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He also said:
"I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved. He will come in and go out, and find pasture. The thief comes only to kill and destroy. I have come that they may find life, and have it to the full." (Injil John 10:9,10)
No-one can enter the sheepfold of the True God unless they believe in Jesus and the Atonement which he accomplished according to the revealed Will of God.
Some Comments On Changes In Islamic Thought Over Time
Although it must be admitted that some write merely as parrots of what someone else has told them, Islamic scholars seem to make every attempt to ‘outwit’ their people. Such things are obvious from the way they write. We begin with Yusuf Ali who states:
‘But when were these four Gospels written? By the end of the second century A.D. they were in existence, but it does not follow that they had been selected by that date to form a canon.". (The Holy Qur’an, Appendix III).
Knowledge of the inadequacy of the text of the Qur’an must be behind such an ‘outwitting’, for the true origins of the Gospels (memoirs of the Companions and Tabi’un of Jesus) is historical ‘Proof’ of two matters.
Firstly, it is ‘Proof’ that the ‘sent down’ teaching (i.e. that ‘Books’ pre-existed and were revealed) was something new that came with Muhammad, for the Gospels were written by the Companions and Tabi’un of Jesus as early recorded history of all sorts, and the manuscripts, show. And secondly, it is ‘Proof’ that they were not only "in existence", but had been written well before the end of the 1st century A.D. - in fact during a period covering the middle of the first century - nowhere near 199 A.D..
As we have seen. quotations from the writings of various people who lived at the end of the second century A.D. show us that in fact not only was the origin of the four Gospels well known, but that these were the only ones approved by the Community of Believers.
Why should it be so strange to those in Islam that the other Tab’un and Tab Tabi’un of Jesus should continue to recognise the accepted and firm Beliefs of the Companion and Tabi’un records which they all adhered to and loved, and preserve them?!
If one examines al-Nadim’s Fihrist (advertised for sale by the Muslim Digest UK in 1997) one finds his testimony to the acknowledged content of the Last Testament. He (d. 380AH/990AD) too does not flinch and lists the four Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, as well as Acts [FrAkis] and the Epistles.
He also said:
"I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved. He will come in and go out, and find pasture. The thief comes only to kill and destroy. I have come that they may find life, and have it to the full." (Injil John 10:9,10)
No-one can enter the sheepfold of the True God unless they believe in Jesus and the Atonement which he accomplished according to the revealed Will of God.
Some Comments On Changes In Islamic Thought Over Time
Although it must be admitted that some write merely as parrots of what someone else has told them, Islamic scholars seem to make every attempt to ‘outwit’ their people. Such things are obvious from the way they write. We begin with Yusuf Ali who states:
‘But when were these four Gospels written? By the end of the second century A.D. they were in existence, but it does not follow that they had been selected by that date to form a canon.". (The Holy Qur’an, Appendix III).
Knowledge of the inadequacy of the text of the Qur’an must be behind such an ‘outwitting’, for the true origins of the Gospels (memoirs of the Companions and Tabi’un of Jesus) is historical ‘Proof’ of two matters.
Firstly, it is ‘Proof’ that the ‘sent down’ teaching (i.e. that ‘Books’ pre-existed and were revealed) was something new that came with Muhammad, for the Gospels were written by the Companions and Tabi’un of Jesus as early recorded history of all sorts, and the manuscripts, show. And secondly, it is ‘Proof’ that they were not only "in existence", but had been written well before the end of the 1st century A.D. - in fact during a period covering the middle of the first century - nowhere near 199 A.D..
As we have seen. quotations from the writings of various people who lived at the end of the second century A.D. show us that in fact not only was the origin of the four Gospels well known, but that these were the only ones approved by the Community of Believers.
Why should it be so strange to those in Islam that the other Tab’un and Tab Tabi’un of Jesus should continue to recognise the accepted and firm Beliefs of the Companion and Tabi’un records which they all adhered to and loved, and preserve them?!
If one examines al-Nadim’s Fihrist (advertised for sale by the Muslim Digest UK in 1997) one finds his testimony to the acknowledged content of the Last Testament. He (d. 380AH/990AD) too does not flinch and lists the four Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, as well as Acts [FrAkis] and the Epistles.
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