By : A. SALMAWY
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
GOD PRIOR TO RELIGION
Many of us at some point or another in our lives start to
question: where did we come from? Why are we here? What happens to
us after we die? Is death the grim end, or is it but a gate that
leads into a different kind of existence? We often wonder how did it
all come to be? Is there some kind of power responsible for the
creation of the vast universe and all that's in it, or did
everything around us just happen to be?
Is there a God? To some people, the affirmative answer is the
only one there can be, while to others belief it is no more than a
calculated bet. The French Philosopher Pascal concluded that belief
was the wisest bet because the believer will either have bliss if he
is right or oblivion if he is wrong, whereas the atheist has the
less attractive alternatives of oblivion or damnation. #1 (The
case against God, Gerald Priestland, Page 14)
To some people the word 'Nature'' is some kind of force
responsible for shaping life, but can there be justification in
saying that "Nature" is a concrete intelligent force responsible for
creating as well as shaping life? Or, is 'Nature' merely an abstract
man-made label that acts as a convenient coat -hanger to the more
urgent questions in our attempt to explain the cause of things?
If we were to trace the age of the earth we would have to go back
in time 4.5 billion years. The age of our Galaxy, the Milky Way,
would take us even further back 12 billion years, while as the
estimated age of the entire universe is somewhere between 15 to 20
billion years.
If the 'terrestrial nature' represents the earth and everything
on it, there would still remain a very long period of time prior to
the formation of the earth when there would have been no meaning to
the word 'Nature'. Still , some force had to account for what
occurred before.
If we were to chart the age of mankind against the age of the
universe we would find it very insignificant in universal terms. The
first Homo Sapiens, who are our direct ancestors, walked on earth a
mere 15,000 years ago! Clearly then the school of thought that
claims that God is not an external being but is to be found inside
each of us is both naive and pretentious. It is naive because if we
were to claim that God exists only inside us then we would have to
believe that before 15,000 years there was no God. Even if one
employs Darwin's theory of evolution to suggest some kind of link
between man and ape, and as a result associate an older age for
mankind, one would still have to say that God did not exist before
30 million years ago, that is when the first apes walked on earth.
It is also pretentious because no matter how clever we think we are,
we are only one species of creatures on one planet that revolves
around one star. The star, being the sun, is merely one star among
100 million other similar stars that belong to our galaxy the 'Milky
Way'. In the universe there are billions of other galaxies!.
The failure of science to provide adequate answers to these
questions, and in the quest for the truth, many people seek the
answers in religion.
Through their adopted faith, whether it is researched or most
commonly inherited, they seek to find God. However, it may make
better sense to reverse the procedure. It may be wiser to seek God
first and then search for His true word. After all God has always
existed while as the establishment of any faith or religion is a
time related event.
Compare this logic to the case of the patient and the doctor, how
can one believe in a medical treatment and as a result have faith in
the doctor? It would naturally make better sense to have faith in a
doctor and because of that faith to follow his medication. Finding
God and accepting His existence is not necessarily a matter related
to any particular religious belief. The subject of the first part of
this book is to argue the case why God exists in a purely
intellectual and rational manner without referring to any religious
beliefs. The subject of the rest of the book will then be : If God
exists, where lies the 'Truth'? That search too can be conducted in
a purely intellectual manner that is far from prejudice or dogmatic
statements. Never will the phrase "Because it is written in such a
Book" be an answer to a question. Never will the very consumed
phrase "just have faith" be an answer to some other question. It is
not the purpose of this book to inject the mind of the reader with
an overdose of quotations from any Holy book or another and then ask
you to "just have faith". On the contrary, no conclusion will be
adopted unless it is in agreement with historical evidence , current
scientific knowledge, and supported by rational analysis.
In order to be able to present the argument it is essential to
refer to various fields of scientific knowledge. A fact must be
stressed here, whilst reference is made to some established
scientific theories in as far as they serve the argument, it is not
the intention of this book to question the validity of these
theories.
