fbpx
Wikipedia

Jesus in Islam

In Islam, Jesus (Arabic: عِيسَى ٱبْنُ مَرْيَمَ, romanizedʿĪsā ibn Maryam, lit.'Isa, son of Maryam') is believed to be the penultimate prophet and messenger of God and the Messiah. He is also considered to be the prophet sent to guide the Children of Israel (Banī Isra'īl), being revealed in the third holy book called the Injīl.


  • ʿĪsā
  • عِيسَىٰ
  • Jesus
Bornc. 4 BC
Disappearedc. 33 AD
Gethsemane, Jerusalem, Judea
Known forBeing the Messiah
PredecessorYahya (John the Baptist)
SuccessorMuhammad
OpponentDajjal (Antichrist)
ParentMaryam (mother)
Relatives

In the Quran, Jesus is described as the Messiah (al-Masīḥ), born of a virgin, performing miracles, accompanied by disciples, rejected by the Jewish establishment, and being raised to heaven. The Quran asserts that Jesus was not crucified nor died on the cross, but was miraculously saved by God. The Quran places Jesus amongst the greatest prophets, and mentions him with various titles. The prophethood of Jesus is preceded by that of Yahya and succeeded by Muhammad, the latter of whom Jesus is reported to have prophesied by using the name Ahmad.

The Quran rejects the Christian view of the divinity of Jesus as God incarnate, or the literal Son of God. It denies Jesus as a deity in several verses, and also mentions that Jesus did not claim to be divine. Muslims believe that Jesus' original message was altered (taḥrīf), after him being raised alive. The monotheism (tawḥīd) of Jesus is emphasized in the Quran. Like all prophets in Islam, Jesus is also called a Muslim, as he preached that his followers should adopt the 'straight path' (Ṣirāṭ al-Mustaqīm). Jesus is attributed with a vast number of miracles in Islamic tradition.

In Islamic eschatology, Jesus will return in the Second Coming with Imam Mahdi to kill the Al-Masih ad-Dajjal ('The False Messiah'), after which with the ancient tribes Gog and Magog (Yaʾjūj Maʾjūj) would disperse. After these creatures would miraculously perish, Imam Mahdi and Jesus would rule the entire world, establish peace and justice, and die after a reign of 40 years. Some Muslims believe that he would then be buried alongside Muhammad at the fourth reserved tomb of the Green Dome in Medina.

Jesus is understood by Muslims to be one of the most important prophets of Islam. The place where Jesus is believed to return, the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, is highly esteemed by Muslims as the fourth holiest site of Islam. Jesus is widely venerated in Sufism, with numerous ascetic and mystic literature being written and recited about the Islamic prophet.

Birth

Islam's account of Jesus begins with a prologue narrated several times in the Quran which first describes the birth of his mother, Mary, and her service in the Jerusalem temple while under the care of the prophet Zechariah, who would become the father of Yahya (John the Baptist). The Quran's birth narrative of Jesus begins at Quran 19:16–34 and Q3:45–53.[1] This birth narrative has been recounted with certain variations and detailed additions by Islamic historians over the centuries. In the matter of the virgin birth of Jesus, while Islamic theology affirms Mary as a pure vessel, it does not follow the concept of Immaculate Conception as related to Mary's birth in some Christian traditions.[2][3][4]

Annunciation

Islamic exegesis affirms the virginal birth of Jesus – similarly to the Gospel account and occurring in Bethlehem.[5] The narrative of the virgin birth opens with an announcement to Mary by the angel Gabriel while Mary is being raised in the Temple after having been pledged to God by her mother. Gabriel states she is honored over all women of all nations and has brought her glad tidings of a holy son.[6]

 
The Annunciation in miniature

Gabriel declares the son is to be named Jesus, the Messiah, proclaiming he will be called a great prophet. Mary, asking how she could conceive and have a child when no man had touched her, was answered by the angel that God can decree what he wills, and that it shall come to pass.[7]

The narrative from the Quran continues with Mary, overcome by the pains of childbirth, being provided with a stream of water under her feet from which she could drink, and with a palm tree which she could shake so ripe dates would fall and be enjoyed. After giving birth, Mary carries the baby Jesus back to the temple and is asked by the temple elders about the child. Having been commanded by Gabriel to a vow of silence, she points to the infant Jesus and the infant proclaims:

He said, I am God's servant; He has given me the Book, and made me a prophet. He has made me blessed wherever I am, and has enjoined on me the Worship and Alms, so long as I live; and to be dutiful to my mother; and has not made me oppressive, impious. Peace is on me the day I was born, the day I shall die, and the day I shall be raised alive.[8]

Jesus speaking from the cradle is one of six miracles attributed to him in the Quran, an account which is also found in the Syriac Infancy Gospel, a sixth-century work.[9][10] According to various hadiths, Jesus and Mary did not cry at birth.[11]

Birth narratives

The Islamic faith echoed some strands within the Christian tradition that Mary (or Maryam) was a literal virgin when Jesus was conceived. The most detailed account of the annunciation and birth of Jesus is provided in Surah 3 (Al Imran) and 19 (Maryam) of the Quran, where the story is narrated that God (Allah) sent an angel to announce that Maryam could shortly expect to bear a son, despite being a virgin.[12]

Some academics have noted that the account in Surah 19 is particularly close to that in the Christian Gospel of Luke.[13] The Annunciation to Mary is mentioned twice in the Quran, and in both instances Mary/Maryam is told that she was chosen by God to deliver a son. In the first instance, the bearer of the news (who is believed by most Muslims to be the archangel Gabriel), delivered the news in (Q3:42-47) as he takes the form of a man (Q19:16-22).[14][15] The details of the conception are not discussed, but when Mary asks how she can bear a son in view of her chastity, she is told that God creates what he wills and that these things are easy for God.[14]

The 8th-century Muslim historian Ibn Ishaq (704–767), wrote the account entitled Kitab al-Mubtada ('In the Beginning'), reporting that Zechariah is Mary's guardian briefly, and after being incapable of maintaining her, he entrusts her to a carpenter named George. Secluded in a church, she is joined by a young man named Joseph, and they help one another fetching water and other tasks. The account of the birth of Jesus follows the Quran's narrative, adding that the birth occurred in Bethlehem beside a palm tree with a manger.[16]

The 10th-century Persian scholar Al-Tabari (839–923), mentions envoys arriving from the king of Persia with gifts (similar to the Magi from the east) for the Messiah; the command to a man called Joseph (not specifically Mary's husband) to take her and the child to Egypt and later return to Nazareth.[17]

The Fatimid Ismaili jurist Qadi al-Nu'man also contributed to the narrative, explaining that the virgin birth of Jesus is meant to be interpreted symbolically. In his interpretation, Mary was the follower (lāḥiq), of the Imam Joachim ('Imran). However, when Joachim realized that she was not suited for the Imamah, he passed it to Zechariah, who then passed it to John the Baptist. Meanwhile, Mary received spiritual inspiration (mādda) from God, revealing that he would invite a man (to the faith) who would become an exalted Speaker (nāṭiq) of a revealed religion (sharīʿa). According to al-Nu'man, the verses "She said: Lord! How can I have a child when no man has touched me?" (Quran 3:47)[18] and "neither have I been unchaste" (Quran 19:20) are symbolic of Mary's saying, "How can I conduct the invitation (daʿwa) when the Imam of the Time has not given me permission to do so?" and "Nor shall I be unfaithful by acting against his command", respectively. To this, a celestial hierarch replies "Such is God. He creates [i.e., causes to pass] what he wills" (Quran 3:47).[19]

Childhood

The Quran does not include the tradition of the Flight into Egypt, though sūra 23:50 could conceivably allude to it: "And we made the son of Maryam and his mother a sign; and we made them abide in an elevated place, full of quiet and watered with springs."[20] However, narratives similar to the narrative found in the Gospels and non-canonical sources circulated in later Islamic tradition, with some details and elaborations being added over the centuries by Islamic writers and historians. Some narratives have Jesus and family staying in Egypt up to 12 years.[21] Many moral stories and miraculous events of Jesus' youth are mentioned in Qisas al-anbiya ('Stories of the Prophets'), books composed over the centuries about pre-Islamic prophets and heroes.[7]

Al-Masudi wrote that Jesus as a boy studied the Jewish religion reading from the Psalms and found "traced in characters of light":

You are my son and my beloved; I have chosen you for myself

with Jesus then claiming:

Today the word of God is fulfilled in the son of man.[17]

In Egypt

Several narratives show some disparity and similarity in Islamic writings about Jesus' early childhood, specifically his time in Egypt with regard to duration and events. Most of the narratives are found in non-canonical Christian sources like, for example, the pre-Islamic Gospel of Thomas. One such disparity is from al-Athir in his The Perfection of History which contains a birth narrative stating Jesus was born in Egypt instead of Bethlehem.[22]

Some other narratives of Jesus' childhood are popular Middle Eastern lore as highlighted by professor of interfaith studies Mahmoud M. Ayoub.[23] Many miracles are attributed to a young Jesus while in Egypt[21] (see §§ Miracles and Other miracles).

Adulthood

 
The Jordan River, where Jesus was baptized by Yahya ibn Zakariya (John the Baptist)[24]

Mission

It is generally agreed that Jesus spoke Aramaic, the common language of Judea in the first century AD and the region at-large.[25]

The first and earliest view of Jesus formulated in Islamic thought is that of a prophet – a human being chosen by God to present both a judgment upon humanity for worshipping idols and a challenge to turn to the one true God. From this basis, reflected upon all previous prophets through the lens of Muslim identity, Jesus is considered no more than a messenger repeating a repetitive message of the ages. The miracles of Jesus and the Quranic titles attributed to Jesus demonstrate the power of God rather than the divinity of Jesus – the same power behind the message of all prophets. Some Islamic traditions believe Jesus' mission was only to the people of Israel and his status as a prophet being confirmed by numerous miracles.[26][27]

A second early high image of Jesus is an end-time figure. This concept arises mostly from the Hadith. Muslim tradition constructs a narrative similarly found in Christian theology, seeing Jesus arriving at the end of time and descending upon earth to fight the Antichrist. This narrative is understood to champion the cause of Islam, with some traditions narrating Jesus pointing to the primacy of Muhammad. Most traditions state Jesus will then die a natural death.[28]

A third and distinctive image is of Jesus representing an ascetic figure – a prophet of the heart. Although the Quran refers to the 'gospel' of Jesus, those specific teachings of his are not mentioned in the Quran or later religious texts. They are largely absent. The Sufi tradition is where Jesus became revered, acknowledged as a spiritual teacher with a distinctive voice from other prophets, including Muhammad. Sufism tends to explore the dimensions of union with God through many approaches, including asceticism, poetry, philosophy, speculative suggestion, and mystical methods. Although Sufism to the Western mind may seem to share similar origins or elements of Neoplatonism, Gnosticism, and Buddhism, the ideology is distinctly Islamic since they adhere to the words of the Quran and pursue imitation of Muhammad as the perfect man.[29]

Preaching

The Islamic concepts of Jesus' preaching is believed to have originated in Kufa, Iraq, under the Rashidun Caliphate where the earliest writers of Muslim tradition and scholarship was formulated. The concepts of Jesus and his preaching ministry developed in Kufa was adopted from the early ascetic Christians of Egypt who opposed official church bishopric appointments from Rome.[30]

The earliest stories, numbering about 85, are found in two major collections of ascetic literature entitled Kitab al-Zuhd wa'l Raqa'iq ('The Book of the Asceticism and Tender Mercies') by Ibn al-Mubarak (d. 797), and Kitab al-Zuhd ('The Book of Asceticism') by Ibn Hanbal (d. 855). These sayings fall into four basic groups:

  1. eschatological sayings;
  2. quasi-Gospel sayings;
  3. ascetic sayings and stories;
  4. sayings echoing intra-Muslim polemics.[31]

The first group of sayings expands Jesus' archetype as portrayed in the Quran. The second group of stories, although containing a Gospel core, are expanded with a "distinctly Islamic stamp". The third group, being the largest of the four, portrays Jesus as a patron saint of Muslim asceticism. The last group builds upon the Islamic archetype and Muslim-centric definition of Jesus and his attributes, furthering esoteric ideas regarding terms such as "Spirit of God" and "Word of God".[32]

Miracles

The Quran attributes at least six miracles to Jesus, with many more being added over the centuries by writers and historians. Miracles were attributed to Jesus as signs of his prophethood and his authority, according to educator and professor Ishaq Musa Al-Husayni (d. 1990), an author most known for Mudhakkirat Dajaja ('Memoirs of a Hen') (Cairo: Dar al-Maarif, 1943; 2nd ed. 1967). In Christ in the Quran and Modern Arabic Literature (1960), Al-Husayni said it is noteworthy Muhammad attributes no miracles to himself.[33]

These six miracles in the Quran are without detail unlike the Gospel and their non-canonical Gnostic sources, which include details and mention other attributed miracles.[33] Over the centuries, these six miracle narratives have been elaborated through Hadith and poetry, with religious writings including some of the other miracles mentioned in the Gospel, non-canonical sources, and from lore.[21][23]

Speaking from the cradle

Speaking from the cradle is mentioned in three places in the Quran: al-Imran (3) 41, 46, al-Maida (5) 109–110 and Maryam (19) 29–30. Part of the narrative has the infant Jesus defending his mother Mary from the accusation of having given birth without a known husband.[34] Early Islam was unclear about Joseph and his role. Jesus speaks as the angel Gabriel had mentioned at the annunciation: Jesus proclaims he is a servant of God, has been given a book, is a prophet, is blessed wherever he will go, blesses the day he was born, the day he will die, and the day he is raised alive.[35]

Although this particular narrative is not found in the Bible, the theme of speaking from the cradle is found in the non-canonical pre-Islamic Syriac Infancy Gospel. The Syriac Infancy Gospel has Jesus declaring himself the Son of God, the Word, and affirming what the angel Gabriel had previously announced to Mary as detailed in the Gospel.[34]

Creating birds from clay

The miracle story of creating birds from clay and breathing life into them when a child is mentioned in al-Imran (3) 43, 49 and al-Maida (5) 109–110. Although this miracle is also not mentioned in the canonical Gospel, the same narrative is found in at least two pre-Islamic sources: the Infancy Gospel of Thomas and the Jewish Toledot Yeshu, with few variant details between the Quran and these two sources.[36][37]

Healing the blind and the lepers

Similar to the New Testament, the Quran mentions Jesus healing the blind and the lepers in al-Imran (3) 49. Muslim scholar and judge al-Baydawi (d. 1286) wrote how it was recorded that many thousands of people came to Jesus to be healed and that Jesus healed these diseases through prayer only.[38] Medieval scholar al-Tha'labi wrote about how these two particular diseases were beyond medical help, and Jesus' miracles were meant to be witnessed by others as clear signs of his message.[36]

Raising the dead

Jesus is believed to have raised people from the dead, as mentioned in al-Imran (3) 49. Although no detail is given as to who was raised or the circumstance, at least three people are mentioned in detail in the Christian Gospel (a daughter of Jairus, a widow's son at Nain, and Lazarus).[39]

Prescience

Jesus was able to predict, or had foreknowledge,[40] of what was hidden or unknown to others. One example is Jesus would answer correctly any and every question anyone asked him. Another example is Jesus knew what people had just eaten, as well as what they had stored in their homes.[21]

Table of food from heaven

In the fifth chapter of the Quran, al-Ma'ida (5) 112–115, a narration mentions the disciples of Jesus requesting a table laden with food, and for it to be a special day of commemoration for them in the future. This may be a possible reference to the Eucharist according to professor of Islamic and Arabic studies W. Montgomery Watt (d. 2006).[41] According to professor of comparative religions Geoffrey Parrinder (d. 2005), it is unclear if this story parallels the Gospel's Last Supper or the feeding the multitude, but may be tied to the Arabic word ʿīd (Muslim festival):[42]

One time the disciples said, O Jesus, son of Mary, can your Lord send down for us a table from heaven? He said, Fear God if you are believers. They said We want to eat of it, and that our hearts may be at peace, and we may know you have spoken truthfully and be among the witnesses to it. Jesus, son of Mary, said, O God our Lord send down upon us a table from heaven, to be for us a festival, for the first of us and the last of us, and a sign from you: and give provision (of food) to us, for you are the best of providers. God said I am sending it down for you.[41]

In a record by the Sunni exegete Tabari, before the last supper, the threat of death made him anxious. Therefore, Jesus invited his disciples for the last supper. After the meal, he washed their hands and performed their ablutions to wipe their hands on his clothing. Afterwards Jesus replied to them: "As for that I have done to you tonight, in that I served you the meal and washed your hands in person, let it be an example for you. Since you indeed consider me to be better than you, do not be haughty in relation to each other but rather expand yourselves for each other as I have expanded myself for you." After instructing the disciples in his teachings, Jesus foretells that one of them would deny him and another betray him. However, in accordance with Islamic views on Jesus' death, just a corpse in semblance of Jesus was crucified and Jesus himself was raised to God.[43]

Other miracles

Many stories and narratives have been developed over the years about Jesus, containing certain inherent lessons or providing meaning due to the lack of detail in the Quran regarding Jesus. Some of these narratives are similar in nature to the New Testament, while some portray Jesus in a very human manner.

