Jesus and Isa: Discussing Christ with a Muslim
Basecamp: Into The DarkMay 24, 2024
82
44:0940.42 MB

Jesus and Isa: Discussing Christ with a Muslim

Muslims and Christians walk around this world pretending as if they mean the same thing when they refer to Jesus and Isa. Yet most Muslims have never read the Gospels at all, and they take the claim that its contents are corrupt on faith. To get a Muslim to ever read it and encounter the true Jesus is a triumph. Today, we uncover the truth about the difference between Isa and Jesus.

Jeremy's Article: https://www.allthingsallpeople.org/blog/isa-jesus-discussing-jesus-with-a-muslim

Engage Network: https://www.allthingsallpeople.org/church-partnership

Any Three Method: https://www.missionfrontiers.org/issue/article/any-3

More of Mikel's work: mwcollins.org

Speaker:

There is a version of Christ found inside the Islamic faith written into the Qur'an.

Speaker:

Muslims will tell you is the same Jesus that is written about in

Speaker:

the New Testament, but they don't call him Jesus, they call him Isa.

Speaker:

So in this episode, we're going to be talking about the differences between

Speaker:

Isa and Jesus, , what they are, why it matters, and how to discuss this topic

Speaker:

with any Muslims that you may know.

Speaker:

You're listening to Base Camp, a podcast where we equip Christians

Speaker:

to engage the darkest places and the least reached people with the gospel.

Speaker:

My name is Michael Collins.

Speaker:

In this episode, I sit down with Jeremy Jenkins, the president and

Speaker:

founder of All Things All People.

Speaker:

And we discuss the difference between Jesus and Isa.

Speaker:

The idea for this conversation came from an article that Jeremy wrote

Speaker:

for the All Things All People blog.

Speaker:

I'll put a link to that article in the description.

Speaker:

The goal is by the end of this episode, you will have a much better

Speaker:

understanding of the way people of the Islamic faith see Christ,

Speaker:

what some of the main differences are, and how to best talk about this subject

Speaker:

with any Muslim people that you may know.

Speaker:

So let's get right into the episode.

Mike:

you started the last episode asking me to share the story that was in my

Mike:

article, so Jeremy, I'm just going to ask that you share the story that was in your

Mike:

article that we have on Jesus and Isa.

Mike:

Am I saying it right?

Mike:

Is it Isa?

Mike:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Yeah, When I wrote that article, I I'm not always the best at titling things

Jeremy:

because if somebody doesn't know that Isa is the Islamic name for Jesus, then they

Jeremy:

have no idea what that article is about,

Mike:

yeah, I

Jeremy:

so, yeah, so Isa, Isa is the name that the, the Quran uses to refer to

Jeremy:

Jesus and a lot of people don't know that.

Jeremy:

That Jesus is referenced a ton in the Quran.

Jeremy:

I mean, he's one of the most talked about people in the Quran.

Jeremy:

And I was in North Africa sometime recently, and I was there with a team

Jeremy:

of people and we were working with some missionaries in North Africa.

Jeremy:

And obviously I can't say where, and we had gotten really tired of not being

Jeremy:

able to find people who speak English.

Jeremy:

And we don't speak any Arabic at all.

Jeremy:

And so we decided to go down to this touristy area of the city we were in.

Jeremy:

Hoping to find people to speak English.

Jeremy:

And, and of course that works.

Jeremy:

Cause if you've ever been, you've not been out of the country yet.

Jeremy:

Right.

Mike:

never been outta the country.

Jeremy:

That's going to be a lot of fun whenever.

Mike:

The summer will be the first time I'm going to Guatemala

Jeremy:

my goodness.

Jeremy:

Okay.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Well that, okay.

Jeremy:

That'd be cool.

Jeremy:

Well, and yeah, you'll experience that there too.

Jeremy:

So there's not a ton of English speakers, and so.

Jeremy:

Anytime you get the opportunity to speak your, your heart language,

Jeremy:

it makes things a lot easier.

Jeremy:

So we went kind of hunting for that.

Jeremy:

The other thing too, is when you're in a tourist area and you're walking around

Jeremy:

and they can tell you're not from there and that you're a tourist, they also

Jeremy:

assume you have a pocket full of money and they want to sell you something.

Jeremy:

And so JR and I were walking and we met this guy and he started talking to us.

Jeremy:

I think he owned a, he owned a travel company.

Jeremy:

So he wanted us to take his tours and all of that.

Jeremy:

Well, I'm like, you know, the guys that we work with, those of them who've

Jeremy:

traveled with me know that I'm pretty good at saying no to people who are

Jeremy:

trying to sell us stuff overseas.

