33, the infant Jesus in the cradle says, "And peace be upon me the day I was born, the day I will die, and the day I am raised alive." Stop. Read that line again. the day he is raised alive spoken from the mouth of the infant in the holy book of the religion you were told denies the resurrection and here's the thing that should sit with you about this scene the Quran doesn't have to include any of it could have skipped Mary entirely could have said Jesus was born to a woman became a prophet taught monotheism end of story which would have been you know the cleaner move theologically that's the bas basic shape of every other prophet in the book. Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, none of them get this treatment. They don't get a chapter named after their mother. They don't get a virgin birth. And cradle speech. No, that's Jesus alone. The Quran insists on every detail. the angel, the virginity, Mary's shame told from her own lips, the palm tree, and the infant who opens his mouth and announces who he is. A book that supposedly corrects Christianity gives Jesus a more spectacular childhood than three of the four gospels do. Mark doesn't even mention his birth. [music] The Quran spends an entire chapter on it. I keep coming back to that scene, the baby talking, because once you've read it, you can't undo what it implies about the wall between the two religions. The doctrine that one institution sells as its uniquely guarded miracle is sitting whole in the holy book of the institution that's supposed to oppose it. Same scene, same virgin, same impossible birth. Two books reaching for the same story, 600 years apart. and both of them treating it as their own. That is not what two unrelated divine revelations look like.
That is what two literary traditions look like [music] when one is reading and reworking the other. Every imam in your local mosque learned about the Mary chapter in the first year of his training. The pastor or [music] priest you grew up under, assuming you grew up Christian, read about it in seminary.
two pulpits, the same silence. Because if the virgin birth isn't the line between the two religions, the line [music] isn't where you were told it is.
And neither institution wants you starting to ask where the line actually [music] runs. And if the birth wasn't enough to put a crack in the wall, what they call him next is what finishes the job. The titles. You were taught the titles. Christ, Messiah, Word of God.
Those are Christian titles. They were built on a theology of incarnation that other religions explicitly rejected. To call Jesus the word of God is to make a claim about his nature that no other religion would touch. That's been the assumption.
Every one of those titles is in the Quran. Intact. Chapter 3:45.
The angel comes to Mary again. Different chapter, same scene from a different angle. The angel announces the child she's about to have. And the angel says, I'm reading the Quran. Allah gives you good tidings of a word from him whose name will be the Messiah, Jesus, son of Mary, distinguished in this world [music] and in the hereafter, and among those brought near. The Messiah. Not a Messiah. The Messiah. The same title the Hebrew Bible uses for the figure Israel was waiting for. The same title the New Testament gives Jesus from cover to cover. The Quran uses it for Jesus 11 separate times. He is not just Messiah.
[music] He is the Messiah.
The figure the entire Old Testament points toward. The Quran preserves that title for Jesus and applies it to no one else. Then there's chapter 4 verse 171 where the load drops. The Quran is in the middle of warning Christians against worshiping the Trinity. It is making the Islamic case against the divinity of Christ. And in the very passage where it is denying his divinity, it calls him this. I'm quoting [music] the Messiah.
Jesus son of Mary was the messenger of Allah and his word which he bestowed on Mary and a spirit from him. his word, a spirit from him. You read the Gospel of John, the most divinity loaded book in the New Testament, and the opening line, the one painted on cathedral walls and quoted at every Easter sunrise service, says, "In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God." The Quran calls Jesus the word of God.
The same Quran that's busy denying his divinity uses for him the title that the most divinity loaded book of the Christian Bible builds the doctrine of incarnation on and calls him a spirit from God on top of it and does it in the same breath as denying he is divine. You see the problem? Either the Quran is leaking a divinity claim it can't take back and the Islamic theology of Jesus as merely human prophet has spent 1,400 years suppressing what its own book says about him or the title word of God never actually meant divinity in the first place in which case the Christian doctrine of incarnation is reading something into the title that was never there. One of two religions is reading its own central title for Jesus wrong.
There isn't a third reading. The mosque does not preach chapter 4 verse 171 with the emphasis on what it calls Jesus. The church does not preach that the Quran's most divine sounding language is reserved exclusively for the figure the church claims as its own. Both pulpits have read it. They've all kind of just moved on. So if the Quran calls Jesus the word of God and a spirit from him, you'd expect Jesus to do God things in the book, things no other prophet does things. And this is the part that gets uncomfortable for Islamic theology. No other prophet is allowed to do the miracles. That's where the Quran's own internal grading of its prophets shows up. You were taught that Muhammad is the supreme prophet of Islam, the seal, the greatest of them all. And like everyone, you probably assumed without ever needing to check that he is the supreme prophet [music] because he did supreme things. Healed the sick, multiplied bread, walked on water, the kind [music] of stuff that historically separates a prophet from a mere preacher. Now look in the Quran for Muhammad's miracles.