Besides some detailed summaries of miracles of Jesus mentioned by Muslim writers over the centuries, from adulthood (like walking on water – also found in the Gospel – and causing loaves of bread to come from the ground),[34] some other miracles from childhood include: explaining the Muslim creed fundamentals to a schoolmaster, revealing who the thieves were to a wealthy chief, filling empty jars of something to drink, providing food and wine for a tyrannical king while also proving to this king his power in raising a dead man from the dead, raising a child accidentally killed, and causing the garments from a single-colored vat to come out with various colors.[21]

Healing a royal official's son

Al-Tabari (d. 923) reports a story of an adult Jesus' encounter with a certain king in the region and the healing of his son. The identity of the king is not mentioned while legend suggests Philip the Tetrarch. The corresponding Bible reference is "the royal official's son".[44]

Greed and truth-telling

A legendary story of a miracle by a young Jesus, used as a hard-learned lesson popularly found in Middle Eastern lore according to professor Ayoub, has to do with a Jewish man and loaves of bread. Although carrying a polemic tone, the lesson centers on greed with truth-telling woven into the narration. It is a story found often in children's books.[45]

Inherent wisdom

Another legendary miracle story is one regarding Jesus' childhood wisdom. This legend, reported through al-Tabari from ibn Ishaq, talks about Mary sending Jesus to a religious school and the teacher being astonished to find Jesus already knowing the information being taught / discussed.[21]

Food in children's homes

Another story from al-Tabari tells of a young Jesus playing with the youths of his village and telling them what food their parents were preparing for them at home.[21]

According to the details of the narrative, some parents became annoyed and forbade their children to play with Jesus, suspecting he was a magician. As a result, the parents kept their children away from Jesus and gathered their children into a single house. One day, feeling lonely, Jesus went out looking for his friends, and coming upon this house he asked the parents where their children were. The parents lied, responding that the children were not there. After Jesus asks who, then, is in the house, the parents call Jesus a pig. Jesus then says "Let there be swine in this house", turning all the children into swine.[23]

Over the centuries, Muslim writers have also referenced other miracles like casting out demons, having borrowed from some heretical pre-Islamic sources, and from canonical sources as legends about Jesus were expanded.[21]

Revelation

Muslims believe that God revealed a new scripture to Jesus, called the al-Injil (the Gospel), while also declaring the truth of the previous revelations: al-Tawrat (the Torah) and al-Zabur (the Psalms).[46] The Quran speaks favorably of al-Injīl, which it describes as a scripture that fills the hearts of its followers with meekness and piety. Traditional Islamic exegesis claims the biblical message to have been distorted (tahrif), is termed ta'yin al-mubham ("resolution of ambiguity").[47] This polemic effort has its origins in the medieval period with Abd al-Jabbar ibn Ahmad's writings.[48] Regarding the Law of Moses, the Quran indicates that Jesus never abolished Jewish laws but rather confirmed them, while making partial abrogations only.[49]

Muslims have long believed that Paul purposefully corrupted the original teachings of Jesus.[50] The 9th-century historian Sayf ibn Umar asserted that certain rabbis persuaded Paul to deliberately misguide early Christians by introducing what Ibn Hazm viewed as objectionable doctrines into Christianity.[51]

According to Yusuf al-Qaradawi in his book The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam, the legal restrictions Jesus abrogated for Jews were those initially legislated by God as a punishment.[52] Classical commentaries such as Tafsir al-Jalalayn specify they pertained to the consumption of fish and bird meat without spikes, or in general.[53]

Disciples

The Quran states that Jesus was aided by a group of disciples (Ḥawāriyyūn) who believed in his message. While not naming the disciples, the Quran does give a few instances of Jesus preaching the message to them. Muslims view the disciples of Jesus as identical to the companions (Ṣaḥāba) of Muhammad.[54] According to Christianity, the names of the twelve disciples were Peter, Andrew, James, John, Philip, Bartholomew, Thomas, Matthew, James, Jude, Simon, and Judas.

The Quran mentions in chapter 3, verses 52–53, that the disciples submitted to the faith of Islam:[non-primary source needed]

When Jesus found Unbelief on their part He said: "Who will be My helpers to (the work of) God?" Said the disciples: "We are God's helpers: We believe in God, and do thou bear witness that we are Muslims. Our Lord! we believe in what Thou hast revealed, and we follow the Messenger; then write us down among those who bear witness."

— Quran Surah Al-Imran 52–53[55]

The longest narrative involving Jesus' disciples is when Jesus performs the miracle of bringing a table of food from heaven at their request, for further proof that his preaching is the true message.

Ascension

An-Nisa's verse 157 is the primary verse of the Quran to refer to the event of Jesus' crucifixion.[56] It says that Jesus was not killed and neither crucified, but "it was made to appear to them":[57]

An-Nisa's verse 157

That they said (in boast), "We killed Christ, Jesus the son of Mary, the Messenger of The God'; but they killed him not, nor crucified him, but so it was made to appear to them, and those who differ therein are full of doubts, with no (certain) knowledge, but only conjecture to follow, for of a surety they killed him not.

Most Islamic traditions categorically deny that Jesus physically died on the cross or otherwise.[58][59]

According to the Quran, he was not crucified, but was rather saved by God. (Although the earliest Islamic traditions and exegesis quote somewhat conflicting reports regarding a death and its length, Muslims believe that Jesus did not die on the cross, but believe that he was saved by being raised alive to heaven).

Substitution

It is unclear exactly where the substitutionist interpretation originated, but some scholars consider the theory originating among certain Gnostic groups of the second century.[10] Leirvik finds the Quran and Hadith to have been clearly influenced by the non-canonical ('heretical') Christianity that prevailed in the Arab peninsula and further in Abyssinia.[60]

While most Western scholars,[61] Jews,[62] and Christians believe Jesus died, orthodox Muslim theology teaches he ascended to Heaven without being put on the cross and God transformed another person, Simon of Cyrene, to appear exactly like Jesus who was crucified instead of Jesus (cf. Irenaeus' description of the heresy of Basilides, Book I, ch. XXIV, 4.).[63][64]

Some disagreement and discord can be seen beginning with Ibn Ishaq's (d. 761) report of a brief accounting of events leading up to the crucifixion, firstly stating that Jesus was replaced by someone named Sergius, while secondly reporting an account of Jesus' tomb being located at Medina, and thirdly citing the places in the Quran (3:55; 4:158) that God took Jesus up to himself.[65]

Michael Cook notes that denial that Jesus died follows the Christian heresy of docetism, who were "disturbed by that God should have died", but that this concern conflicts with another Islamic doctrine, that Jesus was a man, not God.[66] According to Todd Lawson, Quranic commentators seem to have concluded the denial of the crucifixion of Jesus by following material interpreted in Tafsir that relied upon extra-biblical Judeo-Christian sources,[67] with the earliest textual evidence having originated from a non-Muslim source – a misreading of the Christian writings of John of Damascus regarding the literal understandings of docetism (exegetical doctrine describing spiritual and physical realities of Jesus as understood by men in logical terms) as opposed to their figurative explanations.[68] John of Damascus highlighted the Quran's assertion that the Jews did not crucify Jesus being very different from saying that Jesus was not crucified, explaining that it is the varied Quranic exegetes in Tafsir, and not the Quran itself, that denies the crucifixion, further stating that the message in the 4:157 verse simply affirms the historicity of the event.[67]

Symbolic interpretations

Ja'far ibn Mansur al-Yaman (d. 958), Abu Hatim Ahmad ibn Hamdan al-Razi (d. 935), Abu Yaqub al-Sijistani (d. 971), Mu'ayyad fi'l-Din al-Shirazi (d. 1078) and the group Ikhwan al-Safa also affirm the historicity of the Crucifixion, reporting Jesus was crucified and not substituted by another man as maintained by many other popular Quranic commentators and Tafsir. More recently, Mahmoud M. Ayoub, a professor and scholar, provided a more symbolic interpretation for Surah 4 Verse 157:

The Quran, as we have already argued, does not deny the death of Christ. Rather, it challenges human beings who in their folly have deluded themselves into believing that they would vanquish the divine Word, Jesus Christ the Messenger of God. The death of Jesus is asserted several times and in various contexts. (3:55; 5:117; 19:33.)[69]

Ayoub, instead of interpreting the passage as a denial of the death of Jesus, instead believes the passage is about God denying men the power to vanquish and destroy God's message. The words "but they killed him not, nor crucified him" are meant to show that any power humans believe that they have against God is illusory.[70]

Some Sunni Islamic exegesists, such as the anti-Christian polemicist Muhammad Rashid Rida, held an ambigious stance on the matter, namely that the crucifixion and ascension of Jesus were allegorical, but with extreme precaution, in order to rebut Christian doctrines on crucifixion and salvation.[71] Comprehensively denouncing Christian doctrines on salvation, atonement and crucifixion as irrational and kufr (disbelief) in his Tafsir al-Manar, Rida also denounced the Jews for their killings of the Prophets of God, writing:

The actual fact of the crucifixion is not itself a matter which the Book of God seeks to affirm or deny, except for the purpose of asserting the killing of prophets by the Jews unjustly, and reproaching them for that act ... that the Creator of the universe could be incarnated in the womb of a woman in this earth which, in comparison to the rest of His creation, is like an atom, and then be a human being eating and drinking, experiencing fatigue and suffering other hardships like the rest of mankind. Then His enemies would level at Him insults and pain, and finally crucify Him with thieves and declare Him cursed according to the Book He revealed to one of His apostles, exalted be He over all this! ... We say rather no one believes it because belief (iman) is the affirmation (tasdiq) by reason of something that it can apprehend ... The claim of the people of the Cross, therefore, that clemency and forgiveness are opposed to justice, is unacceptable.

— Imam Muhammad Rashid Rida, in Tafsir al-Manar Vol. VI pp. 23, 26-27, [71]

An early interpretation of verse 3:55 (specifically "I will cause you to die and raise you to myself"), Al-Tabari (d. 923), records an interpretation attributed to Ibn 'Abbas, who used the literal "I will cause you to die" (mumayyitu-ka) in place of the metaphorical mutawaffi-ka ('Jesus died'), while Wahb ibn Munabbih, an early Jewish convert, is reported to have said "God caused Jesus, son of Mary, to die for three hours during the day, then took him up to himself." Tabari further transmits from Ibn Ishaq: "God caused Jesus to die for seven hours",[72] while at another place reported that a person called Sergius was crucified in place of Jesus. Ibn-al-Athir forwarded the report that it was Judas, the betrayer, while also mentioning the possibility it was a man named Natlianus.[73]

In reference to the Quranic quote "We have surely killed Jesus the Christ, son of Mary, the apostle of God", Muslim scholar Mahmoud Ayoub asserts this boast not as the repeating of a historical lie or the perpetuating of a false report, but an example of human arrogance and folly with an attitude of contempt towards God and his messenger(s). Ayoub furthers what modern scholars of Islam interpret regarding the historical death of Jesus, the man, as man's inability to kill off God's Word and the Spirit of God, which the Quran testifies were embodied in Jesus Christ. Ayoub continues highlighting the denial of the killing of Jesus as God denying men such power to vanquish and destroy the divine Word. The words, "they did not kill him, nor did they crucify him" speaks to the profound events of ephemeral human history, exposing mankind's heart and conscience towards God's will. The claim of humanity to have this power against God is illusory. "They did not slay him ... but it seemed so to them" speaks to the imaginations of mankind, not the denial of the actual event of Jesus dying physically on the cross.[70]

Another report from Ibn Kathir quotes Ishaq Ibn Bishr, on authority of Idris, on authority of Wahb ibn Munabbih, that "God caused him to die for three days, then resurrected him, then raised him."[74][75]

Al-Masudi (d. 956) reported the death of Christ under Tiberius.[73]

Ibn Kathir (d. 1373) follows traditions which suggest that a crucifixion did occur, but not with Jesus.[76] After the event, Ibn Kathir reports the people were divided into three groups following three different narratives; The Jacobites believing "God remained with us as long as He willed and then He ascended to Heaven"; the Nestorians believing "The son of God was with us as long as he willed until God raised him to heaven"; and the Muslims believing "The servant and messenger of God, Jesus, remained with us as long as God willed until God raised him to Himself."[77]

Islamic reformer Muhammad Rashid Rida agrees with contemporary commentators interpreting the physical killing of Christ's apostleship as a metaphorical interpretation.[78]

Modern Islamic scholars like Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i interpret the ascension of Jesus as spiritual, not physical. This interpretation is in accord with Muʿtazila and Shia metaphorical explanations regarding anthropomorphic references to God in the Quran. Although not popular with traditional Sunni interpretations of the depiction of crucifixion, there has been much speculation and discussion in the effort of logically reconciling this topic.[79]

In ascetic Shia writings, Jesus is depicted having "ascended to heaven wearing a woolen shirt, spun and sewed by Mary, his mother. As he reached the heavenly regions, he was addressed, 'O Jesus, cast away from you the adornment of the world.'"[80] After his ascension, his word is believed to have been altered.[81]

Second Coming

 
Timeline of the arrival of Jesus before Judgement Day
 
The Minaret of Isa in the Umayyad Mosque, Damascus

According to Islamic tradition, having ascended to heaven and dwelled there for 2000+ years, Jesus will descend to earth shortly before Judgement Day, in the midst of wars fought against al-Masih ad-Dajjal ('The False Messiah") and his followers, to come to the aid of the Mahdi and his Muslim followers.[82] Dressed in saffron robes with his head anointed, Jesus will descend at the point of a white minaret, in eastern Damascus, which is believed to be the Minaret of Isa in the Umayyad Mosque.[83] He will then greet the Mahdi and (being a Muslim) pray beside him. Eventually, Jesus will slay the Dajjal at Lod.[84]

Afterwards, he will "break the cross, kill the pigs, and abolish the Jizya tax", according to a well-known Sahih al-Bukhari hadith.[85][86] "The usual interpretation" of this prophecy is that, being a Muslim, Jesus will put a stop to Christian worship of himself and in belief in his divinity, "symbolized by the cross". He will re-establish the Kosher/Halal dietary laws abandoned by Christianity;[87] and because Jews and Christians will now all reject their former faith and accept Islam, there will be no more need for the jizya tax on unbelievers.[88] (According to one hadith, Jesus will "destroy the churches and temples and kill the Christians unless they believe in him.")[89][note 1]

Islamic texts also allude to the reappearance of the ancient menace Gog and Magog (Yaʾjūj Maʾjūj), which will break out of its underground confinement and cause havoc around the world.[91] God, in response to Jesus' prayers, will kill them by sending a type of worm in the napes of their necks, and send large birds to carry and clear their corpses from the land.[82] After the death of the Mahdi, Jesus will assume world leadership and peace and justice will be universal.

Also according to tradition, Jesus will then marry, have children, and rule the world for forty years (traditions give many different time periods) after which he will die.[92] Muslims will then perform the funeral prayer for him and then bury him at the Green Dome in the city of Medina in a grave left vacant beside Muhammad, Abu Bakr, and Umar respectively.[93] According to Ibn Khaldun's legend, the two caliphs will rise from the dead between the two prophets.[94]

Sources

While the Quran does not describe any of the above narrative of Jesus' return,[95] many Muslims believe that two Quranic verses refer to his second coming during the end times.[86] (1) The verse mentioned above stating he is never died on earth:

  • "And [for] their saying, 'Indeed, we have killed Christ, Jesus, the son of Mary, the messenger of God.' And they did not kill him, nor did they crucify him; but [another] was made to resemble him to them. And indeed, those who differ over it are in doubt about it. They have no knowledge of it except the following of assumption. And they did not kill him, for certain." (Q.4:157:)

A second verse interpreted to indicate a connection between Jesus and "the Hour" (end times):

  • "And lo! verily there is knowledge of the Hour. So doubt ye not concerning it, but follow Me. This is the right path." (Q.43:61 trans Pickthall).[86]

Hadiths on Jesus's return are traced back to Abu Hurairah, one of the sahaba, but might actually have been introduced later during civil wars in the early Abbasid Caliphate, when a savior was expected. While for Shias, the Mahdi will be the savior, some Sunnis tended to expect Jesus' return. During the early Abbasid Caliphate, wearing crucifixes in processions and holding pigs in public, was forbidden. Otherwise, the breaking of the cross, might reflect general disapproval of this symbol by Muslims, and slaying pigs a reference to Jesus exorcism of Legion.[96]

Islamic theology

Muslims do not worship Jesus, who is known as Isa in Arabic, nor do they consider him divine, but they do believe that he was a prophet or messenger of God and he is called the Messiah in the Quran. However, by affirming Jesus as Messiah they are attesting to his messianic message, not his mission as a heavenly Christ. [...] Islam insists that neither Jesus nor Mohammed brought a new religion. Both sought to call people back to what might be called "Abrahamic faith." This is precisely what we find emphasized in the book of James. Like Islam, the book of James, and the teaching of Jesus in Q, emphasize doing the will of God as a demonstration of one's faith. [...] Since Muslims reject all of the Pauline affirmations about Jesus, and thus the central claims of orthodox Christianity, the gulf between Islam and Christianity on Jesus is a wide one.