Jeremy:

And so we started off just like kind of really in a friendly way, just saying no

Jeremy:

to this guy, but he was pretty persistent, but he seemed pretty nice anyway.

Jeremy:

So we just started talking to him and asking about the company, asking

Jeremy:

about what he provided and Eventually he kind of figured out like we

Jeremy:

weren't looking to buy anything, but he was still really friendly.

Jeremy:

Well, J.

Jeremy:

R.

Jeremy:

and I both love coffee, as you know, and , in a lot of parts of the

Jeremy:

The Middle East specifically like predominantly Arab populations.

Jeremy:

They'll have like these coffee shops.

Jeremy:

They call them our was and I was a HWA and it's outdoors.

Jeremy:

So it's like an outdoor patio and people will sit, older men, especially

Jeremy:

during the middle of the day, we'll sit at these hours for hours

Mike:

eye on us

Jeremy:

is.

Jeremy:

It really, yeah, it really is.

Jeremy:

And but you know, it doesn't bother them.

Jeremy:

It really, it really didn't bother me.

Jeremy:

But yeah, it can be but they'll sit there and they'll smoke

Jeremy:

Shisha, which is like hookah.

Jeremy:

Do you know, you know, like and they'll play chess or backgammon all day.

Jeremy:

And so that's kind of like like I'm built for that kind of like, not the Shisha,

Jeremy:

not the hookah, but but like sitting and drinking coffee and playing backgammon

Jeremy:

and chess and talking to old men all day, like to me, I was sort of like, I

Jeremy:

wanted to sit in that environment, look for opportunities to talk to people.

Jeremy:

So we asked this guy and, and asked him, Hey, where's a good ahwa.

Jeremy:

We don't want to go to a touristy place.

Jeremy:

And so he kind of lights up and he's like, well, Hey, I'll take you to mine.

Jeremy:

I'll take you to the one that I go to.

Jeremy:

And so he walks us, I don't remember, maybe a quarter mile.

Jeremy:

Kind of in this hidden little alleyway system, we would have never known to

Jeremy:

go down and he takes us to this, this Alwa, which is filled with locals,

Jeremy:

which was really my idea of fun.

Jeremy:

I, I, I actively try and avoid tourists as much as I can

Jeremy:

when I'm doing missions work.

Jeremy:

And so we ended up sitting down.

Jeremy:

Well, he, he's going to walk away and we Ask him, Hey, would you let us, you know,

Jeremy:

buy you a tea or coffee or something?

Jeremy:

And and so he sits down and we just start talking.

Jeremy:

And for me, I have a really easy time.

Jeremy:

Talking to people of other religions, partly because I'm super interested

Jeremy:

in them and their faith, but then also because I teach religions.

Jeremy:

And when you tell somebody that you're a world religions, like professor or

Jeremy:

teacher I've never really had any like bad reactions to that, at least not yet.

Jeremy:

And so I told him I was super interested in Islam, told him I was super interested

Jeremy:

in the culture and all of that.

Jeremy:

And so I was just asking him questions and everything he was saying.

Jeremy:

Was kind of leading us to the point where it was just like,

Jeremy:

well, he knew we were Christians.

Jeremy:

We had mentioned that.

Jeremy:

And, and of course he was, he was Muslim.

Jeremy:

I actually asked him, I said, cause I didn't want to assume even though I knew

Jeremy:

it's just like, Hey, are you Muslim?

Jeremy:

And he smiled and was like, yeah.

Jeremy:

And.

Jeremy:

It seemed like everything he wanted to talk about was about the similarities

Jeremy:

between Islam and Christianity and presumably there's, there are a

Jeremy:

lot, you know we believe in one God.

Jeremy:

We believe in an afterlife.

Jeremy:

We believe in a day of judgment.

Jeremy:

We believe that, you know, submission to God is important.

Jeremy:

Mm-Hmm.

Jeremy:

. A lot of Christians don't know, like Islam literally just means submission.

Jeremy:

Mm-Hmm.

Jeremy:

and Muslim just means submitted one.

Jeremy:

So our Venn diagram overlaps.

Mike:

Yeah.

Mike:

I've heard a lot of different missionary stories.

Mike:

People that were evangelizing to Islamic people and.

Mike:

they said the people that they were hanging out with told them,

Mike:

you're so close to being a Muslim.

Mike:

if you were just accept this one thing.

Jeremy:

In fact, what's so funny because most of my, the first few

Jeremy:

years of my travel and research and studying religions, I was

Jeremy:

doing a lot of work in South Asia.

Jeremy:

Mm-Hmm.

Jeremy:

and Hinduism and Buddhism and things like that.