Generally speaking there are two types of scientific knowledge:
1) Scientific knowledge that is unlikely to change and is thus
taken for granted (e.g. Water is composed of Hydrogen and Oxygen, or
that gravity exists between any two bodies....etc.).
2) Scientific knowledge that is not yet confirmed and is open to
change (e.g. What triggered off the 'Big Bang'? What is gravity made
of? How many universes are there? Or how did such gigantic energy
come to be trapped within the minute space inside the atom?
Throughout this book, all reference made will be made to the
first type only.
There are those who will completely do without an intellectual
approach to belief insisting that for them belief is in the heart
and not the mind. Whilst one must understand and respect this point
of view so far as the first part of the search goes, and that is the
initial belief in God, it is of prime importance that the process of
selecting a faith to believe in should not be left to the heart
alone, but is a matter that should be researched thoroughly by
taking time to consider and debate all points of view. This is
necessary because of the unfortunate yet intentional misguidance and
misrepresentation conducted by various religious organizations.
Sadly, all major religions in the world today can be accused of
corruption in one way or another.
Furthermore, one tends to be more inclined to the view that even
though a spiritual or emotional belief may appear to be of great
strength, yet if it is not supported intellectually, it may often be
vulnerable to crack. One has often come across people who have
suddenly acquired a very intense faith only to completely lose it
after a period of time. For as the saying goes 'easy come easy go'.
On the other hand, a slow contemplated intellectual approach has a
better chance of endurance because it is built on reason.
Today we live in an age of reason and not of blind faith. It is
thus necessary for any intelligent person to debate all matters and
not succumb to the influence of their native environment alone. One
should not rely on the religious background passed on through
parents or the society alone. One often hears the saying 'this is
the religion of my father and my fore-fathers, they cannot all be
wrong!' But if a Jew, a Christian, a Buddhist, a Hindu and a Muslim
who can differ on basic issues all said so, each thinking that they
have inherited the truth, chances are that most, if not all, of them
will be wrong.
We have no choice as to which faith we were born into but we all
have the free will to seek the Truth. One should adopt a faith only
when one is totally convinced that it is the Truth. There are other
people who follow a certain faith because they say it suits them! It
is very ironic that they could adopt a faith that affects their
entire life in the same way they would go shopping in a
super-market! Look and see what is on display and then opt for the
faith that would not place too many sacrifices on their normal way
of life!
Instead, and if one is convinced beyond any doubt that a certain
faith is the true word of God, one should accept it in its entire
form. One should follow its teachings even if it means altering
one's way of life, and not as is sadly happening today within some
well established religions, regarding the constant bending and
reshaping of the faith in an attempt to conform to modern values.
There may be those who will complain that a certain faith or
another is too rigid and does not conform to modern standards, but
they must, if they are honest with themselves, stop and question how
well do modern standards conform to virtue and morality.
CHAPTER TWO
WHY THERE IS ONE GOD
The purpose of this section is to argue how modern
science testifies to the existence of a sole creator, a supreme
force far superior to anything we know, a power responsible for the
creation of the universe and of sustaining it. Moreover, at that
moment of creation, it can demonstrated how all the various laws
that govern the behavior of everything in the universe were
initiated. In order to arrive at these conclusions three sets of
possibilities are debated:
First debate:
Did the universe have a beginning or has it always been there?
Here we refer to the laws of 'thermal dynamics'
which govern the movement of heat between different bodies.
The second law of 'thermal dynamics' states that
heat travels from hot bodies to cooler bodies and not the opposite.
If for example a hot oven is placed in a cold room the oven will
warm the room, this is because heat will be transferred from the hot
oven to the cold room. Never will the amount of heat originally in
the room cause the oven to get hotter. This transfer of heat between
the oven and the room will continue until the oven has used up all
its fuel source (e.g. a gas cylinder) . When that point is reached
the oven will start to cool until such a point when the temperatures
of both the oven and the room become equal.