— Professor James D. Tabor in his book The Jesus Dynasty[97]

Jesus is described by various means in the Quran. The most common reference to Jesus occurs in the form of Ibn Maryam ('son of Mary'), sometimes preceded with another title. Jesus is also recognized as a nabī ('prophet') and rasūl ('messenger') of God. The terms 'abd-Allāh ('servant of God'), wadjih ('worthy of esteem in this world and the next') and mubārak ('blessed', or 'a source of benefit for others') are all used in reference to him.[93] According to Islam, Jesus never claimed to be divine.[58]

Islam sees Jesus as human, sent as the last prophet of Israel to Jews with the Gospel scripture, affirming but modifying the Mosaic Law.[98][99][52] Mainstream Islamic traditions have rejected any divine notions of Jesus being God, or begotten Son of God, or the Trinity. Popular theology teaches such beliefs constitute shirk (the "association" of partners with God) and thereby a rejection of his divine oneness (tawhid) as the sole unpardonable sin.[100]

A widespread polemic directed to these doctrinal origins are ascribed to Paul the Apostle, regarded by some Muslims as a heretic,[citation needed] as well as an evolution across the Greco-Roman world causing pagan influences to corrupt God's revelation.[citation needed] The theological absence of Original Sin in Islam renders the Christian concepts of Atonement and Redemption as redundant.[citation needed] Jesus simply conforms to the prophetic mission of his predecessors.[27]

Jesus is understood to have preached salvation through submission to God's will and worshipping God alone. The Quran states that Jesus will ultimately deny claiming divinity in Al-Ma'idah 5:116.[101] Thus, he is considered to have been a Muslim[102] by the religious definition of the term (i.e., one who submits to God's will), as understood in Islam regarding all other prophets that preceded him.[103][104]

 
Jesus and Mary in an old Persian miniature

A frequent title of Jesus mentioned is al-Masīḥ, which translates to 'the Messiah', as well as 'Christ'. Although the Quran is silent on its significance,[105] scholars[who?] disagree with the Christian concepts of the term, and lean towards a Jewish understanding. Muslim exegetes explain the use of the word masīh in the Quran as referring to Jesus' status as the one anointed by means of blessings and honors; or as the one who helped cure the sick, by anointing the eyes of the blind, for example.[93]

Jesus also holds a description as both a word from God and a soul.[106] The interpretation behind Jesus as a spirit from God, is seen as his human soul.[citation needed] Some Muslim scholars[who?] occasionally see the spirit as the archangel Gabriel, but majority consider the spirit to be Jesus himself.[107]

Jesus is mentioned about 187 times in the Quran, directly and indirectly, and also referred to by many titles, the most common being al-Masīḥ ('the Messiah').[3][108][109][110][28] Jesus is referred to 25 times by the name Isa,[note 2] 48 times in the third-person,[note 3] 35 times in the first-person, and is mentioned the remaining times by various titles in the Quran.[note 4][111]

Muhammad described himself as the "nearest of all people to Jesus".[112]

Similitude with Adam

The Quran emphasizes the creationism of Jesus,[105] through his similitude with Adam in regards to the absence of human origin. Muhammad often used to compare the births of Adam and Jesus.[113]

Islamic exegesis extrapolates a logical inconsistency behind the Christian argument of divine intervention, as such implications would have ascribed divinity to Adam who is understood only as creation.[105]

Precursor to Muhammad

In Islam, Jesus is believed to have been the precursor to the Islamic prophet Muhammad. According to the Quran, the coming of Muhammad was predicted by Jesus in As-Saff 61:6.[114] Through this verse, early Arab Muslims claimed legitimacy for their new faith in the existing religious traditions and the alleged predictions of Jesus.[115] Muslims believe that Jesus was a precursor to Muhammad, and that he prophesied the latter's coming.[116][21] This perspective is based on a verse of the Quran wherein Jesus speaks of a messenger to appear after him named "Ahmad".[117] Islam associates Ahmad with Muhammad, both words deriving from the h-m-d triconsonantal root which refers to praiseworthiness. Muslims assert that evidence of Jesus' pronouncement is present in the New Testament, citing the mention of the Paraclete whose coming is foretold in the Gospel of John.[118]

Muslim commentators claim that the original Greek word used was periklutos, meaning 'famed', 'illustrious', or 'praiseworthy'—rendered in Arabic as Ahmad; and that this was replaced by Christians with parakletos.[93][119] This idea is debated, asking if the traditional understanding is supported by the text of the Quran.

Islamic theology claims Jesus had foretold another prophet succeeding him according to Sura 61:6, with the mention of the name 'Ahmad'. (Ahmad is an Arabic name from the same triconsonantal root Ḥ-M-D = [ح – م – د].) In responding to Ibn Ishaq's biography of Muhammad, the Sirat Rasul Allah, Islamic scholar Alfred Guillaume wrote:

Coming back to the term "Ahmad", Muslims have suggested that Ahmad is the translation of periklutos, celebrated or the Praised One, which is a corruption of parakletos, the Paraclete of John XIV, XV and XVI.[120]

Messianism

An alternative, more esoteric, interpretation is expounded by Messianic Muslims[121] in the Sufi and Isma'ili traditions so as to unite Islam, Christianity and Judaism into a single religious continuum.[122] Other Messianic Muslims hold a similar theological view regarding Jesus, without attempting to unite the religions.[123][124][125] Making use of the New Testament's distinguishing between Jesus, Son of Man (being the physical human Jesus), and Christ, Son of God (being the Holy Spirit of God residing in the body of Jesus), the Holy Spirit, being immortal and immaterial, is not subject to crucifixion – for it can never die, nor can it be touched by the earthly nails of the crucifixion, for it is a being of pure spirit. Thus, while the spirit of Christ avoided crucifixion by ascending unto God, the body that was Jesus was sacrificed on the cross, thereby bringing the Old Testament to final fulfillment. Thus Quranic passages on the death of Jesus affirm that while the Pharisees intended to destroy Jesus completely, they, in fact, succeeded only in killing the Son of Man, being his nasut ('material being'). Meanwhile, the Son of God, being his lahut ('spiritual being') remained alive and undying – because it is the Holy Spirit.[126]

Islamic literature

The Quran does not convey the specific teachings of Jesus. What has developed over the years was authored by later followers of Islam. What is found in the Quran about Jesus is that his teaching conformed to the prophetic model: a human sent by God to present both a judgment upon humanity for worshipping idols and a challenge to turn to the one true God. In the case of Jesus, Muslims believe that his mission was to the people of Israel and that his status as a prophet was confirmed by numerous miracles.[27] The Quran's description of specific events at the end of Jesus' life have continued to be controversial between Christians and Muslims, while the classical commentaries have been interpreted differently to accommodate new information.[27] Jesus is written about by some Muslim scholars as the perfect man.[127][108][128]

Hadith

The Hadiths are reported sayings of Muhammad that developed a canonical status in the third Muslim century as a source of authority for the Muslim community. The Muslim perception of Jesus emerging from the Hadiths is of a miraculous, sinless, and eschatological figure, pointing people, again according to the Muslim's perspective of prophethood, to the Muslim faith (Muslim; one who submits to the will of God).[129]

Jesus is featured as a major figure in two categories of hadiths which can be described as apocalyptic and biblical.[130] The eschatological role of Jesus in the hadiths may have been influenced by ideas of the Second coming held by the Eastern Churches, as well as the Quarnic Jesus mentioned in 43:61.[130] Many of the hadiths which feature Jesus's sayings were not included in the canonical hadith collections, which became more focused on the sayings of Muhammad, but were instead included in a separate genre known as Qisas al-anbiya ('Stories of the Prophets').[131]

Sunni Islam

In Kitab al-Milal wa al-Nihal, al-Shahrastani (d. 1153), an influential Persian historian, historiographer, scholar, philosopher and theologian, records a portrayal of Jesus very close to the orthodox tenets while continuing the Islamic narrative:

The Christians. (They are) the community (umma) of the Christ, Jesus, son of Mary (peace upon him). He is who was truly sent (as prophet; mab'uth) after Moses (peace upon him), and who was announced in the Torah. To him were (granted) manifest signs and notable evidences, such as the reviving of the dead and the curing of the blind and the leper. His very nature and innate disposition (fitra) are a perfect sign of his truthfulness; that is, his coming without previous seed and his speaking without prior teaching. For all the (other) prophets the arrival of their revelation was at (the age of) forty years, but revelation came to him when he was made to speak in the cradle, and revelation came to him when he conveyed (the divine message) at (the age of) thirty. The duration of his (prophetic) mission (da'wa) was three years and three months and three days.[132]

Shia Islam

In the Nahj al-Balagha, the fourth caliph Ali (r. 656–661) is reported to have talked about the simplicity of Jesus.[133] Ali says that "Jesus used a stone for his pillow, put on coarse clothes and ate rough food. His condiment was hunger. His lamp at night was the moon. He had no wife to allure him, nor any son to give grief, neither wealth to deviate. His two feet were his conveyance and his two hands were his servant".[133] According to Ja'far al-Sadiq, a great-great grandson of Ali, the time between David and Jesus was four hundred years.[134] Ja'far further says that the religion of Jesus was monotheism (tawḥīd) and purity (ikhlāṣ).[134] The Injil (Gospel) was sent down to him and the pledge that other prophets took was also taken from Jesus: to establish prayer with religion, enjoin the good and forbid the evil, allowing what is allowed and forbidding what has been forbidden. Admonitions and parables were sent down to him in the Injil, but there was no law of retribution in it nor precepts of retribution (ahkam al-hudud), and no obligations for inheritance. He was sent what was an alleviation of what was sent down to Moses in the Torah. Jesus commanded of his followers that they believe in the law of the Torah and the Injil.[134]

According to Qadi al-Nu'man, a famous Muslim jurist of the Fatimid period, Jesus is referred to as the Messiah (al-Masīḥ) in the Quran because he was sent to the people who responded to him in order to remove (masaha) their impurities, the ailments of their faith; whether apparent (zahir) or hidden (batin). Qadi al- Nu'man, in his work Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation (Asās al-ta'wīl), talks about the spiritual birth (milad al-batin) of Jesus, as an interpretation of his story of physical birth (milad al-zahir) mentioned in the Quran. He says that Mary, the mother of Jesus, is a metaphor for someone who nurtured and instructed Jesus (lāhiq), rather than physically giving birth to him. Qadi al-Nu'man explains that Jesus was from the pure progeny of Abraham, just as Ali and his sons were from the pure progeny of Muhammad, through Fatima.[135]

Sufism

Early Sufis adopted the sayings of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount and an ascetic dimension. The submission and sacrifice Jesus exemplified shows the Muslim is to be set apart from worldly compromises. In poetry and mysticism, Jesus was celebrated as a prophet close to the heart of God achieving an uncommon degree of self-denial.[29]

Although the writings developed over the centuries embellished Jesus' miracles, the lessons of Jesus can be seen as metaphors of the inner life. These rich and diverse presentations of Jesus in Sufi traditions are the largest body of Jesus-texts in any non-Christian tradition.[136]

A key issue arises for Muslims with the Sufi picture of Jesus: how universally should the ascetic/esoteric approach be applied? For many Muslim poets and scholars the answer is clear: every Muslim is invited to the path of asceticism and inner realization embodied by Jesus. However, whilst all Muslims revere Jesus, most have reservations about the application of his way of life to society. For Muslims the highest pinnacle of human achievement is, after all, Muhammad. Muhammad is revered in part because he promoted the right blend of justice and mercy. In other words, Muslims need both a path that addresses individual spirituality as well as a path that will address the complex issues of community life, law, justice, etc. Jesus is viewed by many Muslims as having lived out only one side of this equation. As a figure of the heart or individual conscience, Jesus is viewed by some to be a limited figure. In more critical Muslim perspectives the Sermon on the Mount is admired but seen as impractical for human society. Perhaps the greatest division amongst Muslims has to do with the relevance of ascetic and esoteric beliefs in the context of strengthening an Islamic society.[136]

The miraculous birth and life of Jesus becomes a metaphor for Rumi of the spiritual rebirth that is possible within each human soul. This rebirth is not achieved without effort; one needs to practice silence, poverty, and fasting—themes that were prominent in Jesus' life according to Islamic traditions.[137]

Ibn Arabi stated Jesus was Al-Insān al-Kāmil, the spirit and simultaneously a servant of God. Jesus is held to be "one with God" in whole coincidence of will, not as a being. Due to the spirit of God dwelling in Jesus, God spoke and acted through him. Yet Jesus is not considered to be God, but a person within God's word and spirit and a manifestation of God's attributes, like a mirror.[138][139]

The conception of Jesus as described by Ibn Arabi (d. 1240), an Andalusian scholar, Sufi mystic, poet and philosopher, in the Bezels of Wisdom:

From the water of Mary or from the breath of Gabriel,
In the form of a mortal fashioned of clay,
The Spirit came into existence in an essence
Purged of Nature's taint, which is called Sijjin (prison)
Because of this, his sojourn was prolonged,
Enduring, by decree, more than a thousand years.
A spirit from none other than God,
So that he might raise the dead and bring forth birds from clay.[140]

Ascetic literature

Jesus is widely venerated in Muslim ascetic and mystic literature, such as in Muslim mystic Al-Ghazali's Ihya ʿulum ad-Din ('The revival of the religious sciences'). These works lay stress upon Jesus' poverty, his preoccupation with worship, his detachment from worldly life and his miracles. Such depictions also include advice and sermons which are attributed to him. Later Sufic commentaries adapted material from Christian gospels which were consistent with their ascetic portrayal. Sufi philosopher Ibn Arabi described Jesus as "the seal of universal holiness" due to the quality of his faith and "because he holds in his hands the keys of living breath and because he is at present in a state of deprivation and journeying".[93][citation needed]

Ahmadiyya literature

The Ahmadiyya Movement considers Jesus was a prophet and a mortal man, who was crucified and remained on the cross for six hours, until darkness fell. Jesus was taken down from the cross alive and unconscious. He was treated for three days and nights by saint physician Necdemus in a cave like tomb (especially built for Joseph of Arimathea). Thereafter, Jesus recuperated from his wounds, met his trusted disciples on the Mount of Olives, and left Judea towards the sea of Galilee on his way to Damascus. After his dramatic escape from crucifixion, Jesus traveled to the eastern lands in search of the ten lost tribes of Israel. Finally, he died a natural death in Kashmir, India, as opposed to having been raised up alive to Heaven.[141]

Appearance

Based upon several Hadith narrations of Muhammad, Jesus can be physically described thus (with any differences in Jesus' physical description being due to Muhammad describing him when seeing him at different occasions, such as during his ascension to Heaven, or when describing Jesus during Jesus' second coming):[142]

  • A well-built man of medium/moderate/average height and stature with a broad chest.
  • Straight, lank, and long hair that fell between his shoulders. It seems as though water is dribbling from his head, though it is not wet.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ see also: "Others, however, understand the second coming of 'Isa ... [is] to kill the Dajjil, to break the cross and decimate all Christians and their places of worship, and to inaugurate the aforementioned period of peace before the actual coming of the Hour".[90]
  2. ^ Isa (25 times): Q2:87, Q2:136, Q2:253, Q3:45, Q3:52, Q3:55, Q3:59, Q3:84, Q4:157, Q4:163, Q4:171, Q5:46, Q5:78, Q5:110, Q5:112, Q5:114, Q5:116, Q6:85, Q19:34, Q33:7, Q42:13, Q43:63, Q57:27, Q61:6, Q61:14.
  3. ^ 3rd person "He / Him / Thee" etc. (48 times): Q2:87, Q2:253, Q3:46(2), Q3:48, Q3:52, Q3:55(4), Q4:157(3), Q4.159(3), Q5:110(11), Q5:46(3), Q5:75(2), Q19:21, Q19:22(2), Q19:27(2), Q19:29, Q23:50, Q43:58(2), Q43:59(3), Q43:63, Q57:27(2), Q61:6.
  4. ^ Messiah (Christ) / Ibn Maryam (23 times): Q2:87, Q2:253, Q3:45, Q4:157, Q4:171, Q5:17, Q5:46, Q5:72, Q5:75, Q5:78, Q5:110, Q5:112, Q5:114, Q5:116, Q9:31, Q19:34, Q23:50, Q33:7, Q43:57, Q57:27, Q61:6, Q61:14; Messiah / Al Masih (11 times): Q3:45, Q4:171, Q4:172, Q5:17, Q5:72(2), Q5:75, Q9:30, Q9:31; Spirit (of God) / rwh (11 times): Q2:87, Q2:253, Q4:171, Q5:110, Q12:87, Q15.29, Q17:85(2), Q19:17, Q21:91, Q58:22; child / pure boy (9 times): Q19:19, Q19:20, Q19:21, Q19:29, Q19:35, Q19:88, Q19:91, Q19:92, Q21:91; Word (of God) / kalima (6 times): Q3:39, Q3:45, Q3:48, Q4:171, Q5:46, Q5:110; Messenger / Apostle / Prophet (5 times): Q3:49, Q4:157, Q4:171, Q19:30, Q61:6; Sign (4 times): Q19:21, Q21:91, Q23:50, Q43:61; The Gift (1 time): Q19:19; Mercy from Us (1 time): Q19:21; Servant (1 time): Q19:30; Blessed (1 time): Q19:31; Word of Truth ~ Statement of Truth (1 time): Q19:34; amazing thing ~ thing unheard of (1 time): Q19:27; Example (1 time): Q43:57; Straight Path ~ Right Way (1 time): Q43:61; Witness (1 time): Q4:159; His Name (1 time): Q3:45.