You won't find many. You won't find any really not the kind Christians [music] would mean. There is a passage chapter 17 90 to 93 where the disbelievers come to Muhammad and demand a miracle. They want [music] a stream gushed from the ground, a house of gold, a ladder to heaven. The Quran's response given through Muhammad himself is essentially, I'm just a messenger. I don't do that.
The miracle is the Quran. The book is the proof. That's the answer across the entire Quran. That is it. The book itself is the miracle. No walking on water. No multiplication of loaves. The Quran's Muhammad is in his own book's account. A man who delivered words and [music] asked you to take the words seriously. He does not raise the dead.
He does not make birds out of clay.
Now look at what the Quran attributes to Jesus. Chapter 3:49.
The Quran has Jesus speaking and I'm [music] quoting, "I design for you out of clay the figure of a bird. Then I breathe into it and it becomes a bird by Allah's permission. I heal the blind from birth and the leper and I bring the dead to life by Allah's permission."
Read that slowly because honestly the Quran has Jesus making a bird out of clay.
Real clay like dirt and water clay breathing into it and the clay becoming a living bird, not a metaphor, not a vision. The text describes it as something Jesus does in front of people.
The bird flies away. The same passage repeats in chapter 5 110. Allah is speaking, listing favors he gave to Jesus. And the favor list includes the clay bird, the healing of the blind, the healing of the leper, and raising the dead. And there is more. Chapter 5:es 112 to 115. The disciples come to Jesus and ask him for a sign. They ask for a heavenly table, actual food sent down from the sky. Jesus prays. Allah sends the table. The disciples eat. It is the last supper.
Except in the Quran's version, the meal literally descends from heaven. Jesus delivers the heavenly miracle on demand.
Now hold these two columns next to each other. On Muhammad's side, zero physical miracles in the Quran outside the book itself. On Jesus's side, cradle speech, clay birds breathing and flying, healing the incurable, raising the dead, calling down a feast from heaven. Here's the part that gets uncomfortable for Islamic theology. Creating life, breathing into clay, watching it move, watching it become a flying bird.
That act belongs to Allah in the Quran.
Just Allah. Everywhere else in the book, that's the line you don't cross. No prophet does it. Adam doesn't. Even though Adam himself was made from clay, Abraham doesn't either. Moses, with all his signs in front of Pharaoh, no.
Muhammad, definitely not. The act of breathing life into matter is in everything the Quran says about who God is, what makes Allah Allah. [music] And then the Quran has Jesus do it. The standard Islamic apologetic move is the phrase by Allah's permission. Jesus does not do it himself. He does it as Allah's instrument, which is fair. But every other prophet in the Quran does what they do by Allah's permission, too. None of them are permitted this. The exception is Jesus, and the exception is unique. I find this one harder to move past than the others, and I'll tell you why. It's not a story the Quran needed to include. The Quran could have given Jesus the standard profit package. A message, a community, opposition, hardship without giving him the act reserved for God. It chose to. The book that exists [music] in part to correct what it sees as Christian overreach about Jesus's nature gives him the most godlike miracle in scripture and then in the same passage insists he is just a man. Every imam knows this. Every Quranic scholar knows this.
the mental gymnastics it takes to keep Jesus on the human side of the line.
While the text itself has him doing the one thing humans don't do, those gymnastics are taught in Islamic theology departments. They are not secret. They are just not what gets repeated from the pulpit on Friday afternoon. The miracle worker the Quran describes is Jesus. The messenger the Quran describes is Muhammad. Two roles.
The book is not subtle about which is which. And the gap between those two roles only gets wider from here. Quick thing of the three so far, the birth, the titles, or the miracles, which one hit hardest? Drop it in the comments.
The next three get sharper. Three things now. The birth, the doctrine you thought made Christianity uniquely Christian, found whole in the holy book of the religion that's supposed to oppose Christianity. the titles, the same divine sounding language the Gospel of John uses for Jesus, preserved word for word in the Quran, and the miracles, including the act the Quran reserves for Allah alone, given to one prophet and one prophet only. A reasonable person watching might think, "Okay, the Quran is more generous about Jesus than I knew. Interesting trivia. But the wall between the two religions still has to be somewhere. has to be in the parts I haven't seen yet. Three centuries ago, a young Jewish philosopher in Amsterdam named Baroo Spinosza developed one rule for moments like this. He said, "When two books make competing claims about the same person, you do not pick a side based on which book your mother read to you at night. You read both. You let the words speak. You don't smuggle in the assumption of either book's perfection."