To calculate the amount of time during which the
oven will continue to warm the room we need to know two things:
1- The amount of gas left in the cylinder.
2- The rate at which gas is consumed.
If for example there is 500 c.c. (cubic centimeters)
of gas left in the cylinder and the oven uses up 10 c.c. every hour,
with a simple division we find that the oven will continue to warm
the room for 50 hours (call this stage A). After 50 hours the oven
will start to cool till the point is reached where the temperatures
of the oven and the room are equal (call this stage B).
Now let us apply this to the universe as a whole. We
know that the total amount of energy in the universe is equal to the
sum of energy in all the stars, galaxies, ...etc.. This is a finite
amount no matter how large it is. These stars will continue to
radiate heat, light and other types of radiation into the vast space
of the universe, in the same way in which the oven would warm the
space inside the room. So if we think of all the stars and all other
active bodies in the universe as the ovens and the vast empty space
as the empty room we can deduce the following:
From what is known about the life and death of stars
in modern theories of cosmology, it is known that they would
continue to radiate energy until they consume all their resources.
To be precise, when all the hydrogen, that constitutes the vast
majority of the mass of stars, has been converted into helium and
other heavier elements in a process of continuous nuclear reactions.
After that stage the stars start to collapse and end up as cold dead
bodies.
Since the amount of matter in the universe (in the
form of stars, nebula, quasars.....etc.) is finite, then these
energy sources will radiate energy into the universe for a finite
length of time. In our example of the oven and the room we
calculated that time to be 50 hours. Theoretically, and if we can
calculate the total amount of energy in the universe, and also the
rate of consumption of energy, we can also calculate the length of
time (although obviously not as accurately as in the case of the
oven) in which the stars will continue to radiate energy. For
argument's sake, let us assume that the universe will continue to
radiate energy for another 50 billion years. Since there is still
plenty of energy available in the universe we are still in stage A.
Now if we go back to our original debate, and try to
decide whether the universe had a beginning or has it always been
there, we can quickly reach the conclusion that if it had always
been there, or in mathematical terms if the age of the universe goes
back to infinity, it should have been a cold and dead place by now
simply because infinity, is older than 50 billion years.. If the age
of the universe is infinity, we should have been at stage B a long
time ago,. The accuracy of the figure 50 billion is of no importance
to the result, for whatever figure we chose to make it, it will
always be less than infinity.
What that means is that the universe had a definite
beginning. That beginning, for arguments sake, being less than 50
billion years ago. The birth of new stars in the universe does not
affect our analysis, they are not born out of the void, they are
merely a conversion of hot gases into hot new stars. Their birth is
not an addition to the total amount of matter that already exists in
the universe. The total amount of matter remains constant. After a
time all the hot gases in the universe will be used up and no new
stars will be born.. As for the newly born stars, they too will
eventually consume all their energy and die.
But 'thermal dynamics' is not the only branch of
science to provide evidence in support of a beginning to the
universe, for recent discoveries in space and cosmology also confirm
that the universe had a definite beginning called the Big Bang,
first by the discovery of the background radiation in 1965 by two
American astronomers then later by COBE (Cosmic background explorer
satellite) that proved beyond any doubt the theory of the Big Bang.
The Big Bang theory states that sometime between 15
and 20 billion years ago all the matter in the universe originated
from an extremely dense concentration of matter and space that
exploded outwards giving birth to all the galaxies and other
heavenly bodies that comprise the universe as we know it today.
Another very important discovery that supported the
theory of the Big Bang was the discovery that the universe is
expanding, every day the universe gets bigger. This necessarily
means that if we were to go back in time the universe would be
contracting until it would reach a point from which it started, and
that takes us back to the Big Bang.
Now if we accept that the universe had a definite
beginning, the next step would be to debate whether that beginning
was caused by an intelligent power or by mere chance.
Second debate: A Creator or mere chance?
Here we refer to the well known law of conservation
of matter. This law states that 'Matter cannot be created nor
destroyed'.