Citations

  1. ^ Watt 2013, p. 18.
  2. ^ Cleo McNelly Kearns. (2008), The Virgin Mary, Monotheism and Sacrifice, New York: Cambridge University Press, p. 254–55
  3. ^ a b McDowell, Josh; Walker, Jim (2002). Understanding Islam and Christianity: Beliefs That Separate Us and How to Talk About Them. Euguen, Oregon: Harvest House Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 9780736949910.
  4. ^ Leirvik 2010, p. 47.
  5. ^ Watt 2013, p. 19.
  6. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 51–94.
  7. ^ a b Leirvik 2010, p. 58.
  8. ^ Watt 2013, p. 31.
  9. ^ Zebiri, Kate (March 2000). "Contemporary Muslim Understanding of the Miracles of Jesus". The Muslim World. 90 (1–2): 71–90. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.2000.tb03682.x.
  10. ^ a b Leirvik 2010, p. 34.
  11. ^ Glassé 2001, p. 239.
  12. ^ Sarker, Abraham,Understand My Muslim People, 2004, ISBN 1-59498-002-0, p. 260.
  13. ^ Jackson, Montell, Islam Revealed, 2003, ISBN 1-59160-869-4, p. 73.
  14. ^ a b Peters, Francis Edward (2009). Islam: A Guide for Jews and Christians. Princeton University Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-4008-2548-6.
  15. ^ Jestice, Phyllis G., Holy people of the world: a cross-cultural encyclopedia, Volume 1, 2004, ISBN 1-57607-355-6, pp. 558–559
  16. ^ Watt 1991, p. 39.
  17. ^ a b Watt 2013, p. 46.
  18. ^ "Quran translation Comparison | Al-Quran Surah 3. Al-i'Imran, Ayah 47 | Alim". www.alim.org. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  19. ^ Virani, Shafique (2019). "Hierohistory in Qāḍī l-Nuʿmān's Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation (Asās al-Taʾwīl): The Birth of Jesus". Studies in Islamic Historiography: 147–169. doi:10.1163/9789004415294_007. ISBN 9789004415294. S2CID 214047322.
  20. ^ A. J. Wensinck and Penelope C. Johnstone, "Maryam", in Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, ed. by P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W. P. Heinrichs. Consulted online on 30 September 2018. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0692, ISBN 9789004161214.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i Leirvik 2010, pp. 59–60.
  22. ^ Watt 1991, pp. 48–49.
  23. ^ a b c Ayoub 1992, p. 145.
  24. ^ Leirvik 2010, p. 64.
  25. ^ Allen C. Myers, ed. (1987). "Aramaic". The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-8028-2402-8. It is generally agreed that Aramaic was the common language of Palestine in the first century AD. Jesus and his disciples spoke the Galilean dialect, which was distinguished from that of Jerusalem (Matt. 26:73)
  26. ^ Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 83.
  27. ^ a b c d Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 90.
  28. ^ a b Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 84.
  29. ^ a b Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 85.
  30. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 31–36.
  31. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 31.
  32. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 32.
  33. ^ a b Parrinder 1965, p. 83.
  34. ^ a b c Parrinder 1965, p. 78.
  35. ^ Parrinder 1965, pp. 75–76.
  36. ^ a b Leirvik 2010, p. 60.
  37. ^ Parrinder 1965, pp. 83–84.
  38. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 85.
  39. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 86.
  40. ^ Fudge, Bruce (7 April 2011). Qur'anic Hermeneutics: Al-Tabrisi and the Craft of Commentary (Routledge Studies in the Qur'an). United Kingdom: Routledge. p. 60. ISBN 978-0415782005.
  41. ^ a b Watt 2013, p. 24.
  42. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 87.
  43. ^ Robinson 1991, p. 129.
  44. ^ Ayoub 1992, p. 154.
  45. ^ Ayoub 1992, p. 158.
  46. ^ Esposito 2003, p. 158.
  47. ^ Reynolds 2010, p. 192.
  48. ^ Reynolds 2010, p. 190.
  49. ^ Phipps, William (28 May 2018) [2016]. "5 Scriptures". Muhammad and Jesus: A Comparison of the Prophets and Their Teachings. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-4742-8934-4.
  50. ^ Waardenburg 1999, p. 276.
  51. ^ Adang 1996, pp. 105–06.
  52. ^ a b Al-Qaradawi, Yusuf (30 January 2018) [30 January 1999]. "INTRODUCTION". The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam (Al-Halal Wal Haram Fil Islam). American Trust Publications. p. 5. ISBN 9780892590162.
  53. ^ "تفسير Tafsir al-Jalalayn". altafsir. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
  54. ^ Ridgeon 2013, p. 14.
  55. ^ Quran 3:52–53
  56. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 61.
  57. ^ Zahniser, Mathias (30 October 2008). The Mission and Death of Jesus in Islam and Christianity (Faith Meets Faith Series). New York: Orbis Books. p. 55. ISBN 978-1570758072.
  58. ^ a b Cook 1983, pp. 32–33.
  59. ^ Bulliet, Richard W. (2015). "Islamo-Christian Civilization". In Silverstein, Adam J.; Stroumsa, Guy G.; Blidstein, Moshe (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the Abrahamic Religions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 111. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199697762.013.6. ISBN 978-0-19-969776-2. LCCN 2014960132. S2CID 170430270. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  60. ^ Leirvik 2010, p. 66.
  61. ^ Crossan, John Dominic (1995). Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography. HarperOne. p. 145. ISBN 0-06-061662-8. That he was crucified is as sure as anything historical can ever be, since both Josephus and Tacitus ... agree with the Christian accounts on at least that basic fact.
  62. ^ Schäfer, Peter (13 September 2009). Jesus in the Talmud. Princeton University Press. p. 139. ISBN 978-0691143187.
  63. ^ Roberts, Alexander (1 May 2007). The Ante-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325. Vol. I – The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus. New York: Cosimo Classics. p. 349. ISBN 978-1602064690.
  64. ^ Lawson 2009, p. 14.
  65. ^ Watt 2013, pp. 39–40.
  66. ^ Cook 1983, p. 79.
  67. ^ a b Lawson 2009, p. 12.
  68. ^ Lawson 2009, p. 7.
  69. ^ Ayoub 1980.
  70. ^ a b Ayoub 1980, p. 117.
  71. ^ a b Ayoub 1980, p. 113–115.
  72. ^ Zahniser 2008, p. 56.
  73. ^ a b Watt 2013, p. 47.
  74. ^ Robinson 1991, p. 122.
  75. ^ Ayoub 1980, p. 108. Muhammad b. 'Ali b. Muhammad al-Shawkani, Fath al-Qadir al-Jami bayn Fannay al-Riwaya wa 'l Diraya min 'Ilm al-Tqfsir (Cairo: Mustafa al-Babi al-Halabi, n.d.), I, 346, citing Ibn Asakir, who reports on the authority of Ibn Munabbih.
  76. ^ Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 119.
  77. ^ Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 121.
  78. ^ Ayoub 1980, p. 113.
  79. ^ Ayoub 1980, p. 100.
  80. ^ Ayoub 1980, p. 103.
  81. ^ Tieszen 2018, p. 21.
  82. ^ a b Sonn 2004, p. 209.
  83. ^ Mannheim 2001, p. 91.
  84. ^ Cook 2002, p. 93–104.
  85. ^ Al-Bukhari. "Sahih al-Bukhari » Oppressions – كتاب المظالم » Hadith 2476. 46 Oppressions (31) Chapter: The breaking of the cross and the killing of the pigs". sunnah.com. Retrieved 2022-05-22.
  86. ^ a b c WARREN LARSON Jesus in Islam and Christianity: Discussing the Similarities and the Differences p. 335
  87. ^ Akyol, Mustafa (3 October 2016). "The Problem With the Islamic Apocalypse". The New York Times. New York Times. Retrieved 2022-01-29.
  88. ^ Evans & Johnston 2015.
  89. ^ 'Umdah, 430; cited in Qaim 2007, His Second Coming: "...Then he will kill the swine, break the crosses, destroy the churches and temples and kill the Christians unless they believe in him."
  90. ^ Smith, Jane I.; Haddad, Yvonne Y. (1981). The Islamic Understanding of Death and Resurrection. Albany, N Y: SUNY Press. p. 69.
  91. ^ Sonn, Tamara (2015). Islam: History, Religion, and Politics. John Wiley & Sons. p. 209. ISBN 978-1-118-97230-4.
  92. ^ "Jesus, A Prophet of Allah – Association of Islamic Charitable Projects in USA". www.aicp.org. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  93. ^ a b c d e Anawati, G.C. (2012). "Īsā". In P. J. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C. E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W. P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (2nd ed.). Brill Online. ISBN 9789004161214. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
  94. ^ Peters 1990, p. 352.
  95. ^ Roberto Tottoli Biblical Prophets in the Qur'an and Muslim Literature Routledge, 11 January 2013 ISBN 978-1-136-12314-6 p. 121
  96. ^ Neal Robinson Christ in Islam and Christianity SUNY Press 1 January 1991 ISBN 9780791405581 p. 104
  97. ^ Tabor, James (28 August 2017) [1st pub. 2006]. "Conclusion: RECOVERING LOST TREASURES". The Jesus Dynasty: The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity. Simon & Schuster. pp. 315–316. ISBN 978-0-7432-8723-4.
  98. ^ Sakura, Muham (11 November 2017) [December 2015]. "Preface". The Great Tale of Prophet Adam & Prophet Jesus In Islam. United Submitters International. p. 6. ISBN 9783739635736.
  99. ^ Akhtar, Shabbir (24 October 2017) [October 2007]. "PART 1 Quranic Islam and the secular mind". The Quran and the Secular Mind: A Philosophy of Islam. Routledge. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-203-93531-6.
  100. ^ See:
  101. ^ [Quran 5:116]
  102. ^ "Was Jesus a Muslim?".
  103. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 75.
  104. ^ Fasching & deChant 2001, p. 241.
  105. ^ a b c Akhtar, Shabbir (31 October 2007). The Quran and the Secular Mind: A Philosophy of Islam. Routledge. ISBN 9781134072569 – via Google Books.
  106. ^ "Surah An-Nisa – 171".
  107. ^ Mufti Shafi Uthmani, Maariful Quran, Q19:16-21, Volume 6, p. 34.
  108. ^ a b Schumann 2002, p. 13.
  109. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 33.
  110. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 4.
  111. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 16.
  112. ^ Abdullah 2014, p. 124.
  113. ^ Robinson 1991, p. 12.
  114. ^ [Quran 61:6]
  115. ^ Virani, Shafique N. (2011). "Taqiyya and Identity in a South Asian Community". The Journal of Asian Studies. 70 (1): 99–139. doi:10.1017/S0021911810002974. ISSN 0021-9118. S2CID 143431047. p. 128.
  116. ^ Klauck, Hans-Josef Klauck (2003). The Apocryphal Gospels: An Introduction. London: Bloomsbury T&T Clark. p. 18. ISBN 978-0567083906.
  117. ^ Quran 61:06
  118. ^ "Jesus' Omen about the Paraclete | Supporting Prophet Muhammad website". rasoulallah.net. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  119. ^ Watt 2013, p. 33.
  120. ^ Liddell and Scott's celebrated Greek-English Lexicon gives this definition for periklutos: "heard of all round, famous, renowned, Latin inclytus: of things, excellent, noble, glorious". Rev. James M. Whiton, ed. A Lexicon abridged from Liddell and Scott's Greek-English Lexicon. New York: American Book Company, N.D. c.1940s, p.549. Periklutos occurs in The Iliad and The Odyssey, and Hesiod's Theogony.
  121. ^ Travis, John (2000). "Messian Muslim Followers of Isa" (PDF). International Journal of Frontier Missions. 17 (Spring): 54.
  122. ^ Cumming, Joseph. "Muslim Followers of Jesus?". ChristianityToday. Retrieved 2009-11-20.
  123. ^ "Touchstone Archives: Can Jesus Save Islam?". Retrieved 2016-10-17.
  124. ^ Medearis, Carl (9 January 2013). "Muslims Who Follow Jesus". HuffPost. Retrieved 2016-10-17.
  125. ^ "Why Evangelicals Should Be Thankful for Muslim Insiders". Retrieved 2016-10-17.
  126. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam, Jesus article. cf. L. Massignon, Le Christ dans les Évangiles selon Ghazali, in REI, 1932, 523–36, who cites texts of the Rasa'il Ikhwan al-Safa, a passage of Abu Hatim al-Razi (about 934), and another of the Isma'ili da'i Mu'ayyad fid-din al-Shirazi (1077).
  127. ^ Little, John T. (3 April 2007). "Al-Insan Al-Kamil: The Perfect Man According to Ibn Al-Arabi". The Muslim World. 77 (1): 43–54. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.1987.tb02785.x. Ibn al-'Arabi uses no less than 22 different terms to describe the various aspects under which this single Logos may be viewed.
  128. ^ Parrinder 1965, p. 6.
  129. ^ Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 97.
  130. ^ a b Khalidi 2001, p. 25.
  131. ^ Khalidi 2001, p. 26.
  132. ^ Watt 2013, p. 68.
  133. ^ a b Leirvik 2010, p. 75.
  134. ^ a b c Qaim 2007, p. 36–37.
  135. ^ Virani, Shafique N. (6 November 2019), "Hierohistory in Qāḍī l-Nuʿmān's Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation (Asās al-Taʾwīl): the Birth of Jesus", Studies in Islamic Historiography, BRILL: 147–169, doi:10.1163/9789004415294_007, ISBN 978-90-04-41529-4, S2CID 214047322, retrieved 2020-11-21
  136. ^ a b Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 86.
  137. ^ Barker & Gregg 2010, p. 112.
  138. ^ Leirvik 2010, p. 89.
  139. ^ Clinton Bennett Understanding Christian-Muslim Relations: Past and Present A&C Black 2008 ISBN 978-0-826-48782-7 page 155
  140. ^ ibn ʻArabī al-Ḥātimī aṭ-Ṭāʾī, Abū ʻAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn ʻAlī ibn Muḥammad; Austin, R. W. (1980). Ibn al-ʻArabi. Paulist Press. p. 174. ISBN 978-0-8091-2331-5.
  141. ^ "Death of Jesus – WikiAhmadiyya, Islam & Ahmadiyya encyclopedia free online". www.wikiahmadiyya.org.
  142. ^ Sahih al-Bukhari, , , , , Sahih Muslim, , , , ,

Sources

  • Abdullah, Arif Kemil (2014). The Qur'an and Normative Religious Pluralism: A Thematic Study of the Qur'an. IIIT. ISBN 9781565646575.
  • Adang, Camilla (1996). Muslim Writers on Judaism and the Hebrew Bible: From Ibn Rabban to Ibn Hazm. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-10034-3.
  • Ayoub, Mahmoud M. (April 1980). "Towards an Islamic Christology II: The Death of Jesus, Reality or Delusion (A Study of the Death of Jesus in Tafsir Literature)". The Muslim World. 70 (2): 91–121. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.1980.tb03405.x.
  • Ayoub, Mahmoud M. (1992). The Qur'an and Its Interpreters, Volume II: The House of 'Imran. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-0994-7.
  • Barker, Gregory A.; Gregg, Stephen E. (2010). Jesus Beyond Christianity: The Classic Texts. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Cook, Michael (1983). Muhammad. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192876058.
  • Esposito, J. L. (2002). What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-515713-0.
  • Esposito, J. L. (2003). The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-512558-0.
  • Evans, Craig A.; Johnston, Jeremiah J. (20 October 2015). Jesus and the Jihadis: Confronting the Rage of ISIS: The Theology Driving the Ideology. Destiny Image Publishers. ISBN 978-0-76-840900-0.
  • Fasching, D. J.; deChant, D. (2001). Comparative Religious Ethics: A Narrative Approach. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-20125-0.
  • Glassé, Cyril (2001). The New Encyclopedia of Islam, with introduction by Huston Smith (révisée ed.). Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press. ISBN 9780759101906.
  • Khalidi, Tarif (2001). The Muslim Jesus: Sayings and Stories in Islamic Literature. Cambridge, MA & London: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00477-1. Google books site
  • Lawson, Todd (2009). The Crucifixion and the Qur'an: A Study in the History of Muslim Thought. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1851686360. Retrieved 2012-07-28.
  • Leirvik, Oddbjørn (2010). Images of Jesus Christ in Islam (2nd ed.). Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4411-8662-1.
  • Markham, I. S.; Ruparell, T. (2001). Encountering Religion: An Introduction to the Religions of the World. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-20674-3.
  • Parrinder, Geoffrey (1965). Jesus in the Qur'an. London: Oxford Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1-85168-999-6.
  • Peters, Francis E. (1990). Judaism, Christianity, and Islam: The Classical Texts and Their Interpretation, Volume 3. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691020556.
  • Parrinder, Geoffrey (2013). Jesus in the Qur'an. Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-0-41573-463-9.
  • Qaim, Mahdi Muntazir (2007). Jesus Through the Qur'an and Shi'ite Narrations. Queens, New York. ISBN 978-1879402140.
  • Reynolds, Gabriel Said (2010). "On the Qur'anic Accusation of Scriptural Falsification (tahrîf) and Christian Anti-Jewish Polemic" (PDF). Journal of the American Oriental Society. 130 (2): 189–202. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
  • Ridgeon, Lloyd (2013). Islamic Interpretations of Christianity. Routledge. ISBN 9781136840135.
  • Cook, David (2002). Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic. University of Michigan: Darwin Press. ISBN 9780878501427.
  • Robinson, Neal (1991). Christ in Islam and Christianity. New York: SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-791-40559-8.
  • Schumann, Olaf H. (2002). Jesus the Messiah in Muslim Thought. ISPCK/HIM. ISBN 978-8172145224.
  • Sonn, Tamarra (2004). A Brief History of Islam. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-2174-3.
  • Tieszen, Charles (2018). Theological Issues in Christian-Muslim Dialogue. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 9781532610585.
  • Waardenburg, Jackques (1999). Muslim Perceptions of Other Religions: A Historical Survey. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-535576-5.
  • Watt, W. Montgomery (1991). Muslim-Christian Encounters: Perceptions and Misperceptions. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-05410-2.
  • Watt, W. Montgomery (19 December 2013). Muslim-Christian Encounters: Perceptions and Misperceptions. Routledge Revivals. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-82043-7.

