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Why I am not a Muslim
My Questions to Muslims
Sura 61:14 and Church History
O ye who believe! Be ye helpers of Allah:
As said Jesus the son of Mary to the Disciples,
"Who will be my helpers to (the work of) Allah?"
Said the disciples, "We are Allah's helpers!"
then a portion of the Children of Israel believed,
and a portion disbelieved:
But We gave power to those who believed,
against their enemies,
and they became the ones that prevailed.
Sura 61:14
In this verse of the Qur'an, seemingly God himself says, that those
who believed in Jesus as the disciples did, were those who prevailed.
The Qur'an acknowledges that there was strife and enmity, that
these true believers indeed had enemies, but in the end, the true
believers were those who prevailed. And this not by accident, since
it is God himself who gives this power to the true believers.
Looking at this very clear verse, I wonder why Muslims seem to
completely disregard it and declare that true Christianity and the
true message of Jesus became corrupted and Christianity is wrong.
Does this Islamic theory of the "corruption of Christianity" not
mean that the true believers, those which followed and believed
the true message of Jesus did indeed NOT prevail?
Yes, Church history agrees there was much battle over the right
doctrine and correct faith between the different interpretations
taken by some. And especially in the early fourth century the
theological battle between those whose spokesman was Athanasios
and the large following that Arius had at this time. This debate
went on for a number of years. But in the end it was a clear victory
of orthodox Trinitarian Christianity. And this battle was completely
decided in the fourth century, nearly 250 years before the Qur'an
was given to Muhammad.
This seems to leave us with the alternative that either
- Orthodox Trinitarian Christianity is right [because they are
the ones who prevailed], or
- the author of the Qur'an was not well informed about Church history.
But it is worse than that. Most Muslims believe that Jesus preached
in essence the "same Islam" as Muhammad did. But we have NO record at
all of any group believing similarly to what we find in Islam. We have
record of many different groups which claimed to be Christians. Some
very small, some larger ones. Some of them "still acceptable" with
only minor deviations from orthodox Christianity, some totally heretic.
But not only did no "Islam-like" group prevail, there didn't even exist
one. Or, if Muslims still want to claim the existence of such a group,
it was so insignificant as to not leave any trace of its existence at
all, not to speak of "prevailing" or "being uppermost" [as the Shakir
and Pickthall translations render it].
Furthermore, Jesus said basically the same as the Qur'an:
I will build my church,
and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it.
Matthew 16:18
This means: Even though the powers of death and destruction will try
to overpower the church, Jesus prophecies that they will not succeed,
and the true church [HIS church] will not be overpowered but stand
secure in these attacks. NOT: It will be corrupted and dissolve and
then God will send a new prophet to reestablish a community of true
believers.
Muslims and Christians agree that God is All-knowing and wouldn't make
such mistakes. Either the Muslims are wrong with their theory of a
corrupted Christianity, or, if that is indeed necessary for Islam,
then at least this verse is wrong and therefore didn't come from
the omniscient God, but from a less well-informed source.
But if (this part of) the Qur'an is not from God, how do you know
the rest of the Qur'an is and what do you base this confidence on?
And even Yusuf Ali's commentary, footnote 5448 says:
A portion of the Children of Israel - the ones that really cared
for Truth - believed in Jesus and followed his guidance. But the
greater portion of them were hard hearted, and remained in their
beaten track of formalism and false racial pride. The majority
SEEMED at first to have the upper hand when they thought they
had crucified Jesus and killed his Message. But they were soon
brought to their senses. Jerusalem was destroyed by Titus in
A.D. 70 and the Jews have been scattered ever since. "The Wandering
Jew" has become a bye-word in many literatures. On the other hand,
those who followed Jesus permeated the Roman Empire, brought many
new races withing their circle, and through the Roman Empire,
Christianity became the predominant religion of the world until
the advent of Islam....
I.e. Yusuf Ali interprets this verse clearly as refering to that
Christianity which permeated the Roman Empire, not some unknown other
group of Christians. Again, you just can't "overlook" those who
prevailed. It can only refer to those who are the victors in the end.
And to this day, though there are small minorities who hold heretical
views but call themselves Christians, the vast majority of Christian
Churches is firmly Trinitarian and especially this was clearly the
case at the very time the Qur'an was preached by Muhammad.
Side remark:
Even though arguments for truth (quality) from numbers (quantity) are
fallacious, Muslims bring it up ever so often. Hence note: Until this
day, Christianity has at least 50% more adherents than Islam (2 Billion
and 1.2 Billion). And though Islam has become strong to a certain extent,
it is after 1400 years still far from prevailing over Christianity.
Also, around 900 or even 1400 AD, with the large Muslim Empire still
intact and before the missions movement in Christianity from the 18th
century onwards there might well have been more Muslims on this earth
than Christians. What does that then tell us about long term growth
rates? Why do you think the *current growth rate* is so much more
meaningful than this long term growth rate?
If we believe that God is the author of these words, there seems to
be a problem. If we assume it was Muhammad who composed them, then
they make perfect sense. What I pointed out above, is solid history,
nobody has any basis to disagree with it. The following are purely
my thoughts on the issue, trying to find an explanation for the
observations. Feel free to completely disagree. But do you have a
better explanation?
Yusuf Ali in his introduction to this Sura says that the date of it is
not known, but most probably just after the battle of Uhud, i.e. just
after the Muslim community had a major setback and was defeated by
the unbelievers.
Muhammad was a clever man, and he had travelled quite a bit in the
Middle East as the head administrator of Khadijja's caravan business.
He would have talked to the people through whose country he travelled
and would have known that the Christians originally were a very
persecuted and small minority. First persecuted by the Jews, later
mainly by the powerful Roman empire, but he would also have seen that
in most areas where he came to the Christians were the ones ruling
now. Despite their initial smallness and weakness they had finally
prevailed over all their enemies, both the Jews and the Romans.
So, what could have been more encouragement to his small dispised
community of followers [if it was a Mekkan Sura] or this just defeated
Muslim community [if after the Battle of Uhud as Yusuf Ali states],
than to remind them that the followers of the prophet Jesus were in
just the same situation [first in Israel and then in the Roman empire]
as the Muslims now [in Mekka/Medina/Arabia]. But God gave THEM victory
over their enemies - even though not immediately - but in the end it
was the true believers which prevailed by the power of God. Therefore,
don't give up, take heart, God is with us and we also will eventually
prevail even if it is difficult now.
Muhammad was a man who knew how to lead people, no question about that.
And reading it this way, it makes perfect sense.
Though this was excellent "encouragement psychology", Muhammad seemingly
wasn't familiar with the true Christian faith and doctrines. Otherwise
he might have been more careful in what he was saying here.
To summarize, the problem is:
Was God uninformed about the kind of Christianity that had prevailed?
Or was Muhammad uninformed about the Christianity that had prevailed?
Either way, this is a "difficult" verse with quite some consequences.
Or do you see a way that is able to view this verse both in line with
historical reality and with divine omniscience?
Another article along similar lines: The Qur'an Affirms:
Paul Passed On The True Gospel of Christ
Copyright © 1997 Jochen Katz. All rights reserved.
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