What that means is that all that we are able to do
is convert one form of substance to another. We can never create
matter from nothing, and similarly we cannot turn matter into
nothing. Trees are brought down to make wood and paper, sand is used
in the making of glass.........etc., but we can never create wood or
glass out of vacuum.
Similarly we cannot completely destroy wood or
glass, for even if we burn wood, we are only converting it to ashes
and gases that are given off in the process.
We have also shown that all matter had a definite
beginning or a moment in time when it came to exist, the moment when
the universe was created. By joining these seemingly contradicting
statements together:
1- Since the universe had a definite beginning,
we can say that it was created.
2- Laws of physics states that matter cannot be
created!
Therefore, it is only rational to say that the
universe was created by a power that is above and independent of the
laws of physics as we know them. That power is clearly not
restricted or confined to the basic laws of physics but far
superior. Neither can this power be of a physical essence. It is
also justifiable to expect this power not to have had a beginning
because the concept of a beginning, and for that matter time in
general, has been shown to be a dimension of the physical universe
only. In his 'Theory of relativity', Einstein stated that time,
space and matter were all created when the universe was born, and
that before that moment time did not exist. It is not easy for the
human mind to envisage the concept of no time, but if one accepts
that time is only a dimension of the physical world the idea becomes
more acceptable. Further still, and since the universe had a
definite beginning before which nothing existed, then such an
awesome event (the creation of the universe) cannot be attributed to
chance, since before that initial moment of creation nothing
existed, not even chance!
A superior non-physical power and creator is the
only possible explanation to this argument.
The laws of probabilities
The laws of probability offer another interesting
argument:
If we throw the dice, the chance of obtaining double
6 is (1 in 36). What this means is that on average if we throw the
dice 1000 times, the chances are that we should get double 6 around
27 times. Now if we throw the dice 1000 times and we obtain double 6
every single throw then there is a design, a system or a controlling
force behind the throws. We can hardly call it chance.
The science of Genetics offers vivid evidence that
chance could not be a factor in the process of creation due to the
very precise combinations necessary in the building of cells. These
requisite combinations defy all laws of probabilities.
On a larger scale, We only need to look at the
universe to be able to marvel at the endless examples of precision
and beautiful design. Every field of scientific knowledge seems to
testify to the existence of a master creator. It does not seem
difficult to dismiss the possibility of chance.
The Mechanical argument
The mechanical argument is also in support of the
concept of a creator.
'For every action there is a reaction, equal to it
and opposite in direction.'
Everything that has moved was moved by something
else. If we go back in time, tracing everything to its original
mover, we would ultimately arrive at that which was not moved by
anything else. That analysis will also lead us to the unavoidable
conclusion of an initial Creator.
The Development vs. Destruction argument
Everything left unattended gradually disintegrates.
If one builds a house and leaves it unattended, in a few weeks it
will become full of dust. In thirty years or so the paint will start
falling off. After two hundred years or so some of the walls will
start to weaken and fall, and maybe in a thousand years or so the
whole house will be flat to the ground. In other words, and if left
unattended, any organized structure or system will eventually become
one of chaos.
Never will chaos suddenly spring into a system. A
house will never spring into being of its own doing.
If we try to analyze what has actually happened on
earth we realize that it was quite remarkable. When the earth was
first formed it was a very hostile hot planet with no form of life
whatsoever. Gradually simple forms of life evolved leading all the
time to more complex forms of living creatures and culminating in
the appearance of mankind. The trend has been reversed, instead of
things crumbling they have in fact developed all the time to higher
forms of being. Chaos has developed into a system. Has the earth
been attended all the time?
It is amusing, to put it mildly, to observe man so
full of vanity thinking he is the master of everything merely
because he is given some intelligence to discover some of the laws
of the universe. In reality, man has no authority in setting or
altering such laws. With the aid of the physical senses, man is
given a view over a divine masterpiece, but considering the human
being is a mere spectator within the huge universe, he can indeed be
very pompous!