Further reading

  • Rippin, A. "Yahya b. Zakariya". In P. J. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C. E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W. P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Brill Academic Publishers. ISSN 1573-3912.
  • Saritoprak, Zeki (2014). Islam's Jesus. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. ISBN 9780813049403. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
  • Slade, Darren M. (January 2014). (PDF). American Theological Inquiry. 7 (1): 43–53. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-02.
  • Wherry, E. M.; Sale, G. (2000). A Comprehensive Commentary on the Qurán: Comprising Sale's Translation and Preliminary Discourse (vol. II). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23188-6.
  • Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2006). "'Etymythological Othering' and the Power of 'Lexical Engineering' in Judaism, Islam and Christianity. A Socio-Philo(sopho)logical Perspective", Explorations in the Sociology of Language and Religion, edited by Tope Omoniyi and Joshua A. Fishman, Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 237–258. ISBN 90-272-2710-1

External links

  • Jesus: A Summary of the Points About Which Islam and Christianity Agree and Disagree Dr. Alan Godlas, University of Georgia.
  • What Do Muslims Think About Jesus – Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia
  • Jesus Through Muslim Eyes – BBC
  • The Story of Jesus Through Iranian Eyes – ABC News
  • 7 Muslim Beliefs about Jesus Dr. Warren Larson
  • Alim.org Surah 3. Al-i'Imran, Ayah 4

