"No one who denies the Son has the Father; whoever acknowledges the Son has the Father also." (1 John 2:23 NIV)
Long before Muhammad was born, Arabic Christians were already
referring to God as Allah — and millions continue to do so today. The
Allah of Islam, however, is definitely not the God of the Bible; for
while Muslims passionately defend the unity of God, they patently deny
His triunity. They recoil at the notion of God as Father, reject the
unique deity of Jesus Christ the Son, and renounce the divine identity
of the Holy Spirit.
First, while Jesus taught His disciples to pray "Our Father in
heaven," devotees of Muhammad find the very notion offensive. To their
way of thinking, calling God "Father" and Jesus Christ "Son" suggests
sexual procreation. According to the Qur'an, "It is not befitting to
(the majesty of) Allah that He should beget a son" (Sura 19:35); and
Allah "begetteth not, nor is he begotten" (Sura 112:3). The Bible,
however, does not use the term "begotten" with respect to the Father and
the Son in the sense of sexual reproduction but rather in the sense of
special relationship; thus, when the apostle John speaks of Jesus as
"the only begotten of the Father" (John 1:14
KJV, emphasis added), he is underscoring the unique deity of Christ.
John goes on to state, "No one has ever seen God, but God the One and
Only, who is at the Father's side, has made him known" (John 1:18 NIV). When the apostle Paul likewise refers to Jesus as "the firstborn over all creation" (Colossians 1:15 NIV, emphasis added), he is emphasizing Christ's preeminence or prime position as the Creator of all things (cf. vv. 16–19). Christians are sons of God through adoption; Jesus is God the Son from all eternity.
Muslims, furthermore, dogmatically denounce the Christian declaration of Christ's unique deity as the unforgivable sin of shirk.
As the Qur'an puts it, "Allah forgiveth not (the sin of) joining other
gods with Him; but He forgiveth whom He pleaseth other sins than this"
(Sura 4:116). Muslims readily affirm the sinlessness of Christ, however,
they adamantly deny His sacrifice upon the cross and subsequent
resurrection. In doing so, they deny the singular historical fact that
demonstrates that Jesus does not stand in a long line of peers from
Abraham to Muhammad, but is God in human flesh. The Qur'anic phrase,
"Allah raised him up" (Sura 4:158) is taken to mean that Jesus was
supernaturally raptured rather than resurrected from the dead. In
Islamic lore, God made someone look like Jesus, and this look-alike was
crucified in His place. In recent years, the myth that Judas was
crucified in place of Jesus has been popularized in Muslim circles due
to the propagation of a late-medieval work titled The Gospel of Barnabas.
Against the weight of historical evidence, the Qur'an exclaims, "they
killed him not, nor crucified him, but so it was made to appear to them"
(Sura 4:157).
Finally, in addition to rejecting the divinity of Jesus, Islam also
renounces the divine identity of the Holy Spirit. Far from being the
third person of the triune God who inspired the text of the Bible, Islam
teaches that the Holy Spirit is the archangel Gabriel who dictated the
Qur'an to Muhammad over a period of 23 years. This is ironic considering
that Islam also identifies the Holy Spirit promised by Jesus in John 14
as Muhammad. The Bible, however, roundly rejects such corruptions and
misrepresentations. The Holy Spirit is neither an angel nor a mere
mortal; rather, He is the very God Who redeems us from our sins and will
one day resurrect us to life eternal (e.g., Acts 5:3–4; Rom. 8:11).
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