They didn't have the word objectivity back then exactly, but that's what he was reaching for. He paid the highest price his community could exact [music] for saying that out loud. They cursed his name with curses that 370 years later have never been lifted. His method applied here says this, "The wall between Christianity and Islam doesn't run where the institutions want you to think.
It runs through three more places, each one sharper than the last. And the last one is the one that, if you read it carefully, ends one of the two religions outright. There's a category I haven't named yet. Purity.
[snorts] And this one is the part of the book that should make every Muslim audience uncomfortable and every Christian audience uncomfortable for the opposite reason. You were taught if you grew up in any Islamic context at all that all the prophets of Islam are equal. Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, six of the great ones with Muhammad as the seal, the greatest, the final and most complete, equal in their prophecy, equal in their purity, all of them protected from major sin by [music] Allah. The Quran disagrees with the doctrine of equal purity. The Quran sets one prophet apart from every other prophet, including Muhammad. And the prophet it sets apart is Jesus. Go back to that scene under the palm tree when the angel announces Mary's pregnancy.
The exact phrase the angel uses for the child she is going to have in chapter 19 is a pure boy. Not righteous, not chosen, pure, morally clean, untouched by sin from the moment of conception.
That announcement is unique. Search the Quran for any other prophet introduced this way before he can speak. Adam isn't. Neither is Noah. Abraham gets close in one passage, but not at birth.
Not before he can speak. Moses, no. And Muhammad, and this is the hard part, explicitly [music] isn't because 300 pages later in the same book in chapter 47:E 19, Allah commands Muhammad. The line is direct.
Know that there is no god but Allah and ask forgiveness for your sin and for the sin of believing men and believing women. The word the Quran uses for sin in that verse is the same word the Quran uses for the sins of nations Allah destroys for their wickedness. Sodom, Pharaoh's Egypt, the people of Ad, not a polite word, not poetic flourish. The Quran tells Muhammad to seek forgiveness for the same category of fault that gets entire civilizations leveled. Then chapter 48:es 1 and 2. This is the famous opening, the one every Muslim has heard at some point. Allah speaking to Muhammad, we have granted you a clear victory that Allah may forgive you your past and future sins. Past and future sins already forgiven of the seal of prophets. The man Muslims are taught to consider the highest of the high. The hadith collections, the most authoritative sources after the Quran, make it explicit.
Bkadi, the gold standard of Sunni Hadith, records Muhammad himself saying he asked forgiveness from Allah more than 70 times a day. 70 per day of the sinless prophet supposedly. Now stack those next to the verse that calls Jesus pure before he can speak. The Quran's own internal grading is clear. One prophet is announced as morally pure before he can even speak. The other is told by the same Allah in the same book to seek forgiveness for past and future sin and asks for it daily for the rest of his life. [sighs] And look, I don't have any horse in the Islamic theological race, but once you've read those two verses next to each other, the one that calls Jesus pure before he can speak, and the one that tells Muhammad to repent for his own sin, you can't unread them, 300 pages apart in the same book, written by the same hand, claimed to be the same revelation. One announces a prophet as already pure. The other commands a prophet to repent. [music] The book grades them. The doctrine of equal purity is the doctrine arguing with its own book. The pulpit version of Islam has spent 1,400 years smoothing this over. The seminary version has spent 1,400 years explaining it. Every Islamic scholar with a degree has an answer for why ask forgiveness for your sin doesn't really mean ask forgiveness for your sin. Some of those answers are sophisticated.
Some are reasonable. None of them is what a child reading the Quran for the first time would conclude. A child reading it for the first time would conclude what the words on the page actually say. One prophet is pure. The other isn't. The book itself isn't pretending they're the same. If the prophet who never sinned is Jesus, you'd expect the Quran to save the biggest job for him, too.
The job at the end of everything, the closing scene, the last act of the whole story, whatever you want to call it.
That is exactly what the Quran does. You were taught that Muhammad is final, that Islam ends with him, seals with him as the last messenger, completes with him as the perfect example of submission.
The Quran agrees about the message. The message is sealed. There's no more revelation coming after the Quran, but the ending of history, the actual closing event, the figure who returns, the figure who [music] confronts the antichrist of Islamic tradition, the figure who breaks the cross and rules injustice [music] and finally dies a natural death is not Muhammad. It is Jesus. The Quran says it directly twice, though in compressed form. [music] Chapter 43:61 Allah speaking. And indeed Jesus will be a sign of the hour. So do not be in doubt of it and follow me. Sign of the hour. The hour is the day of judgment, the closing of history, the return.