jesus, islam, islam, refers, jesus, other, uses, disambiguation, name, islam, jesus, arabic, يس, ٱب, romanized, ʿĪsā, maryam, maryam, believed, penultimate, prophet, messenger, messiah, also, considered, prophet, sent, guide, children, israel, banī, isra, bein. In Islam Isa refers to Jesus For other uses see Isa disambiguation and Isa name In Islam Jesus Arabic ع يس ى ٱب ن م ر ي م romanized ʿisa ibn Maryam lit Isa son of Maryam is believed to be the penultimate prophet and messenger of God and the Messiah He is also considered to be the prophet sent to guide the Children of Israel Bani Isra il being revealed in the third holy book called the Injil Prophetʿisaع يس ى JesusBornc 4 BCHerodian Kingdom of Judea Roman EmpireDisappearedc 33 ADGethsemane Jerusalem JudeaKnown forBeing the MessiahPredecessorYahya John the Baptist SuccessorMuhammadOpponentDajjal Antichrist ParentMaryam mother RelativesZakariyya uncle Yahya possible cousin In the Quran Jesus is described as the Messiah al Masiḥ born of a virgin performing miracles accompanied by disciples rejected by the Jewish establishment and being raised to heaven The Quran asserts that Jesus was not crucified nor died on the cross but was miraculously saved by God The Quran places Jesus amongst the greatest prophets and mentions him with various titles The prophethood of Jesus is preceded by that of Yahya and succeeded by Muhammad the latter of whom Jesus is reported to have prophesied by using the name Ahmad The Quran rejects the Christian view of the divinity of Jesus as God incarnate or the literal Son of God It denies Jesus as a deity in several verses and also mentions that Jesus did not claim to be divine Muslims believe that Jesus original message was altered taḥrif after him being raised alive The monotheism tawḥid of Jesus is emphasized in the Quran Like all prophets in Islam Jesus is also called a Muslim as he preached that his followers should adopt the straight path Ṣiraṭ al Mustaqim Jesus is attributed with a vast number of miracles in Islamic tradition In Islamic eschatology Jesus will return in the Second Coming with Imam Mahdi to kill the Al Masih ad Dajjal The False Messiah after which with the ancient tribes Gog and Magog Yaʾjuj Maʾjuj would disperse After these creatures would miraculously perish Imam Mahdi and Jesus would rule the entire world establish peace and justice and die after a reign of 40 years Some Muslims believe that he would then be buried alongside Muhammad at the fourth reserved tomb of the Green Dome in Medina Jesus is understood by Muslims to be one of the most important prophets of Islam The place where Jesus is believed to return the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus is highly esteemed by Muslims as the fourth holiest site of Islam Jesus is widely venerated in Sufism with numerous ascetic and mystic literature being written and recited about the Islamic prophet Contents 1 Birth 1 1 Annunciation 1 2 Birth narratives 2 Childhood 2 1 In Egypt 3 Adulthood 3 1 Mission 3 2 Preaching 4 Miracles 4 1 Speaking from the cradle 4 2 Creating birds from clay 4 3 Healing the blind and the lepers 4 4 Raising the dead 4 5 Prescience 4 6 Table of food from heaven 4 7 Other miracles 4 7 1 Healing a royal official s son 4 7 2 Greed and truth telling 4 7 3 Inherent wisdom 4 7 4 Food in children s homes 5 Revelation 6 Disciples 7 Ascension 7 1 Substitution 7 2 Symbolic interpretations 8 Second Coming 8 1 Sources 9 Islamic theology 9 1 Similitude with Adam 9 2 Precursor to Muhammad 9 3 Messianism 10 Islamic literature 10 1 Hadith 10 2 Sunni Islam 10 3 Shia Islam 10 4 Sufism 10 4 1 Ascetic literature 11 Ahmadiyya literature 12 Appearance 13 See also 14 References 14 1 Notes 14 2 Citations 14 3 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksBirth EditMain article Nativity of Jesus See also Maryam surah and Mary in Islam Islam s account of Jesus begins with a prologue narrated several times in the Quran which first describes the birth of his mother Mary and her service in the Jerusalem temple while under the care of the prophet Zechariah who would become the father of Yahya John the Baptist The Quran s birth narrative of Jesus begins at Quran 19 16 34 and Q3 45 53 1 This birth narrative has been recounted with certain variations and detailed additions by Islamic historians over the centuries In the matter of the virgin birth of Jesus while Islamic theology affirms Mary as a pure vessel it does not follow the concept of Immaculate Conception as related to Mary s birth in some Christian traditions 2 3 4 Annunciation Edit See also Annunciation Islamic exegesis affirms the virginal birth of Jesus similarly to the Gospel account and occurring in Bethlehem 5 The narrative of the virgin birth opens with an announcement to Mary by the angel Gabriel while Mary is being raised in the Temple after having been pledged to God by her mother Gabriel states she is honored over all women of all nations and has brought her glad tidings of a holy son 6 The Annunciation in miniature Gabriel declares the son is to be named Jesus the Messiah proclaiming he will be called a great prophet Mary asking how she could conceive and have a child when no man had touched her was answered by the angel that God can decree what he wills and that it shall come to pass 7 The narrative from the Quran continues with Mary overcome by the pains of childbirth being provided with a stream of water under her feet from which she could drink and with a palm tree which she could shake so ripe dates would fall and be enjoyed After giving birth Mary carries the baby Jesus back to the temple and is asked by the temple elders about the child Having been commanded by Gabriel to a vow of silence she points to the infant Jesus and the infant proclaims He said I am God s servant He has given me the Book and made me a prophet He has made me blessed wherever I am and has enjoined on me the Worship and Alms so long as I live and to be dutiful to my mother and has not made me oppressive impious Peace is on me the day I was born the day I shall die and the day I shall be raised alive 8 Jesus speaking from the cradle is one of six miracles attributed to him in the Quran an account which is also found in the Syriac Infancy Gospel a sixth century work 9 10 According to various hadiths Jesus and Mary did not cry at birth 11 Birth narratives Edit The Islamic faith echoed some strands within the Christian tradition that Mary or Maryam was a literal virgin when Jesus was conceived The most detailed account of the annunciation and birth of Jesus is provided in Surah 3 Al Imran and 19 Maryam of the Quran where the story is narrated that God Allah sent an angel to announce that Maryam could shortly expect to bear a son despite being a virgin 12 Some academics have noted that the account in Surah 19 is particularly close to that in the Christian Gospel of Luke 13 The Annunciation to Mary is mentioned twice in the Quran and in both instances Mary Maryam is told that she was chosen by God to deliver a son In the first instance the bearer of the news who is believed by most Muslims to be the archangel Gabriel delivered the news in Q3 42 47 as he takes the form of a man Q19 16 22 14 15 The details of the conception are not discussed but when Mary asks how she can bear a son in view of her chastity she is told that God creates what he wills and that these things are easy for God 14 The 8th century Muslim historian Ibn Ishaq 704 767 wrote the account entitled Kitab al Mubtada In the Beginning reporting that Zechariah is Mary s guardian briefly and after being incapable of maintaining her he entrusts her to a carpenter named George Secluded in a church she is joined by a young man named Joseph and they help one another fetching water and other tasks The account of the birth of Jesus follows the Quran s narrative adding that the birth occurred in Bethlehem beside a palm tree with a manger 16 The 10th century Persian scholar Al Tabari 839 923 mentions envoys arriving from the king of Persia with gifts similar to the Magi from the east for the Messiah the command to a man called Joseph not specifically Mary s husband to take her and the child to Egypt and later return to Nazareth 17 The Fatimid Ismaili jurist Qadi al Nu man also contributed to the narrative explaining that the virgin birth of Jesus is meant to be interpreted symbolically In his interpretation Mary was the follower laḥiq of the Imam Joachim Imran However when Joachim realized that she was not suited for the Imamah he passed it to Zechariah who then passed it to John the Baptist Meanwhile Mary received spiritual inspiration madda from God revealing that he would invite a man to the faith who would become an exalted Speaker naṭiq of a revealed religion shariʿa According to al Nu man the verses She said Lord How can I have a child when no man has touched me Quran 3 47 18 and neither have I been unchaste Quran 19 20 are symbolic of Mary s saying How can I conduct the invitation daʿwa when the Imam of the Time has not given me permission to do so and Nor shall I be unfaithful by acting against his command respectively To this a celestial hierarch replies Such is God He creates i e causes to pass what he wills Quran 3 47 19 Childhood EditMain article Finding in the Temple See also Flight into Egypt and Infancy Gospel of Thomas The Quran does not include the tradition of the Flight into Egypt though sura 23 50 could conceivably allude to it And we made the son of Maryam and his mother a sign and we made them abide in an elevated place full of quiet and watered with springs 20 However narratives similar to the narrative found in the Gospels and non canonical sources circulated in later Islamic tradition with some details and elaborations being added over the centuries by Islamic writers and historians Some narratives have Jesus and family staying in Egypt up to 12 years 21 Many moral stories and miraculous events of Jesus youth are mentioned in Qisas al anbiya Stories of the Prophets books composed over the centuries about pre Islamic prophets and heroes 7 Al Masudi wrote that Jesus as a boy studied the Jewish religion reading from the Psalms and found traced in characters of light You are my son and my beloved I have chosen you for myself with Jesus then claiming Today the word of God is fulfilled in the son of man 17 In Egypt Edit See also Infancy Gospel of Thomas Several narratives show some disparity and similarity in Islamic writings about Jesus early childhood specifically his time in Egypt with regard to duration and events Most of the narratives are found in non canonical Christian sources like for example the pre Islamic Gospel of Thomas One such disparity is from al Athir in his The Perfection of History which contains a birth narrative stating Jesus was born in Egypt instead of Bethlehem 22 Some other narratives of Jesus childhood are popular Middle Eastern lore as highlighted by professor of interfaith studies Mahmoud M Ayoub 23 Many miracles are attributed to a young Jesus while in Egypt 21 see Miracles and Other miracles Adulthood Edit The Jordan River where Jesus was baptized by Yahya ibn Zakariya John the Baptist 24 Mission Edit See also Ministry of Jesus and Apostle Islam It is generally agreed that Jesus spoke Aramaic the common language of Judea in the first century AD and the region at large 25 The first and earliest view of Jesus formulated in Islamic thought is that of a prophet a human being chosen by God to present both a judgment upon humanity for worshipping idols and a challenge to turn to the one true God From this basis reflected upon all previous prophets through the lens of Muslim identity Jesus is considered no more than a messenger repeating a repetitive message of the ages The miracles of Jesus and the Quranic titles attributed to Jesus demonstrate the power of God rather than the divinity of Jesus the same power behind the message of all prophets Some Islamic traditions believe Jesus mission was only to the people of Israel and his status as a prophet being confirmed by numerous miracles 26 27 A second early high image of Jesus is an end time figure This concept arises mostly from the Hadith Muslim tradition constructs a narrative similarly found in Christian theology seeing Jesus arriving at the end of time and descending upon earth to fight the Antichrist This narrative is understood to champion the cause of Islam with some traditions narrating Jesus pointing to the primacy of Muhammad Most traditions state Jesus will then die a natural death 28 A third and distinctive image is of Jesus representing an ascetic figure a prophet of the heart Although the Quran refers to the gospel of Jesus those specific teachings of his are not mentioned in the Quran or later religious texts They are largely absent The Sufi tradition is where Jesus became revered acknowledged as a spiritual teacher with a distinctive voice from other prophets including Muhammad Sufism tends to explore the dimensions of union with God through many approaches including asceticism poetry philosophy speculative suggestion and mystical methods Although Sufism to the Western mind may seem to share similar origins or elements of Neoplatonism Gnosticism and Buddhism the ideology is distinctly Islamic since they adhere to the words of the Quran and pursue imitation of Muhammad as the perfect man 29 Preaching Edit The Islamic concepts of Jesus preaching is believed to have originated in Kufa Iraq under the Rashidun Caliphate where the earliest writers of Muslim tradition and scholarship was formulated The concepts of Jesus and his preaching ministry developed in Kufa was adopted from the early ascetic Christians of Egypt who opposed official church bishopric appointments from Rome 30 The earliest stories numbering about 85 are found in two major collections of ascetic literature entitled Kitab al Zuhd wa l Raqa iq The Book of the Asceticism and Tender Mercies by Ibn al Mubarak d 797 and Kitab al Zuhd The Book of Asceticism by Ibn Hanbal d 855 These sayings fall into four basic groups eschatological sayings quasi Gospel sayings ascetic sayings and stories sayings echoing intra Muslim polemics 31 The first group of sayings expands Jesus archetype as portrayed in the Quran The second group of stories although containing a Gospel core are expanded with a distinctly Islamic stamp The third group being the largest of the four portrays Jesus as a patron saint of Muslim asceticism The last group builds upon the Islamic archetype and Muslim centric definition of Jesus and his attributes furthering esoteric ideas regarding terms such as Spirit of God and Word of God 32 Miracles EditMain article Miracles of Jesus See also Infancy Gospel of Thomas The Quran attributes at least six miracles to Jesus with many more being added over the centuries by writers and historians Miracles were attributed to Jesus as signs of his prophethood and his authority according to educator and professor Ishaq Musa Al Husayni d 1990 an author most known for Mudhakkirat Dajaja Memoirs of a Hen Cairo Dar al Maarif 1943 2nd ed 1967 In Christ in the Quran and Modern Arabic Literature 1960 Al Husayni said it is noteworthy Muhammad attributes no miracles to himself 33 These six miracles in the Quran are without detail unlike the Gospel and their non canonical Gnostic sources which include details and mention other attributed miracles 33 Over the centuries these six miracle narratives have been elaborated through Hadith and poetry with religious writings including some of the other miracles mentioned in the Gospel non canonical sources and from lore 21 23 Speaking from the cradle Edit Speaking from the cradle is mentioned in three places in the Quran al Imran 3 41 46 al Maida 5 109 110 and Maryam 19 29 30 Part of the narrative has the infant Jesus defending his mother Mary from the accusation of having given birth without a known husband 34 Early Islam was unclear about Joseph and his role Jesus speaks as the angel Gabriel had mentioned at the annunciation Jesus proclaims he is a servant of God has been given a book is a prophet is blessed wherever he will go blesses the day he was born the day he will die and the day he is raised alive 35 Although this particular narrative is not found in the Bible the theme of speaking from the cradle is found in the non canonical pre Islamic Syriac Infancy Gospel The Syriac Infancy Gospel has Jesus declaring himself the Son of God the Word and affirming what the angel Gabriel had previously announced to Mary as detailed in the Gospel 34 Creating birds from clay Edit The miracle story of creating birds from clay and breathing life into them when a child is mentioned in al Imran 3 43 49 and al Maida 5 109 110 Although this miracle is also not mentioned in the canonical Gospel the same narrative is found in at least two pre Islamic sources the Infancy Gospel of Thomas and the Jewish Toledot Yeshu with few variant details between the Quran and these two sources 36 37 Healing the blind and the lepers Edit See also Healing the two blind men in Galilee and Cleansing ten lepers Similar to the New Testament the Quran mentions Jesus healing the blind and the lepers in al Imran 3 49 Muslim scholar and judge al Baydawi d 1286 wrote how it was recorded that many thousands of people came to Jesus to be healed and that Jesus healed these diseases through prayer only 38 Medieval scholar al Tha labi wrote about how these two particular diseases were beyond medical help and Jesus miracles were meant to be witnessed by others as clear signs of his message 36 Raising the dead Edit Jesus is believed to have raised people from the dead as mentioned in al Imran 3 49 Although no detail is given as to who was raised or the circumstance at least three people are mentioned in detail in the Christian Gospel a daughter of Jairus a widow s son at Nain and Lazarus 39 Prescience Edit Jesus was able to predict or had foreknowledge 40 of what was hidden or unknown to others One example is Jesus would answer correctly any and every question anyone asked him Another example is Jesus knew what people had just eaten as well as what they had stored in their homes 21 Table of food from heaven Edit Main article Feeding the multitude See also Last Supper In the fifth chapter of the Quran al Ma ida 5 112 115 a narration mentions the disciples of Jesus requesting a table laden with food and for it to be a special day of commemoration for them in the future This may be a possible reference to the Eucharist according to professor of Islamic and Arabic studies W Montgomery Watt d 2006 41 According to professor of comparative religions Geoffrey Parrinder d 2005 it is unclear if this story parallels the Gospel s Last Supper or the feeding the multitude but may be tied to the Arabic word ʿid Muslim festival 42 One time the disciples said O Jesus son of Mary can your Lord send down for us a table from heaven He said Fear God if you are believers They said We want to eat of it and that our hearts may be at peace and we may know you have spoken truthfully and be among the witnesses to it Jesus son of Mary said O God our Lord send down upon us a table from heaven to be for us a festival for the first of us and the last of us and a sign from you and give provision of food to us for you are the best of providers God said I am sending it down for you 41 In a record by the Sunni exegete Tabari before the last supper the threat of death made him anxious Therefore Jesus invited his disciples for the last supper After the meal he washed their hands and performed their ablutions to wipe their hands on his clothing Afterwards Jesus replied to them As for that I have done to you tonight in that I served you the meal and washed your hands in person let it be an example for you Since you indeed consider me to be better than you do not be haughty in relation to each other but rather expand yourselves for each other as I have expanded myself for you After instructing the disciples in his teachings Jesus foretells that one of them would deny him and another betray him However in accordance with Islamic views on Jesus death just a corpse in semblance of Jesus was crucified and Jesus himself was raised to God 43 Other miracles Edit Many stories and narratives have been developed over the years about Jesus containing certain inherent lessons or providing meaning due to the lack of detail in the Quran regarding Jesus Some of these narratives are similar in nature to the New Testament while some portray Jesus in a very human manner Besides some detailed summaries of miracles of Jesus mentioned by Muslim writers over the centuries from adulthood like walking on water also found in the Gospel and causing loaves of bread to come from the ground 34 some other miracles from childhood include explaining the Muslim creed fundamentals to a schoolmaster revealing who the thieves were to a wealthy chief filling empty jars of something to drink providing food and wine for a tyrannical king while also proving to this king his power in raising a dead man from the dead raising a child accidentally killed and causing the garments from a single colored vat to come out with various colors 21 Healing a royal official s son Edit Main article Healing the royal official s son Al Tabari d 923 reports a story of an adult Jesus encounter with a certain king in the region and the healing of his son The identity of the king is not mentioned while legend suggests Philip the Tetrarch The corresponding Bible reference is the royal official s son 44 Greed and truth telling Edit A legendary story of a miracle by a young Jesus used as a hard learned lesson popularly found in Middle Eastern lore according to professor Ayoub has to do with a Jewish man and loaves of bread Although carrying a polemic tone the lesson centers on greed with truth telling woven into the narration It is a story found often in children s books 45 Inherent wisdom Edit See also Logos Islamic and Logos Christianity Another legendary miracle story is one regarding Jesus childhood wisdom This legend reported through al Tabari from ibn Ishaq talks about Mary sending Jesus to a religious school and the teacher being astonished to find Jesus already knowing the information being taught discussed 21 Food in children s homes Edit Another story from al Tabari tells of a young Jesus playing with the youths of his village and telling them what food their parents were preparing for them at home 21 According to the details of the narrative some parents became annoyed and forbade their children to play with Jesus suspecting he was a magician As a result the parents kept their children away from Jesus and gathered their children into a single house One day feeling lonely Jesus went out looking for his friends and coming upon this house he asked the parents where their children were The parents lied responding that the children were not there After Jesus asks who then is in the house the parents call Jesus a pig Jesus then says Let there be swine in this house turning all the children into swine 23 Over the centuries Muslim writers have also referenced other miracles like casting out demons having borrowed from some heretical pre Islamic sources and from canonical sources as legends about Jesus were expanded 21 Revelation EditMain article Gospel in Islam See also Ministry of Jesus Muslims believe that God revealed a new scripture to Jesus called the al Injil the Gospel while also declaring the truth of the previous revelations al Tawrat the Torah and al Zabur the Psalms 46 The Quran speaks favorably of al Injil which it describes as a scripture that fills the hearts of its followers with meekness and piety Traditional Islamic exegesis claims the biblical message to have been distorted tahrif is termed ta yin al mubham resolution of ambiguity 47 This polemic effort has its origins in the medieval period with Abd al Jabbar ibn Ahmad s writings 48 Regarding the Law of Moses the Quran indicates that Jesus never abolished Jewish laws but rather confirmed them while making partial abrogations only 49 Muslims have long believed that Paul purposefully corrupted the original teachings of Jesus 50 The 9th century historian Sayf ibn Umar asserted that certain rabbis persuaded Paul to deliberately misguide early Christians by introducing what Ibn Hazm viewed as objectionable doctrines into Christianity 51 According to Yusuf al Qaradawi in his book The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam the legal restrictions Jesus abrogated for Jews were those initially legislated by God as a punishment 52 Classical commentaries such as Tafsir al Jalalayn specify they pertained to the consumption of fish and bird meat without spikes or in general 53 Disciples EditMain article Disciples of