Jeremy:

And the worldview does not overlap hardly at all.

Jeremy:

With groups like that, like there's, there's hardly any similarities

Jeremy:

at all between what Christians assumed to be true, believed to

Jeremy:

be true and what a Hindu does.

Jeremy:

There's, there's really not that much similarity.

Jeremy:

So when I started, and I'm not, I'm not an Islamic expert, but when I started,

Jeremy:

engaging Muslims with the gospel.

Jeremy:

I was like, Oh, this is so much

Mike:

easier.

Jeremy:

You know what I mean?

Jeremy:

Because, because of the same thing, what you just said is like , they have

Jeremy:

a deep love and reverence for Allah, which is just the Arabic word for God.

Jeremy:

And they, they believe that Allah is the same God that the Bible is talking about.

Jeremy:

In fact, most of Islamic history, at least what Muhammad said was Islamic history

Jeremy:

is, is Jewish and Christian history.

Jeremy:

I mean, and that's why, It is really easy to talk to Muslims about matters

Jeremy:

of faith because they believe in Adam and Eve, they believe in Noah, they

Jeremy:

believe in Abraham, they believe in Moses

Mike:

in Noah, believe Moses um, Somewhat.

Mike:

the the, the

Jeremy:

the Quran on top of it.

Jeremy:

Well, somewhat.

Jeremy:

So, yeah, so , I mean, there's a lot of differences, but the main

Jeremy:

difference is that they believe, so if you're familiar with the story of

Jeremy:

Abraham and Isaac, Abraham has a son.

Jeremy:

Well, before he had Isaac, he had another son.

Jeremy:

Is this

Jeremy:

Ishmael

Jeremy:

and what Jews and Christians believe is that Isaac was the promised son and that

Jeremy:

through Isaac seed is the chosen people of God, which Jews and Christians would

Jeremy:

say in some form or fashion is Israel.

Jeremy:

Muslims would say that.

Jeremy:

Actually, the chosen people of God came through Ishmael.

Jeremy:

And in fact, they believe that Ishmael was the son who was almost

Jeremy:

sacrificed when God provided the Ram.

Jeremy:

And so ultimately they view themselves as the seed of Ishmael.

Jeremy:

And if you, if you read the account in Genesis of when.

Jeremy:

When Abraham you know, essentially banished Hagar and Ishmael, it says that

Jeremy:

he brought them out to the desert and that Hagar was distraught because her

Jeremy:

son was going to die, Ishmael and God, and this is in Genesis, God speaks to,

Jeremy:

to Hagar and says, Hey, I I see your son.

Jeremy:

I will not let him die.

Jeremy:

And in fact, he's going to become a great and mighty people.

Jeremy:

And that's the end of it.

Jeremy:

But when Mohammed says that he began to receive revelation from Allah through

Jeremy:

the angel Gabriel in a cave outside of Mecca, what he said was that Jews and

Jeremy:

early Christians actually corrupted.

Jeremy:

What they call the Torah and the Injil.

Jeremy:

Injil is just the Arabic word for gospel.

Jeremy:

And so ultimately what we have is we have essentially two streams of promise.

Jeremy:

Is Jews and Christians say that the promise of Abraham came

Jeremy:

through Isaac and Muslims say no.

Jeremy:

In fact, it came through Ishmael.

Jeremy:

And that early Jews and Christians corrupted, specifically Jews,

Jeremy:

corrupted The old, the Old Testament, and then the New Testament after it.

Jeremy:

And so we do have a tremendous amount of similarities, but there are,

Jeremy:

there are these tiny differences there at the beginning of the

Jeremy:

narratives that, that changed the

Mike:

trajectory of

Mike:

everything.

Mike:

So do they believe that Jesus is a descendant of Ishmael or Jesus was.

Mike:

still a descendant of Isaac, but they just still hold him in

Jeremy:

I don't know.

Jeremy:

I don't know.

Jeremy:

I don't know specifically what they would say about his genealogy.

Jeremy:

They do believe that Jesus and all of the prophets that came before were actually

Jeremy:

prophets of a law and they hold those men in high regards, but the difference

Jeremy:

being that they would say that Jesus and Noah and Moses actually all came Came as

Jeremy:

prophets of Allah spreading the message of Islam, which is submission to Allah.

Jeremy:

And that Mohammed brought the restored revelation of Allah

Jeremy:

in the form of the Quran.

Jeremy:

And, these few key differences that point Muslims towards a life of submission and

Jeremy:

really, I mean, a works based salvation.

Jeremy:

They wouldn't disagree with that at all.

Jeremy:

Whereas Christians say, no, Jesus was the son of God.