Jesus is its sign, not Muhammad. And that's what should make you stop. The Quran is naming the closing figure of history. and the figure it names isn't the prophet of Islam. The Quran's choice for the closing role is Jesus. And chapter 4 verse 159, the Quran says about Jesus, "And there is none of the people of the scripture but will believe in him before his death." before his death. Implication: He is not yet dead.
He is somewhere alive awaiting the moment. The Quran doesn't say much more than that. The hadith do Bkari and Muslim the two hadith collections every Sunni treats as the gold standard make the esquetology explicit. And by explicit I mean well look it's [music] pretty detailed. Jesus descends. He lands on the white minouret in Damascus.
[music] He confronts the false messiah of Islamic tradition, the figure Islam calls the antichrist and defeats him.
The cross gets broken. And that's the literal language by the way. Breaks the cross. Meaning Christianity ends by his presence. [music] The special tax non-Muslims paid in Islamic states is abolished. 40 years of just rule. Then he dies a natural death [music] and is buried. Tradition holds that there's a grave reserved for him in Medina next to Muhammad's grave. Kept empty, waiting.
Muhammad has zero role in this. Zero.
[music] The seal of prophets does not return. He's not the one breaking the cross. He's not the one who confronts the deceiver of the world. He watches [music] from wherever the dead prophet watches while another prophet, the pure boy from the palm tree, closes history on his behalf. Think about what that means structurally. Muhammad is final in the sense that he is the last to bring scripture. Jesus is final in the sense that he is the last to bring justice.
Two finalities, two endings.
And every imam in every mosque on this planet knows knows with certainty from the Quran and from the most authoritative hadith that the prophet who walks onto the stage of the closing scene is Issa, Jesus, son of Mary. Not the prophet whose name is on the title page of every mosque on earth. The doctrine of Muhammad's supremacy is doctrine. The text grades the prophets differently. The text saves the climactic role for the one who was announced as pure before he could speak.
The text already told you who the central figure of the religion's biggest moment is.
You just weren't told to read it that way. Five things now. The birth, the titles, the miracles, the purity, the return. Every one of them runs in the same direction. There is one verse left, one single sentence buried in chapter 4.
And on this sentence, the wall between Christianity and Islam either holds or it falls. The sentence is in chapter 4 of the Quran, verse 157. Before I read it, I want you to feel what is about to be at stake. For two billion people on this planet, one morning matters more than any other morning that has ever been or ever will be. The morning Jesus walked out of a tomb. Take that morning away and you take Christianity with it.
Paul said it himself 2,000 years ago in 1 Corinthians 15:1 17. If Christ has not been raised, your faith is feudal. his words, "The whole structure of two billion people's faith rests on a single morning in a garden outside Jerusalem."
The Quran in 4:57 denies the morning happened. I'm going to read it slowly quoting directly. And for their saying, indeed we have killed the Messiah Jesus son of Mary, the messenger of Allah.
They did not kill him, nor did they crucify him, but it was made to appear so to them. Three claims in one sentence. They did not kill him. They did not crucify him. It was made to appear so. The mainstream interpretation held in Sunni Islam for 1,400 years, taught in every major religious school from Cairo to Karach, is what's called the substitution view, which the name kind of gives it away. Someone else was made to look like Jesus. That someone was put on the cross. Jesus was raised alive into the heavens. He's still up there. He's the one waiting to come back. The grave in Medina kept empty for him. Sit with what that means. The morning that anchors the Christian universe didn't happen. Not the way you were told. There was a body on a cross outside Jerusalem on a Friday afternoon somewhere around the year 30. The body wasn't his. The wounds were real. The wounds were on someone else. The grief at the foot of the cross was real. The grief was misdirected.
The empty tomb was empty because there was never anyone in it to begin with.
That's the Quran's account. If the Quran is right, here is what follows. Every Easter sermon is referring to a transit, not a return. The hymn says, "He is risen." And he was risen in the Quran's version, but he was risen alive into the sky before the Romans got to him, not risen out of a grave they put him in.
The crucifixion was theater. The tomb was theater. The resurrection was a misunderstanding that 2,000 years of liturgy hardened into doctrine. and salvation the way Christianity has always meant it. Atonement through the sacrifice of God's son on a cross never happened. There was nothing to be saved from on that hill because there was never a sacrifice on that hill. If the Bible is right, here is what follows for Islam. The Quran makes a historical claim that Jesus was not crucified that contradicts every single non-Christian source we have from the period. Tacitus, the Roman historian, writing around 116, describes the execution under Pontius Pilate as a known historical fact.