Jesus in Islam The Quran states that Jesus was aided by a group of disciples Ḥawariyyun who believed in his message While not naming the disciples the Quran does give a few instances of Jesus preaching the message to them Muslims view the disciples of Jesus as identical to the companions Ṣaḥaba of Muhammad 54 According to Christianity the names of the twelve disciples were Peter Andrew James John Philip Bartholomew Thomas Matthew James Jude Simon and Judas The Quran mentions in chapter 3 verses 52 53 that the disciples submitted to the faith of Islam non primary source needed When Jesus found Unbelief on their part He said Who will be My helpers to the work of God Said the disciples We are God s helpers We believe in God and do thou bear witness that we are Muslims Our Lord we believe in what Thou hast revealed and we follow the Messenger then write us down among those who bear witness Quran Surah Al Imran 52 53 55 The longest narrative involving Jesus disciples is when Jesus performs the miracle of bringing a table of food from heaven at their request for further proof that his preaching is the true message Ascension EditMain article Islamic view of Jesus death An Nisa s verse 157 is the primary verse of the Quran to refer to the event of Jesus crucifixion 56 It says that Jesus was not killed and neither crucified but it was made to appear to them 57 An Nisa s verse 157 That they said in boast We killed Christ Jesus the son of Mary the Messenger of The God but they killed him not nor crucified him but so it was made to appear to them and those who differ therein are full of doubts with no certain knowledge but only conjecture to follow for of a surety they killed him not Most Islamic traditions categorically deny that Jesus physically died on the cross or otherwise 58 59 According to the Quran he was not crucified but was rather saved by God Although the earliest Islamic traditions and exegesis quote somewhat conflicting reports regarding a death and its length Muslims believe that Jesus did not die on the cross but believe that he was saved by being raised alive to heaven Substitution Edit It is unclear exactly where the substitutionist interpretation originated but some scholars consider the theory originating among certain Gnostic groups of the second century 10 Leirvik finds the Quran and Hadith to have been clearly influenced by the non canonical heretical Christianity that prevailed in the Arab peninsula and further in Abyssinia 60 While most Western scholars 61 Jews 62 and Christians believe Jesus died orthodox Muslim theology teaches he ascended to Heaven without being put on the cross and God transformed another person Simon of Cyrene to appear exactly like Jesus who was crucified instead of Jesus cf Irenaeus description of the heresy of Basilides Book I ch XXIV 4 63 64 Some disagreement and discord can be seen beginning with Ibn Ishaq s d 761 report of a brief accounting of events leading up to the crucifixion firstly stating that Jesus was replaced by someone named Sergius while secondly reporting an account of Jesus tomb being located at Medina and thirdly citing the places in the Quran 3 55 4 158 that God took Jesus up to himself 65 Michael Cook notes that denial that Jesus died follows the Christian heresy of docetism who were disturbed by that God should have died but that this concern conflicts with another Islamic doctrine that Jesus was a man not God 66 According to Todd Lawson Quranic commentators seem to have concluded the denial of the crucifixion of Jesus by following material interpreted in Tafsir that relied upon extra biblical Judeo Christian sources 67 with the earliest textual evidence having originated from a non Muslim source a misreading of the Christian writings of John of Damascus regarding the literal understandings of docetism exegetical doctrine describing spiritual and physical realities of Jesus as understood by men in logical terms as opposed to their figurative explanations 68 John of Damascus highlighted the Quran s assertion that the Jews did not crucify Jesus being very different from saying that Jesus was not crucified explaining that it is the varied Quranic exegetes in Tafsir and not the Quran itself that denies the crucifixion further stating that the message in the 4 157 verse simply affirms the historicity of the event 67 Symbolic interpretations Edit Ja far ibn Mansur al Yaman d 958 Abu Hatim Ahmad ibn Hamdan al Razi d 935 Abu Yaqub al Sijistani d 971 Mu ayyad fi l Din al Shirazi d 1078 and the group Ikhwan al Safa also affirm the historicity of the Crucifixion reporting Jesus was crucified and not substituted by another man as maintained by many other popular Quranic commentators and Tafsir More recently Mahmoud M Ayoub a professor and scholar provided a more symbolic interpretation for Surah 4 Verse 157 The Quran as we have already argued does not deny the death of Christ Rather it challenges human beings who in their folly have deluded themselves into believing that they would vanquish the divine Word Jesus Christ the Messenger of God The death of Jesus is asserted several times and in various contexts 3 55 5 117 19 33 69 Ayoub instead of interpreting the passage as a denial of the death of Jesus instead believes the passage is about God denying men the power to vanquish and destroy God s message The words but they killed him not nor crucified him are meant to show that any power humans believe that they have against God is illusory 70 Some Sunni Islamic exegesists such as the anti Christian polemicist Muhammad Rashid Rida held an ambigious stance on the matter namely that the crucifixion and ascension of Jesus were allegorical but with extreme precaution in order to rebut Christian doctrines on crucifixion and salvation 71 Comprehensively denouncing Christian doctrines on salvation atonement and crucifixion as irrational and kufr disbelief in his Tafsir al Manar Rida also denounced the Jews for their killings of the Prophets of God writing The actual fact of the crucifixion is not itself a matter which the Book of God seeks to affirm or deny except for the purpose of asserting the killing of prophets by the Jews unjustly and reproaching them for that act that the Creator of the universe could be incarnated in the womb of a woman in this earth which in comparison to the rest of His creation is like an atom and then be a human being eating and drinking experiencing fatigue and suffering other hardships like the rest of mankind Then His enemies would level at Him insults and pain and finally crucify Him with thieves and declare Him cursed according to the Book He revealed to one of His apostles exalted be He over all this We say rather no one believes it because belief iman is the affirmation tasdiq by reason of something that it can apprehend The claim of the people of the Cross therefore that clemency and forgiveness are opposed to justice is unacceptable Imam Muhammad Rashid Rida in Tafsir al Manar Vol VI pp 23 26 27 71 An early interpretation of verse 3 55 specifically I will cause you to die and raise you to myself Al Tabari d 923 records an interpretation attributed to Ibn Abbas who used the literal I will cause you to die mumayyitu ka in place of the metaphorical mutawaffi ka Jesus died while Wahb ibn Munabbih an early Jewish convert is reported to have said God caused Jesus son of Mary to die for three hours during the day then took him up to himself Tabari further transmits from Ibn Ishaq God caused Jesus to die for seven hours 72 while at another place reported that a person called Sergius was crucified in place of Jesus Ibn al Athir forwarded the report that it was Judas the betrayer while also mentioning the possibility it was a man named Natlianus 73 In reference to the Quranic quote We have surely killed Jesus the Christ son of Mary the apostle of God Muslim scholar Mahmoud Ayoub asserts this boast not as the repeating of a historical lie or the perpetuating of a false report but an example of human arrogance and folly with an attitude of contempt towards God and his messenger s Ayoub furthers what modern scholars of Islam interpret regarding the historical death of Jesus the man as man s inability to kill off God s Word and the Spirit of God which the Quran testifies were embodied in Jesus Christ Ayoub continues highlighting the denial of the killing of Jesus as God denying men such power to vanquish and destroy the divine Word The words they did not kill him nor did they crucify him speaks to the profound events of ephemeral human history exposing mankind s heart and conscience towards God s will The claim of humanity to have this power against God is illusory They did not slay him but it seemed so to them speaks to the imaginations of mankind not the denial of the actual event of Jesus dying physically on the cross 70 Another report from Ibn Kathir quotes Ishaq Ibn Bishr on authority of Idris on authority of Wahb ibn Munabbih that God caused him to die for three days then resurrected him then raised him 74 75 Al Masudi d 956 reported the death of Christ under Tiberius 73 Ibn Kathir d 1373 follows traditions which suggest that a crucifixion did occur but not with Jesus 76 After the event Ibn Kathir reports the people were divided into three groups following three different narratives The Jacobites believing God remained with us as long as He willed and then He ascended to Heaven the Nestorians believing The son of God was with us as long as he willed until God raised him to heaven and the Muslims believing The servant and messenger of God Jesus remained with us as long as God willed until God raised him to Himself 77 Islamic reformer Muhammad Rashid Rida agrees with contemporary commentators interpreting the physical killing of Christ s apostleship as a metaphorical interpretation 78 Modern Islamic scholars like Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba i interpret the ascension of Jesus as spiritual not physical This interpretation is in accord with Muʿtazila and Shia metaphorical explanations regarding anthropomorphic references to God in the Quran Although not popular with traditional Sunni interpretations of the depiction of crucifixion there has been much speculation and discussion in the effort of logically reconciling this topic 79 In ascetic Shia writings Jesus is depicted having ascended to heaven wearing a woolen shirt spun and sewed by Mary his mother As he reached the heavenly regions he was addressed O Jesus cast away from you the adornment of the world 80 After his ascension his word is believed to have been altered 81 Second Coming EditSee also Second Coming Islam Islamic eschatology and Hadith of Jesus praying behind Mahdi Timeline of the arrival of Jesus before Judgement Day The Minaret of Isa in the Umayyad Mosque Damascus According to Islamic tradition having ascended to heaven and dwelled there for 2000 years Jesus will descend to earth shortly before Judgement Day in the midst of wars fought against al Masih ad Dajjal The False Messiah and his followers to come to the aid of the Mahdi and his Muslim followers 82 Dressed in saffron robes with his head anointed Jesus will descend at the point of a white minaret in eastern Damascus which is believed to be the Minaret of Isa in the Umayyad Mosque 83 He will then greet the Mahdi and being a Muslim pray beside him Eventually Jesus will slay the Dajjal at Lod 84 Afterwards he will break the cross kill the pigs and abolish the Jizya tax according to a well known Sahih al Bukhari hadith 85 86 The usual interpretation of this prophecy is that being a Muslim Jesus will put a stop to Christian worship of himself and in belief in his divinity symbolized by the cross He will re establish the Kosher Halal dietary laws abandoned by Christianity 87 and because Jews and Christians will now all reject their former faith and accept Islam there will be no more need for the jizya tax on unbelievers 88 According to one hadith Jesus will destroy the churches and temples and kill the Christians unless they believe in him 89 note 1 Islamic texts also allude to the reappearance of the ancient menace Gog and Magog Yaʾjuj Maʾjuj which will break out of its underground confinement and cause havoc around the world 91 God in response to Jesus prayers will kill them by sending a type of worm in the napes of their necks and send large birds to carry and clear their corpses from the land 82 After the death of the Mahdi Jesus will assume world leadership and peace and justice will be universal Also according to tradition Jesus will then marry have children and rule the world for forty years traditions give many different time periods after which he will die 92 Muslims will then perform the funeral prayer for him and then bury him at the Green Dome in the city of Medina in a grave left vacant beside Muhammad Abu Bakr and Umar respectively 93 According to Ibn Khaldun s legend the two caliphs will rise from the dead between the two prophets 94 Sources Edit While the Quran does not describe any of the above narrative of Jesus return 95 many Muslims believe that two Quranic verses refer to his second coming during the end times 86 1 The verse mentioned above stating he is never died on earth And for their saying Indeed we have killed Christ Jesus the son of Mary the messenger of God And they did not kill him nor did they crucify him but another was made to resemble him to them And indeed those who differ over it are in doubt about it They have no knowledge of it except the following of assumption And they did not kill him for certain Q 4 157 A second verse interpreted to indicate a connection between Jesus and the Hour end times And lo verily there is knowledge of the Hour So doubt ye not concerning it but follow Me This is the right path Q 43 61 trans Pickthall 86 Hadiths on Jesus s return are traced back to Abu Hurairah one of the sahaba but might actually have been introduced later during civil wars in the early Abbasid Caliphate when a savior was expected While for Shias the Mahdi will be the savior some Sunnis tended to expect Jesus return During the early Abbasid Caliphate wearing crucifixes in processions and holding pigs in public was forbidden Otherwise the breaking of the cross might reflect general disapproval of this symbol by Muslims and slaying pigs a reference to Jesus exorcism of Legion 96 Islamic theology EditMuslims do not worship Jesus who is known as Isa in Arabic nor do they consider him divine but they do believe that he was a prophet or messenger of God and he is called the Messiah in the Quran However by affirming Jesus as Messiah they are attesting to his messianic message not his mission as a heavenly Christ Islam insists that neither Jesus nor Mohammed brought a new religion Both sought to call people back to what might be called Abrahamic faith This is precisely what we find emphasized in the book of James Like Islam the book of James and the teaching of Jesus in Q emphasize doing the will of God as a demonstration of one s faith Since Muslims reject all of the Pauline affirmations about Jesus and thus the central claims of orthodox Christianity the gulf between Islam and Christianity on Jesus is a wide one Professor James D Tabor in his book The Jesus Dynasty 97 Jesus is described by various means in the Quran The most common reference to Jesus occurs in the form of Ibn Maryam son of Mary sometimes preceded with another title Jesus is also recognized as a nabi prophet and rasul messenger of God The terms abd Allah servant of God wadjih worthy of esteem in this world and the next and mubarak blessed or a source of benefit for others are all used in reference to him 93 According to Islam Jesus never claimed to be divine 58 Islam sees Jesus as human sent as the last prophet of Israel to Jews with the Gospel scripture affirming but modifying the Mosaic Law 98 99 52 Mainstream Islamic traditions have rejected any divine notions of Jesus being God or begotten Son of God or the Trinity Popular theology teaches such beliefs constitute shirk the association of partners with God and thereby a rejection of his divine oneness tawhid as the sole unpardonable sin 100 A widespread polemic directed to these doctrinal origins are ascribed to Paul the Apostle regarded by some Muslims as a heretic citation needed as well as an evolution across the Greco Roman world causing pagan influences to corrupt God s revelation citation needed The theological absence of Original Sin in Islam renders the Christian concepts of Atonement and Redemption as redundant citation needed Jesus simply conforms to the prophetic mission of his predecessors 27 Jesus is understood to have preached salvation through submission to God s will and worshipping God alone The Quran states that Jesus will ultimately deny claiming divinity in Al Ma idah 5 116 101 Thus he is considered to have been a Muslim 102 by the religious definition of the term i e one who submits to God s will as understood in Islam regarding all other prophets that preceded him 103 104 Jesus and Mary in an old Persian miniature A frequent title of Jesus mentioned is al Masiḥ which translates to the Messiah as well as Christ Although the Quran is silent on its significance 105 scholars who disagree with the Christian concepts of the term and lean towards a Jewish understanding Muslim exegetes explain the use of the word masih in the Quran as referring to Jesus status as the one anointed by means of blessings and honors or as the one who helped cure the sick by anointing the eyes of the blind for example 93 Jesus also holds a description as both a word from God and a soul 106 The interpretation behind Jesus as a spirit from God is seen as his human soul citation needed Some Muslim scholars who occasionally see the spirit as the archangel Gabriel but majority consider the spirit to be Jesus himself 107 Jesus is mentioned about 187 times in the Quran directly and indirectly and also referred to by many titles the most common being al Masiḥ the Messiah 3 108 109 110 28 Jesus is referred to 25 times by the name Isa note 2 48 times in the third person note 3 35 times in the first person and is mentioned the remaining times by various titles in the Quran note 4 111 Muhammad described himself as the nearest of all people to Jesus 112 Similitude with Adam Edit The Quran emphasizes the creationism of Jesus 105 through his similitude with Adam in regards to the absence of human origin Muhammad often used to compare the births of Adam and Jesus 113 Islamic exegesis extrapolates a logical inconsistency behind the Christian argument of divine intervention as such implications would have ascribed divinity to Adam who is understood only as creation 105 Precursor to Muhammad Edit In Islam Jesus is believed to have been the precursor to the Islamic prophet Muhammad According to the Quran the coming of Muhammad was predicted by Jesus in As Saff 61 6 114 Through this verse early Arab Muslims claimed legitimacy for their new faith in the existing religious traditions and the alleged predictions of Jesus 115 Muslims believe that Jesus was a precursor to Muhammad and that he prophesied the latter s coming 116 21 This perspective is based on a verse of the Quran wherein Jesus speaks of a messenger to appear after him named Ahmad 117 Islam associates Ahmad with Muhammad both words deriving from the h m d triconsonantal root which refers to praiseworthiness Muslims assert that evidence of Jesus pronouncement is present in the New Testament citing the mention of the Paraclete whose coming is foretold in the Gospel of John 118 Muslim commentators claim that the original Greek word used was periklutos meaning famed illustrious or praiseworthy rendered in Arabic as Ahmad and that this was replaced by Christians with parakletos 93 119 This idea is debated asking if the traditional understanding is supported by the text of the Quran Islamic theology claims Jesus had foretold another prophet succeeding him according to Sura 61 6 with the mention of the name Ahmad Ahmad is an Arabic name from the same triconsonantal root Ḥ M D ح م د In responding to Ibn Ishaq s biography of Muhammad the Sirat Rasul Allah Islamic scholar Alfred Guillaume wrote Coming back to the term Ahmad Muslims have suggested that Ahmad is the translation of periklutos celebrated or the Praised One which is a corruption of parakletos the Paraclete of John XIV XV and XVI 120 Messianism Edit An alternative more esoteric interpretation is expounded by Messianic Muslims 121 in the Sufi and Isma ili traditions so as to unite Islam Christianity and Judaism into a single religious continuum 122 Other Messianic Muslims hold a similar theological view regarding Jesus without attempting to unite the religions 123 124 125 Making use of the New Testament s distinguishing between Jesus Son of Man being the physical human Jesus and Christ Son of God being the Holy Spirit of God residing in the body of Jesus the Holy Spirit being immortal and immaterial is not subject to crucifixion for it can never die nor can it be touched by the earthly nails of the crucifixion for it is a being of pure spirit Thus while the spirit of Christ avoided crucifixion by ascending unto God the body that was Jesus was sacrificed on the cross thereby bringing the Old Testament to final fulfillment Thus Quranic passages on the death of Jesus affirm that while the Pharisees intended to destroy Jesus completely they in fact succeeded only in killing the Son of Man being his nasut material being Meanwhile the Son of God being his lahut spiritual being remained alive and undying because it is the Holy Spirit 126 Islamic literature EditThe Quran does not convey the specific teachings of Jesus What has developed over the years was authored by later followers of Islam What is found in the Quran about Jesus is that his teaching conformed to the prophetic model a human sent by God to present both a judgment upon humanity for worshipping idols and a challenge to turn to the one true God In the case of Jesus Muslims believe that his mission was to the people of Israel and that his status as a prophet was confirmed by numerous miracles 27 The Quran s description of specific events at the end of Jesus life have continued to be controversial between Christians and Muslims while the classical commentaries have been interpreted differently to accommodate new information 27 Jesus is written about by some Muslim scholars as the perfect man 127 108 128 Hadith Edit See also Hadith of Jesus Praying Behind Mahdi The Hadiths are reported sayings of Muhammad that developed a canonical status in the third Muslim century as a source of authority for the Muslim community The Muslim perception of Jesus emerging from the Hadiths is of a miraculous sinless and eschatological figure pointing people again according to the Muslim s perspective of prophethood to the Muslim faith Muslim one who submits to the will of God 129 Jesus is featured as a major figure in two categories of hadiths which can be described as apocalyptic and biblical 130 The eschatological role of Jesus in the hadiths may have been influenced by ideas of the Second coming held by the Eastern Churches as well as the Quarnic Jesus mentioned in 43 61 130 Many of the hadiths which feature Jesus s sayings were not included in the canonical hadith collections which became more focused on the sayings of Muhammad but were instead included in a separate genre known as Qisas al anbiya Stories of the Prophets 131 Sunni Islam Edit In Kitab al Milal wa al Nihal al Shahrastani d 1153 an influential Persian historian historiographer scholar philosopher and theologian records a portrayal of Jesus very close to the orthodox tenets while continuing the Islamic narrative The Christians They are the community umma of the Christ Jesus son of Mary peace upon him He is who was truly sent as prophet mab uth after Moses peace upon him and who was announced in the Torah To him were granted manifest signs and notable evidences such as the reviving of the dead and the curing of the blind and the leper His very nature and innate disposition fitra are a perfect sign of his truthfulness that is his coming without previous seed and his speaking without prior teaching For all the other prophets the arrival of their revelation was at the age of forty years but revelation came to him when he was made to speak in the cradle and revelation came to him when he conveyed the divine message at the age of thirty The duration of his prophetic mission da wa was three years and three months and three days 132 Shia Islam Edit In the Nahj al Balagha the fourth caliph Ali r 656 661 is reported to have talked about the simplicity of Jesus 133 Ali says that Jesus used a stone for his pillow put on coarse clothes and ate rough food His condiment