There is so much symmetry in the universe to be able
to go through all of it, but one particular design has special
appeal,. And that is the Macro/Micro pattern.
The Macro/Micro pattern
If we look at the universe at large we find that it
is composed of vast areas of empty space and also other areas
containing shapeless matter in the form of hot gases, dark matter
and formed stars. These stars group together to form galaxies. Our
galaxy, 'The Milky Way' has within it no less than 100 billion
individual stars. Our star, the sun, has nine planets in orbit
around it. Most of these planets have a number of moons again in
orbit. The basic force that governs the movement of all these bodies
is gravity. The moons rotate around their planets, which all rotate
around the mother star, which in our case is the sun. Similarly, all
these stars revolve round the center of gravity of the galaxy.
Galaxies group together to form clusters of galaxies
and once again individual galaxies revolve round the center of
gravity of the cluster. Clusters group together to form
super-clusters, and these obey the same laws. These are the largest
units in the universe as we know it today.
However, and if we proceed in the opposite
direction, we notice that the similarity is truly remarkable. If we
look at the other end of the scale and examine the atom which is the
smallest form of substance able to exist in a chemical reaction, we
find that it is composed of electrons revolving round a nucleus, in
the same way as stars revolve round the center of gravity of their
galaxies. Are we but seeing the finger prints of the creator?
If one searches one can surely find God. God's
marvels are all around us. It was very naive when the first man in
space, the Soviet astronaut Yuri Gagarin, said when he was high in
orbit around the earth:
"Where is God? I do not see him!"
It seems ironic though that he met his death in a
helicopter accident, still in the air, where he could not find his
maker! No doubt he found Him now!!!!!!
If we accept that the creation of the universe must
have been the work of a supreme intelligent power, we are faced with
another puzzle and that is: How many gods are there? Is God one, or
could there be more than one god?
Third debate: If God exists, how many gods are
there?
Here the reference is made to some basic word
definitions. The words absolute and relative are quite straight
forward in what they mean. Anything relative is that which can be
compared to or related to other things. Whenever we describe that
object we are always describing it in relation to other things. On
the other hand an absolute is that which is self-existent and
conceivable without relation to other things.
If we return to our example of the room and the oven
we can say that the oven is hotter than the room but that does not
mean that the oven is hot in an absolute sense, for if we were to
place this oven inside an active volcano it would seem very cool in
comparison. An athlete is a very fast runner compared to road
pedestrians but is indeed very slow compared to a motor car, and so
on until it becomes clear that anything we see in life is relative
because there will always be something that is cooler, bigger, older
....etc.
If we go back to our Big Bang theory we realize that
what brought it about must have been a power that is above all the
laws of physics that govern the universe. When scientists study the
evolution of the universe they trace it back to the moment of
creation or the Big Bang, but when they reach that point they find
that all the laws of physics cease to be. Had they considered the
same situation in a forward direction they would have realized that
the Big Bang was the moment when all the laws of physics have
actually began to be!
We have also noted that the force that brought about
the Big Bang, and in effect the creation of the universe, could not
have been related to this universe in any physical sense, for it is
clearly the cause and not the effect of the universe. Since this
supreme power is the cause then it must have been existent prior to
and independent of the universe. Thus we can say that nothing in
this universe can be related to that supreme power , and if nothing
can be compared or related to that power, then by definition that
power is absolute.
The absolute God then means that nothing is like or
akin to Him, but if we were to consider the possibility of the
existence of more than one god, immediately the question will arise
as to: which god came first, which god is more powerful and so on,
and that would ultimately reduce these gods to being relative
because comparisons will arise.
If God is absolute, by definition, He must be One.