Josephus, the Jewish historian, mentions it twice. There's also a Greek satist named Lucian 2 century who in passing makes fun of Christians for worshiping the man who was crucified in Palestine.
He's not even on the side of Christians.
He's mocking them. And he treats the crucifixion as just obvious. The crucifixion of Jesus under Pilate is one of the most attested events in the entire ancient world. To deny that it happened is to deny historical method itself. And if the Quran is wrong about a verifiable historical fact about its own central figure of Jesus, what other historical claims in the book are we supposed to trust? There is no third option for the believer. No symbolic reading reconciles them. The both true on different levels move doesn't really work either because both books are making historical claims about the same man on the same hill on the same Friday in the same century. The Romans either nailed him to a cross or they didn't.
The Quran says they didn't. The Bible says they did. Both accounts cannot be true. But there is a third option. It just isn't an option either institution wants on the table. The third option is that both books are doing what books do.
They were written by people. People with theological agendas in different centuries, in different [music] languages, making claims about events neither author witnessed. The Bible got an execution roughly right because Roman crucifixion was as common as a public hanging in the medieval era. The Quran got the cosmic theology of Jesus right by the standards of the audience it was speaking to in 7th century Arabia.
Neither book is reporting from the scene. Both books are doing literature.
And the contradiction between them isn't evidence that one is right and the other is wrong. It is evidence that the category itself divinely authored book that cannot air cracks the second you put two such books next to each other and let them speak. That is the option neither pulpit teaches. Not the church because it needs the resurrection. Not the mosque because it needs the Quran's perfect inherency. Both institutions need the contradiction to be a contest with a winner. Because the moment you let it be evidence about the category, both lose.
The Christian and the Muslim are praying to two different mournings. They cannot both have happened. And every institution that depends on them has spent 1,400 years making sure you never read both books at the same time. I need to stop here because I know what some of you are sitting with right now. If you grew up Christian, the resurrection isn't a story to you. Someone in your family is buried with the words, "He is risen," carved or read or sung over them. Someone you loved went into the ground in the language of an empty tomb.
The morning you've just been shown another religion's account of, that morning has carried real weight in your real life. And if you grew up Muslim, the Quran isn't a book to you. It's the book. The one you were told contains no error of any kind ever on any subject.
And what you've just been shown is a verse that taken at face value asserts something about the past that the rest of the world's records contradict directly. Both of those are real things to be carrying right now. I'm not going to tell you what to do with them. I'm just going to tell you what they are.
The wall between Christianity and Islam is not a fortress. It is a curtain. And on both sides of the curtain, an institution is holding it shut. Not because the other book threatens what is true, because the other book threatens what is useful. For most of you watching, none of this is news in the sense that you are about to lose anything. You walked away from one of these books or both a long time ago or you never walked into them in the first place depending on where you come from.
What this is is confirmation.
Confirmation that the suspicion you carried that something in the structure of how these books work doesn't add up was the right suspicion all along. You don't have to argue with anyone's faith.
You don't have to defend a version of any of this. You don't have to pick a side in a fight where both sides depend on you not seeing the third reading.
Tell me which one of these knocked the loudest for you. The virgin birth, the doctrine the church sold you as Christianity's exclusive proof. Sitting whole inside the holy book of the religion that's supposed to [music] be against it. the titles, every divine sounding name the Gospel of John uses for Jesus, preserved by the Quran for the figure that same Quran is supposedly demoting, the pure boy, the only sinless human in the entire Islamic universe, while the founder of Islam is told by his own Allah to ask forgiveness for his own sin. or the verse in chapter 4, the single sentence that if you take it at face value means the morning 2 billion Christians stake their faith on never happened the way they were told. Drop the one that did the most damage in the comments. I read every one. And if this video did the work for you, hit the like button. Not because I need it, because the algorithm uses it to decide whether to push this kind of content into anyone else's feed. And the kind of work this channel does, reading the books carefully, both books, neither institution is paying for. The like is what gets it past the gatekeepers. Smash it. And if there is someone in your life still inside one of these religions, still defending one book against the other, send this to them. Not to convert anyone, not to undermine anyone's faith.
Send it because they deserve to read both books before deciding what to do with either one. Reading carefully is not an attack on belief. It's the minimum dignity of belief. Two religions, one man between them. And for 1,400 years, the only thing holding the wall up has been the silence on both sides about what the other one says he as
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