was hunger His lamp at night was the moon He had no wife to allure him nor any son to give grief neither wealth to deviate His two feet were his conveyance and his two hands were his servant 133 According to Ja far al Sadiq a great great grandson of Ali the time between David and Jesus was four hundred years 134 Ja far further says that the religion of Jesus was monotheism tawḥid and purity ikhlaṣ 134 The Injil Gospel was sent down to him and the pledge that other prophets took was also taken from Jesus to establish prayer with religion enjoin the good and forbid the evil allowing what is allowed and forbidding what has been forbidden Admonitions and parables were sent down to him in the Injil but there was no law of retribution in it nor precepts of retribution ahkam al hudud and no obligations for inheritance He was sent what was an alleviation of what was sent down to Moses in the Torah Jesus commanded of his followers that they believe in the law of the Torah and the Injil 134 According to Qadi al Nu man a famous Muslim jurist of the Fatimid period Jesus is referred to as the Messiah al Masiḥ in the Quran because he was sent to the people who responded to him in order to remove masaha their impurities the ailments of their faith whether apparent zahir or hidden batin Qadi al Nu man in his work Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation Asas al ta wil talks about the spiritual birth milad al batin of Jesus as an interpretation of his story of physical birth milad al zahir mentioned in the Quran He says that Mary the mother of Jesus is a metaphor for someone who nurtured and instructed Jesus lahiq rather than physically giving birth to him Qadi al Nu man explains that Jesus was from the pure progeny of Abraham just as Ali and his sons were from the pure progeny of Muhammad through Fatima 135 Sufism Edit Early Sufis adopted the sayings of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount and an ascetic dimension The submission and sacrifice Jesus exemplified shows the Muslim is to be set apart from worldly compromises In poetry and mysticism Jesus was celebrated as a prophet close to the heart of God achieving an uncommon degree of self denial 29 Although the writings developed over the centuries embellished Jesus miracles the lessons of Jesus can be seen as metaphors of the inner life These rich and diverse presentations of Jesus in Sufi traditions are the largest body of Jesus texts in any non Christian tradition 136 A key issue arises for Muslims with the Sufi picture of Jesus how universally should the ascetic esoteric approach be applied For many Muslim poets and scholars the answer is clear every Muslim is invited to the path of asceticism and inner realization embodied by Jesus However whilst all Muslims revere Jesus most have reservations about the application of his way of life to society For Muslims the highest pinnacle of human achievement is after all Muhammad Muhammad is revered in part because he promoted the right blend of justice and mercy In other words Muslims need both a path that addresses individual spirituality as well as a path that will address the complex issues of community life law justice etc Jesus is viewed by many Muslims as having lived out only one side of this equation As a figure of the heart or individual conscience Jesus is viewed by some to be a limited figure In more critical Muslim perspectives the Sermon on the Mount is admired but seen as impractical for human society Perhaps the greatest division amongst Muslims has to do with the relevance of ascetic and esoteric beliefs in the context of strengthening an Islamic society 136 The miraculous birth and life of Jesus becomes a metaphor for Rumi of the spiritual rebirth that is possible within each human soul This rebirth is not achieved without effort one needs to practice silence poverty and fasting themes that were prominent in Jesus life according to Islamic traditions 137 Ibn Arabi stated Jesus was Al Insan al Kamil the spirit and simultaneously a servant of God Jesus is held to be one with God in whole coincidence of will not as a being Due to the spirit of God dwelling in Jesus God spoke and acted through him Yet Jesus is not considered to be God but a person within God s word and spirit and a manifestation of God s attributes like a mirror 138 139 The conception of Jesus as described by Ibn Arabi d 1240 an Andalusian scholar Sufi mystic poet and philosopher in the Bezels of Wisdom From the water of Mary or from the breath of Gabriel In the form of a mortal fashioned of clay The Spirit came into existence in an essence Purged of Nature s taint which is called Sijjin prison Because of this his sojourn was prolonged Enduring by decree more than a thousand years A spirit from none other than God So that he might raise the dead and bring forth birds from clay 140 Ascetic literature Edit Jesus is widely venerated in Muslim ascetic and mystic literature such as in Muslim mystic Al Ghazali s Ihya ʿulum ad Din The revival of the religious sciences These works lay stress upon Jesus poverty his preoccupation with worship his detachment from worldly life and his miracles Such depictions also include advice and sermons which are attributed to him Later Sufic commentaries adapted material from Christian gospels which were consistent with their ascetic portrayal Sufi philosopher Ibn Arabi described Jesus as the seal of universal holiness due to the quality of his faith and because he holds in his hands the keys of living breath and because he is at present in a state of deprivation and journeying 93 citation needed Ahmadiyya literature EditMain article Jesus in Ahmadiyya Islam The Ahmadiyya Movement considers Jesus was a prophet and a mortal man who was crucified and remained on the cross for six hours until darkness fell Jesus was taken down from the cross alive and unconscious He was treated for three days and nights by saint physician Necdemus in a cave like tomb especially built for Joseph of Arimathea Thereafter Jesus recuperated from his wounds met his trusted disciples on the Mount of Olives and left Judea towards the sea of Galilee on his way to Damascus After his dramatic escape from crucifixion Jesus traveled to the eastern lands in search of the ten lost tribes of Israel Finally he died a natural death in Kashmir India as opposed to having been raised up alive to Heaven 141 Appearance EditBased upon several Hadith narrations of Muhammad Jesus can be physically described thus with any differences in Jesus physical description being due to Muhammad describing him when seeing him at different occasions such as during his ascension to Heaven or when describing Jesus during Jesus second coming 142 A well built man of medium moderate average height and stature with a broad chest Straight lank and long hair that fell between his shoulders It seems as though water is dribbling from his head though it is not wet See also EditBiblical and Quranic narratives Christianity and Islam Islamic eschatology Izhar ul Haqq List of legends in the Quran Mary in Islam Peace in Islamic philosophy Qisas Al Anbiya Saint Mary film The Messiah 2007 film References EditNotes Edit see also Others however understand the second coming of Isa is to kill the Dajjil to break the cross and decimate all Christians and their places of worship and to inaugurate the aforementioned period of peace before the actual coming of the Hour 90 Isa 25 times Q2 87 Q2 136 Q2 253 Q3 45 Q3 52 Q3 55 Q3 59 Q3 84 Q4 157 Q4 163 Q4 171 Q5 46 Q5 78 Q5 110 Q5 112 Q5 114 Q5 116 Q6 85 Q19 34 Q33 7 Q42 13 Q43 63 Q57 27 Q61 6 Q61 14 3rd person He Him Thee etc 48 times Q2 87 Q2 253 Q3 46 2 Q3 48 Q3 52 Q3 55 4 Q4 157 3 Q4 159 3 Q5 110 11 Q5 46 3 Q5 75 2 Q19 21 Q19 22 2 Q19 27 2 Q19 29 Q23 50 Q43 58 2 Q43 59 3 Q43 63 Q57 27 2 Q61 6 Messiah Christ Ibn Maryam 23 times Q2 87 Q2 253 Q3 45 Q4 157 Q4 171 Q5 17 Q5 46 Q5 72 Q5 75 Q5 78 Q5 110 Q5 112 Q5 114 Q5 116 Q9 31 Q19 34 Q23 50 Q33 7 Q43 57 Q57 27 Q61 6 Q61 14 Messiah Al Masih 11 times Q3 45 Q4 171 Q4 172 Q5 17 Q5 72 2 Q5 75 Q9 30 Q9 31 Spirit of God rwh 11 times Q2 87 Q2 253 Q4 171 Q5 110 Q12 87 Q15 29 Q17 85 2 Q19 17 Q21 91 Q58 22 child pure boy 9 times Q19 19 Q19 20 Q19 21 Q19 29 Q19 35 Q19 88 Q19 91 Q19 92 Q21 91 Word of God kalima 6 times Q3 39 Q3 45 Q3 48 Q4 171 Q5 46 Q5 110 Messenger Apostle Prophet 5 times Q3 49 Q4 157 Q4 171 Q19 30 Q61 6 Sign 4 times Q19 21 Q21 91 Q23 50 Q43 61 The Gift 1 time Q19 19 Mercy from Us 1 time Q19 21 Servant 1 time Q19 30 Blessed 1 time Q19 31 Word of Truth Statement of Truth 1 time Q19 34 amazing thing thing unheard of 1 time Q19 27 Example 1 time Q43 57 Straight Path Right Way 1 time Q43 61 Witness 1 time Q4 159 His Name 1 time Q3 45 Citations Edit Watt 2013 p 18 Cleo McNelly Kearns 2008 The Virgin Mary Monotheism and Sacrifice New York Cambridge University Press p 254 55 a b McDowell Josh Walker Jim 2002 Understanding Islam and Christianity Beliefs That Separate Us and How to Talk About Them Euguen Oregon Harvest House Publishers p 12 ISBN 9780736949910 Leirvik 2010 p 47 Watt 2013 p 19 Khalidi 2001 p 51 94 a b Leirvik 2010 p 58 Watt 2013 p 31 Zebiri Kate March 2000 Contemporary Muslim Understanding of the Miracles of Jesus The Muslim World 90 1 2 71 90 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 2000 tb03682 x a b Leirvik 2010 p 34 Glasse 2001 p 239 Sarker Abraham Understand My Muslim People 2004 ISBN 1 59498 002 0 p 260 Jackson Montell Islam Revealed 2003 ISBN 1 59160 869 4 p 73 a b Peters Francis Edward 2009 Islam A Guide for Jews and Christians Princeton University Press p 23 ISBN 978 1 4008 2548 6 Jestice Phyllis G Holy people of the world a cross cultural encyclopedia Volume 1 2004 ISBN 1 57607 355 6 pp 558 559 Watt 1991 p 39 a b Watt 2013 p 46 Quran translation Comparison Al Quran Surah 3 Al i Imran Ayah 47 Alim www alim org Retrieved 2020 12 11 Virani Shafique 2019 Hierohistory in Qaḍi l Nuʿman s Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation Asas al Taʾwil The Birth of Jesus Studies in Islamic Historiography 147 169 doi 10 1163 9789004415294 007 ISBN 9789004415294 S2CID 214047322 A J Wensinck and Penelope C Johnstone Maryam in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition ed by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs Consulted online on 30 September 2018 doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0692 ISBN 9789004161214 a b c d e f g h i Leirvik 2010 pp 59 60 Watt 1991 pp 48 49 a b c Ayoub 1992 p 145 Leirvik 2010 p 64 Allen C Myers ed 1987 Aramaic The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans p 72 ISBN 978 0 8028 2402 8 It is generally agreed that Aramaic was the common language of Palestine in the first century AD Jesus and his disciples spoke the Galilean dialect which was distinguished from that of Jerusalem Matt 26 73 Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 83 a b c d Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 90 a b Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 84 a b Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 85 Khalidi 2001 p 31 36 Khalidi 2001 p 31 Khalidi 2001 p 32 a b Parrinder 1965 p 83 a b c Parrinder 1965 p 78 Parrinder 1965 pp 75 76 a b Leirvik 2010 p 60 Parrinder 1965 pp 83 84 Parrinder 1965 p 85 Parrinder 1965 p 86 Fudge Bruce 7 April 2011 Qur anic Hermeneutics Al Tabrisi and the Craft of Commentary Routledge Studies in the Qur an United Kingdom Routledge p 60 ISBN 978 0415782005 a b Watt 2013 p 24 Parrinder 1965 p 87 Robinson 1991 p 129 Ayoub 1992 p 154 Ayoub 1992 p 158 Esposito 2003 p 158 Reynolds 2010 p 192 Reynolds 2010 p 190 Phipps William 28 May 2018 2016 5 Scriptures Muhammad and Jesus A Comparison of the Prophets and Their Teachings Bloomsbury Publishing p 101 ISBN 978 1 4742 8934 4 Waardenburg 1999 p 276 Adang 1996 pp 105 06 a b Al Qaradawi Yusuf 30 January 2018 30 January 1999 INTRODUCTION The Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam Al Halal Wal Haram Fil Islam American Trust Publications p 5 ISBN 9780892590162 تفسير Tafsir al Jalalayn altafsir Retrieved 2018 01 31 Ridgeon 2013 p 14 Quran 3 52 53 Parrinder 1965 p 61 Zahniser Mathias 30 October 2008 The Mission and Death of Jesus in Islam and Christianity Faith Meets Faith Series New York Orbis Books p 55 ISBN 978 1570758072 a b Cook 1983 pp 32 33 Bulliet Richard W 2015 Islamo Christian Civilization In Silverstein Adam J Stroumsa Guy G Blidstein Moshe eds The Oxford Handbook of the Abrahamic Religions Oxford Oxford University Press p 111 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199697762 013 6 ISBN 978 0 19 969776 2 LCCN 2014960132 S2CID 170430270 Retrieved 2020 10 24 Leirvik 2010 p 66 Crossan John Dominic 1995 Jesus A Revolutionary Biography HarperOne p 145 ISBN 0 06 061662 8 That he was crucified is as sure as anything historical can ever be since both Josephus and Tacitus agree with the Christian accounts on at least that basic fact Schafer Peter 13 September 2009 Jesus in the Talmud Princeton University Press p 139 ISBN 978 0691143187 Roberts Alexander 1 May 2007 The Ante Nicene Fathers The Writings of the Fathers Down to A D 325 Vol I The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus New York Cosimo Classics p 349 ISBN 978 1602064690 Lawson 2009 p 14 Watt 2013 pp 39 40 Cook 1983 p 79 a b Lawson 2009 p 12 Lawson 2009 p 7 Ayoub 1980 a b Ayoub 1980 p 117 a b Ayoub 1980 p 113 115 Zahniser 2008 p 56 a b Watt 2013 p 47 Robinson 1991 p 122 Ayoub 1980 p 108 Muhammad b Ali b Muhammad al Shawkani Fath al Qadir al Jami bayn Fannay al Riwaya wa l Diraya min Ilm al Tqfsir Cairo Mustafa al Babi al Halabi n d I 346 citing Ibn Asakir who reports on the authority of Ibn Munabbih Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 119 Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 121 Ayoub 1980 p 113 Ayoub 1980 p 100 Ayoub 1980 p 103 Tieszen 2018 p 21 a b Sonn 2004 p 209 Mannheim 2001 p 91 sfn error no target CITEREFMannheim2001 help Cook 2002 p 93 104 Al Bukhari Sahih al Bukhari Oppressions كتاب المظالم Hadith 2476 46 Oppressions 31 Chapter The breaking of the cross and the killing of the pigs sunnah com Retrieved 2022 05 22 a b c WARREN LARSON Jesus in Islam and Christianity Discussing the Similarities and the Differences p 335 Akyol Mustafa 3 October 2016 The Problem With the Islamic Apocalypse The New York Times New York Times Retrieved 2022 01 29 Evans amp Johnston 2015 Umdah 430 cited in Qaim 2007 His Second Coming Then he will kill the swine break the crosses destroy the churches and temples and kill the Christians unless they believe in him Smith Jane I Haddad Yvonne Y 1981 The Islamic Understanding of Death and Resurrection Albany N Y SUNY Press p 69 Sonn Tamara 2015 Islam History Religion and Politics John Wiley amp Sons p 209 ISBN 978 1 118 97230 4 Jesus A Prophet of Allah Association of Islamic Charitable Projects in USA www aicp org Retrieved 2021 07 28 a b c d e Anawati G C 2012 isa In P J Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill Online ISBN 9789004161214 Retrieved 2016 06 06 Peters 1990 p 352 Roberto Tottoli Biblical Prophets in the Qur an and Muslim Literature Routledge 11 January 2013 ISBN 978 1 136 12314 6 p 121 Neal Robinson Christ in Islam and Christianity SUNY Press 1 January 1991 ISBN 9780791405581 p 104 Tabor James 28 August 2017 1st pub 2006 Conclusion RECOVERING LOST TREASURES The Jesus Dynasty The Hidden History of Jesus His Royal Family and the Birth of Christianity Simon amp Schuster pp 315 316 ISBN 978 0 7432 8723 4 Sakura Muham 11 November 2017 December 2015 Preface The Great Tale of Prophet Adam amp Prophet Jesus In Islam United Submitters International p 6 ISBN 9783739635736 Akhtar Shabbir 24 October 2017 October 2007 PART 1 Quranic Islam and the secular mind The Quran and the Secular Mind A Philosophy of Islam Routledge p 31 ISBN 978 0 203 93531 6 See Esposito 2002 pp 32 74 Fasching amp deChant 2001 p 241 Markham amp Ruparell 2001 p 348 Quran 5 116 Was Jesus a Muslim Khalidi 2001 p 75 Fasching amp deChant 2001 p 241 a b c Akhtar Shabbir 31 October 2007 The Quran and the Secular Mind A Philosophy of Islam Routledge ISBN 9781134072569 via Google Books Surah An Nisa 171 Mufti Shafi Uthmani Maariful Quran Q19 16 21 Volume 6 p 34 a b Schumann 2002 p 13 Parrinder 1965 p 33 Khalidi 2001 p 4 Parrinder 1965 p 16 Abdullah 2014 p 124 Robinson 1991 p 12 Quran 61 6 Virani Shafique N 2011 Taqiyya and Identity in a South Asian Community The Journal of Asian Studies 70 1 99 139 doi 10 1017 S0021911810002974 ISSN 0021 9118 S2CID 143431047 p 128 Klauck Hans Josef Klauck 2003 The Apocryphal Gospels An Introduction London Bloomsbury T amp T Clark p 18 ISBN 978 0567083906 Quran 61 06 Jesus Omen about the Paraclete Supporting Prophet Muhammad website rasoulallah net Retrieved 2021 07 28 Watt 2013 p 33 Liddell and Scott s celebrated Greek English Lexicon gives this definition for periklutos heard of all round famous renowned Latin inclytus of things excellent noble glorious Rev James M Whiton ed A Lexicon abridged from Liddell and Scott s Greek English Lexicon New York American Book Company N D c 1940s p 549 Periklutos occurs in The Iliad and The Odyssey and Hesiod s Theogony Travis John 2000 Messian Muslim Followers of Isa PDF International Journal of Frontier Missions 17 Spring 54 Cumming Joseph Muslim Followers of Jesus ChristianityToday Retrieved 2009 11 20 Touchstone Archives Can Jesus Save Islam Retrieved 2016 10 17 Medearis Carl 9 January 2013 Muslims Who Follow Jesus HuffPost Retrieved 2016 10 17 Why Evangelicals Should Be Thankful for Muslim Insiders Retrieved 2016 10 17 Encyclopedia of Islam Jesus article cf L Massignon Le Christ dans les Evangiles selon Ghazali in REI 1932 523 36 who cites texts of the Rasa il Ikhwan al Safa a passage of Abu Hatim al Razi about 934 and another of the Isma ili da i Mu ayyad fid din al Shirazi 1077 Little John T 3 April 2007 Al Insan Al Kamil The Perfect Man According to Ibn Al Arabi The Muslim World 77 1 43 54 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1987 tb02785 x Ibn al Arabi uses no less than 22 different terms to describe the various aspects under which this single Logos may be viewed Parrinder 1965 p 6 Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 97 a b Khalidi 2001 p 25 Khalidi 2001 p 26 Watt 2013 p 68 a b Leirvik 2010 p 75 a b c Qaim 2007 p 36 37 Virani Shafique N 6 November 2019 Hierohistory in Qaḍi l Nuʿman s Foundation of Symbolic Interpretation Asas al Taʾwil the Birth of Jesus Studies in Islamic Historiography BRILL 147 169 doi 10 1163 9789004415294 007 ISBN 978 90 04 41529 4 S2CID 214047322 retrieved 2020 11 21 a b Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 86 Barker amp Gregg 2010 p 112 Leirvik 2010 p 89 Clinton Bennett Understanding Christian Muslim Relations Past and Present A amp C Black 2008 ISBN 978 0 826 48782 7 page 155 ibn ʻArabi al Ḥatimi aṭ Ṭaʾi Abu ʻAbd Allah Muḥammad ibn ʻAli ibn Muḥammad Austin R W 1980 Ibn al ʻArabi Paulist Press p 174 ISBN 978 0 8091 2331 5 Death of Jesus WikiAhmadiyya Islam amp Ahmadiyya encyclopedia free online www wikiahmadiyya org Sahih al Bukhari 4 54 462 4 55 607 608 4 55 647 650 4 55 649 650 Sahih Muslim 1 316 1 321 1 325 1 328 41 7023 Sources Edit Abdullah Arif Kemil 2014 The Qur an and Normative Religious Pluralism A Thematic Study of the Qur an IIIT ISBN 9781565646575 Adang Camilla 1996 Muslim Writers on Judaism and the Hebrew Bible From Ibn Rabban to Ibn Hazm Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10034 3 Ayoub Mahmoud M April 1980 Towards an Islamic Christology II The Death of Jesus Reality or Delusion A Study of the Death of Jesus in Tafsir Literature The Muslim World 70 2 91 121 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1980 tb03405 x Ayoub Mahmoud M 1992 The Qur an and Its Interpreters Volume II The House of Imran SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0994 7 Barker Gregory A Gregg Stephen E 2010 Jesus Beyond Christianity The Classic Texts Oxford Oxford University Press Cook Michael 1983 Muhammad Oxford University Press ISBN 0192876058 Esposito J L 2002 What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515713 0 Esposito J L 2003 The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512558 0 Evans Craig A Johnston Jeremiah J 20 October 2015 Jesus and the Jihadis Confronting the Rage of ISIS The Theology Driving the Ideology Destiny Image Publishers ISBN 978 0 76 840900 0 Fasching D J deChant D 2001 Comparative Religious Ethics A Narrative Approach Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 20125 0 Glasse Cyril 2001 The New Encyclopedia of Islam with introduction by Huston Smith revisee ed Walnut Creek CA AltaMira Press ISBN 9780759101906 Khalidi Tarif 2001 The Muslim Jesus Sayings and Stories in Islamic Literature Cambridge MA amp London Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00477 1 Google books site Lawson Todd 2009 The Crucifixion and the Qur an A Study in the History of Muslim Thought Oxford Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1851686360 Retrieved 2012 07 28 Leirvik Oddbjorn 2010 Images of Jesus Christ in Islam 2nd ed Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4411 8662 1 Markham I S Ruparell T 2001 Encountering Religion An Introduction to the Religions of the World Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 20674 3 Parrinder Geoffrey 1965 Jesus in the Qur an London Oxford Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 85168 999 6 Peters Francis E 1990 Judaism Christianity and Islam The Classical Texts and Their Interpretation Volume 3 Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691020556 Parrinder Geoffrey 2013 Jesus in the Qur an Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 0 41573 463 9 Qaim Mahdi Muntazir 2007 Jesus Through the Qur an and Shi ite Narrations Queens New York ISBN 978 1879402140 Reynolds Gabriel Said 2010 On the Qur anic Accusation of Scriptural Falsification tahrif and Christian Anti Jewish Polemic PDF Journal of the American Oriental Society 130 2 189 202 Retrieved 2018 03 03 Ridgeon Lloyd 2013 Islamic Interpretations of Christianity Routledge ISBN 9781136840135 Cook David 2002 Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic University of Michigan Darwin Press ISBN 9780878501427 Robinson Neal 1991 Christ in Islam and Christianity New York SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 791 40559 8 Schumann Olaf H 2002 Jesus the Messiah in Muslim Thought ISPCK HIM ISBN 978 8172145224 Sonn Tamarra 2004 A Brief History of Islam Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 2174 3 Tieszen Charles 2018 Theological Issues in Christian Muslim Dialogue Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 9781532610585 Waardenburg Jackques 1999 Muslim Perceptions of Other Religions A Historical Survey Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535576 5 Watt W Montgomery 1991 Muslim Christian Encounters Perceptions and Misperceptions Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 05410 2 Watt W Montgomery 19 December 2013 Muslim Christian Encounters Perceptions and Misperceptions Routledge Revivals Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 82043 7 Further reading EditRippin A Yahya b Zakariya In P J Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Brill Academic Publishers ISSN 1573 3912 Saritoprak Zeki 2014 Islam s Jesus Gainesville University Press of Florida ISBN 9780813049403 Retrieved 2014 05 13 Slade Darren M January 2014 Arabia Haeresium Ferax Arabia Bearer of Heresies Schismatic Christianity s Potential Influence on Muhammad and the Qur an PDF American Theological Inquiry 7 1 43 53 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 02 02 Wherry E M Sale G 2000 A Comprehensive Commentary on the Quran Comprising Sale s Translation and Preliminary Discourse vol II Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 23188 6 Zuckermann Ghil ad 2006 Etymythological Othering and the Power of Lexical Engineering in Judaism Islam and Christianity A Socio Philo sopho logical Perspective Explorations in the Sociology of Language and Religion edited by Tope Omoniyi and Joshua A Fishman Amsterdam John Benjamins pp 237 258 ISBN 90 272 2710 1External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Jesus in Islam Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jesus in Islam Jesus A Summary of the Points About Which Islam and Christianity Agree and Disagree Dr Alan Godlas University of Georgia What Do Muslims Think About Jesus Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia Jesus Through Muslim Eyes BBC The Story of Jesus Through Iranian Eyes ABC News 7 Muslim Beliefs about Jesus Dr Warren Larson Alim org Surah 3 Al i Imran Ayah 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jesus in Islam amp oldid 1144964659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.