CHAPTER THREE
TRUTH AND REVELATION
Thomas Aquinas (1225-74), one of the greatest
Catholic theologians of the middle ages, made a clear distinction
between truth which could be deducted by reason (for example, the
existence of God and the moral law) and truth which must be given by
revelation (for example, the way to salvation). #2 (Historical
Selections in the Philosophy of Religion, ed. Ninian Smart, page 62)
Essentially, if God is one, there must be One
'truth'. Do we conclude that there must be one revelation ? The
answer to this is that 'truth' and revelation are not absolutely
equivalent terms. Because 'truth' is an absolute term it is situated
independent of form, whereas revelations are related to time, people
and a place, and thus require a form. But to speak of form is to
speak of diversity and thus plurality.
Mankind has gone through enormous changes through
the ages physically, mentally and spiritually, that there was always
the need for various revelations at different times and for
different peoples. Because of these diversities God never addresses
identical revelations to two different people. This being so, it can
be said that the diverse revelation do not, and should not
contradict one another, for although they differ in form, the
'truth' in all of them is one. In fact, they supplement one another,
one revelation preparing for what is to follow, each revelation
being one further chapter in the same book. The book as a whole
advocates one message, and one 'truth'.
If there appears any apparent contradictions between
different revelations, they are in human receptacles and not in the
divine message. This is manifested in the human inability to
interpret such revelations and more importantly the failure to
preserve the 'truth' contained in the revelation, which always tends
to be impaired and altered with the passing of time.
God, when He speaks, expresses Himself in an
absolute mode, but this absoluteness relates to the universal
content rather than to the form. Revelation speaks in an absolute
language because God is absolute, not because the form is. In other
words, the absoluteness of the revelation is absolute in itself, but
relative regarding its form.
The language of the sacred Scripture is divine but
at the same time it is necessarily the language of men. It is made
for men and could be divine only in an indirect manner. Is our
language or indeed our understanding adequate to attain the divine
meaning? Because the answer tends to be more negative than positive,
the need for various revelations in parallel with human progress
across the ages was always necessary.
It is one thing to believe in the one God, but to be
certain that any one revelation is genuine and not merely the
product of human imagination is a totally different issue. A close
look at the three divine Revelations, Judaism, Christianity and
Islam which are the subject study of this book, suggests that their
founders were genuine prophets and that they were inspired by a
divine power for the following reasons:
1) According to historical records, the founders of
these religions were men of slender means. They had no notable claim
to social status or power and had no material aspirations. Yet in
due course they were successful in bringing about everlasting
changes in the history and civilization of the world. Their
followers rose from a mere handful to millions among millions. This
can only suggest that they were sustained and supported by a great
power.
2) The founders of these religions have all been
men highly honored and regarded for their integrity and the purity
of their lives even by those who later, on the announcement of their
claims, became their enemies. It is not conceivable that those who
did not lie about men should suddenly lie about God.
3) The founders of these religions were not known
to be learned men or scholars in the arts and culture of their
times, yet, what each of them taught turned out to be something in
advance of its time. By adopting this teaching a people attained
greater heights in civilization and culture and retained the glory
for many centuries. Only a genuine religious teacher makes this
possible. It is inconceivable that a person innocent of ordinary
accomplishments, and as soon as he begins to lie about God, should
come to have such tremendous powers that his teaching dominates all
other teachings current to his time.
4) What each of these founders taught was contrary
to all contemporary trends. If their teachings had been in line with
the tendencies of their times, it could be said that these teachers
only gave expression to those tendencies. This suggests that these
teachers were not a product of their times but were genuine
reformers and prophets as they rightly claimed to be.
At the time of Moses, how novel must have seemed his
teachings about a single God. When Jesus in his time confronted a
materialism born of the worldliness of the Jews and of the influence
of Rome, how peculiar must have appeared his stress on the spirit?
How out of place must have been his message of forgiveness to a
people who trembled under the tyranny of Roman soldiers, groaning
all the time for legitimate vengeance? And when the oneness of God
was also preached by Muhammad, how inappropriate that must have
sounded to the Meccan leaders for whom the many gods were both their
life and their revenue? How unsettling to the structure of the
tribal life were his teachings that proclaimed the slave to be equal
to his master? That in society that regarded slavery as a social
privilege.