Jeremy:

He was God and his death, burial and resurrection redeemed humanity

Jeremy:

and bought them from their sin.

Mike:

We, will get into maybe more of those little differences about Christ.

Mike:

But back

Mike:

to

Mike:

You in, this and what

Mike:

is it?

Mike:

and this awa.

Mike:

with your friend and with JR.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Mike:

You guys go and sit down and, and then this.

Mike:

this

Jeremy:

So what what's funny is like, it's a beautiful thing because.

Jeremy:

What otherwise can be like kind of an academic

Jeremy:

conversation,

Jeremy:

like, oh, here's these differences and all that they proved to be really important

Jeremy:

because this conversation centers in on the idea of him saying, well, hey,

Jeremy:

there's actually a lot of similarities.

Jeremy:

Kind of what you said, like, you guys are just this

Jeremy:

close to being really good Muslims, you know?

Jeremy:

And I said, you know, there are a lot of similarities.

Jeremy:

You're right.

Jeremy:

In fact, we both agree that we're sinful.

Jeremy:

And, and what kind of fall out of this is this really great evangelistic method.

Jeremy:

I don't know who pioneered it.

Jeremy:

But we call it any three which is asking.

Jeremy:

This guy, the question, how do you believe that your sins are going to be forgiven?

Jeremy:

And so he begins to list off the various things that, that Muslims

Jeremy:

believe, including like the five pillars, like you have to confess.

Jeremy:

That Allah is the one true God and Muhammad is his prophet.

Jeremy:

You have to what's called a zakat, which is like, you have

Jeremy:

to give, you have to be generous.

Jeremy:

You have to fast during Ramadan.

Jeremy:

You have to pray five times a day called Salat.

Jeremy:

And then at least once in your life, as you're able, you have to perform a

Jeremy:

pilgrimage to Mecca called the Hajj.

Jeremy:

And there's other things too.

Jeremy:

I mean, the Muslims really are mostly A devout group of people who place a

Jeremy:

high emphasis on living a good life.

Jeremy:

And so he lists off all these things and.

Jeremy:

He kind of finishes and I said and once again, this isn't my question, but okay.

Jeremy:

Do you believe then that your sins are forgiven

Jeremy:

already?

Jeremy:

And he shook his head.

Jeremy:

No, you know, no, I don't , which is the standard Islamic answer.

Jeremy:

Even Mohammed said that he couldn't be sure that he had done enough to warrant

Jeremy:

salvation into paradise upon his death.

Jeremy:

And so Muslims really operate on the sense that no one

Jeremy:

can

Jeremy:

know.

Jeremy:

And I said, okay, so see, here's the difference then.

Jeremy:

And this is where it's important.

Jeremy:

Like any conversation that you're having that's evangelistic in nature, even if

Jeremy:

there's a lot of similarities, sometimes those can be really helpful to highlight,

Jeremy:

but eventually we have to get to

Jeremy:

the differences.

Jeremy:

And I said, see, here's the difference.

Jeremy:

We believe that our sins are already forgiven.

Jeremy:

And the way that I believe that is because of the work of Jesus.

Jeremy:

And I shared kind of an aversion and this kind of goes along with, the any

Jeremy:

three method, and maybe we can, we can link to some, any three resources in

Jeremy:

the podcast notes, but the story we call it the first and last sacrifice,

Jeremy:

and that kind of, once again, leans on.

Jeremy:

The, the overlap between the Abrahamic faith, Islam Judaism and Christianity,

Jeremy:

because you reference, you say, Hey, we believe in Adam and Eve in

Jeremy:

the garden sinned against Allah.

Jeremy:

And the first act of really compassion that God had for humanity was that

Jeremy:

he clothed them and he clothed them in the form of animal sacrifice.

Jeremy:

He killed he killed a lamb and provided them clothing.

Jeremy:

And, you know, he's nodding, right.

Jeremy:

As, as most good Muslims would.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

And you say, you know, and you see throughout the old Testament narrative

Jeremy:

or the Torah narrative that really for humanity to come into the presence of,

Jeremy:

of a law there had to be sacrificed.

Jeremy:

There had to be a toning sacrifice, usually in the form of, of, of

Jeremy:

animal sacrifice so much so that right between Abraham and his son,

Jeremy:

and it's important, most Christian missionaries would say you don't.

Jeremy:

Like there on the street in an hour, get into an argument over whether it

Jeremy:

was Isaac or Ishmael, you just say Abraham and his son, you know, Abraham

Jeremy:

and his son, there, there was a needed sacrifice between Abraham and God.

Jeremy:

And instead of making him sacrifice his son, he provided a Ram.