5) The fifth common attribute to these revelations
was the element of miracles. These miracles common to all three
revelations, and which will be analyzed later, stands as further
evidence in support of the authenticity of each of them.
REVELATION AND PRACTICE
If we accept the validity of these revelations and
try to compare them from the outside, as might a scholar,
contradictions might appear, but we do find that God keeps Himself,
so to speak, at the center of each revelation.
The three divine revelations, Judaism, Christianity
and Islam are all monotheistic: they all believe in the one absolute
God, although in the Christianity of today there are variations on
that subject.
If the 'truth' contained in these three religions is
one why does there seem to be so many disputes between the followers
of these faiths? If we were to hold a debate between a Jew, a
Christian and a Muslim and discuss basic issues we would find a
great deal of similarities, yet we would also find many sharp
disputes in areas of vital importance. However, and when we examine
the scriptures, we realize that many of these disputes are
unfounded. It becomes clear that although some of these scriptures
have been altered, with whole parts removed and whole new parts
added, still and even in their present form, there is substantial
evidence to indicate the singularity of their source. The 'truth'
contained in each of them is one and the same. In reality,
revelation and practice are two different terms. The 'truth'
embodied in the revelation is an absolute but the practice of that
faith depends on the human interpretation of that revelation. For
that, it is not surprising to find the practice of the same faith
changing with time.
STARTING POINT
Before we take a close look at these three religions
we must first select a route to follow in our analysis. Where do we
start? Do we start with Judaism as it is the first of the three
revelations in historical order. If we chose to do that, we could
then advance in time to cover Christianity and end up with Islam.
Alternatively, we could start with Islam since it is the last of the
three revelations and being so, is the only faith of the three that
endorses all three prophets: Moses, Jesus and Muhammad.
The Jewish scriptures contain prophecies that speak
of the coming of the Messiah, yet the orthodox Jews do not believe
in Jesus Christ or for that matter the prophet Muhammad,. They
believe that the Messiah is still to come and they await his coming.
Christians believe in all the prophets who preceded
Jesus and whose names are to be found in the Old Testament, but they
do not believe in the prophet Muhammad who came after Jesus.
Moreover, they believe that Jesus is the incarnation of God.
Muslims believe in all the prophets of the Old
Testament, in Jesus Christ and in the prophet Muhammad. A Muslim
thus finds Jews at error not to believe in Jesus or Muhammad. They
also find Christians at fault to worship Jesus and to dismiss the
message of Muhammad. Similarly a Jew speaks of Jesus and Muhammad
as false prophets.
For all that, it is important that we select a
starting point that constitutes little controversy. For that, we
could not start with Islam because immediately many Islamic concepts
will be strongly contested by non-Muslims. It is only natural for a
Jew or a Christian to say:
"Why are you quoting the Quran when I do not believe
in it?"
Similarly we could not start with Christianity
because a Jew would argue that the real Messiah is yet to come,
whilst a Muslim would say that although the teachings of Jesus were
inspired by the same One God; the deliberate alterations and
additions of man-made doctrines to the Bible make it no longer an
accurate representation of the original message of Jesus Christ.
As a result of all that, we are left with only one
acceptable starting point, one that presents little controversy, and
that is Judaism. All three faiths recognize Moses as a true prophet
of God. Since Jesus Christ was a Jew who lived all his life in
accordance with the law of Moses, we can expect any Christian to
recognize the teachings of the Jewish Scripture (the Torah).
Similarly, any Muslim believes in Moses the prophet of God, whose
name is mentioned in the Quran no less than 136 times.
If followers of all three faiths do accept the
revelation and law of Moses they should also accept the prophecies
contained in the Jewish Scripture. These prophecies are an important
tool to serve the argument in search of the 'truth'. The prophecies
in the Jewish scriptures and indeed in the New Testament throw a
great light on the harmony that exists between all three Revelations
leading us ultimately to conclude the singularity of their source.
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