Jeremy:

And then so on and so on through the, the, the Torah, the old Testament.

Jeremy:

And, and then I shared with him and I said, and then we meet the person of

Jeremy:

Jesus, who we believe was the son of God.

Jeremy:

And there on the cross, we see him and we see what his cousin, John the Baptist

Jeremy:

said, which, which was interesting.

Jeremy:

Cause he had never heard of John

Jeremy:

the

Jeremy:

Baptist.

Jeremy:

We see that John the Baptist calls him the lamb of God who

Jeremy:

takes away the sins of the world.

Jeremy:

And this man had never heard that phrase.

Jeremy:

And and I said, well, it's appropriate because on the cross he was killed.

Jeremy:

And this, this also brings us to another huge difference between

Jeremy:

Muslims and Christians, because Muslims don't believe that Jesus was

Mike:

killed on the

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Because they believe Jesus lived a sinless life.

Jeremy:

They believe he was born of a virgin.

Jeremy:

The Quran actually lists like a ton of really interesting

Jeremy:

things, presumably about Jesus.

Jeremy:

They believe when he was an infant.

Jeremy:

That he spoke.

Jeremy:

So they believe all sorts of miraculous

Mike:

things

Mike:

about

Mike:

Jesus.

Mike:

It's not that he

Mike:

died.

Mike:

It's not

Mike:

that

Mike:

he

Mike:

died.

Mike:

Or is it not that he died at all, or just not that he died on the

Jeremy:

They believe no, they believe that he didn't die that he was taken up by a

Jeremy:

law and that he'll return one day He's actually jesus is a huge part of Islamic

Jeremy:

eschatological beliefs, like at the end of days that he's going to come back.

Jeremy:

So they, they actually, and this is a sort of an important thing to

Jeremy:

understand about the Islamic worldview.

Jeremy:

They think that, well, if Jesus was sinless, They don't believe

Jeremy:

he's the highest prophet.

Jeremy:

They believe Muhammad is the highest prophet.

Jeremy:

But if, if Jesus was sinless, then it, then Allah would have

Jeremy:

never allowed him to die on a

Mike:

Interesting.

Mike:

So they accept that he's sinless, but they,

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

It's a kind of a strange thing.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

And like I said, they believe he's born of a virgin.

Jeremy:

They actually hold Mary in really high regard to they would have referred.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

And usually they refer to her as Miriam.

Mike:

So do they think that The New Testament, the Gospels

Mike:

are lying or that they've been

Jeremy:

corrupted.

Jeremy:

Yeah, they believe that they believe that the Gospels, yeah, the Injil.

Jeremy:

Is that we have is corrupted, but interestingly enough I mean, most

Jeremy:

Muslims have never read it because, because all they hear from their

Jeremy:

leaders, from imams, from the culture is that it's, it's corrupted.

Jeremy:

It can't be trusted that early Christians changed the original message

Jeremy:

of Isa to fit some other narrative.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

And, and of course they reject Trinitarianism.

Jeremy:

They reject that Jesus is God.

Jeremy:

They reject that he's the son of God.

Jeremy:

Probably the One of the most memorized passages in the Quran is where Muhammad

Jeremy:

wrote that God would never have a son.

Mike:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

And so they reject, they reject really the totality of

Jeremy:

who Christians say Jesus was.

Mike:

I'm curious because you know, you talk about in this article

Mike:

They, don't believe that it is befitting of God to have a son and at the same time

Mike:

they hold family in such a high regard,

Mike:

but if it's not befitting of God to have a son, that seems that

Mike:

there's something negative about

Jeremy:

having

Jeremy:

a

Jeremy:

son.

Jeremy:

Yeah, I think that, yeah, I mean, I think it all boils down to Islam.

Jeremy:

Islam is probably the purest form of monotheism that you

Jeremy:

could find.

Jeremy:

In the sense, I mean, Christians are monotheists, but they believe that God

Jeremy:

is, is three persons in one essence.

Jeremy:

The first thing you have to do to become a Muslim is say, there is no God,

Jeremy:

but

Jeremy:

God

Jeremy:

in, in Muhammad is his prophet.

Jeremy:

it's called the Shahada.

Jeremy:

And so the true essence right there with submission.

Jeremy:

Of

Jeremy:

Islam, the true essence is that God is one.

Jeremy:

I remember my professors using the word unicity, the idea

Jeremy:

that God is one in nature.

Jeremy:

God is one in person.

Jeremy:

And so I don't think that they would That they would view it as the insistence that

Jeremy:

God couldn't have a son as a negative.

Jeremy:

They view God interacting with anything other than, than

Jeremy:

himself as a defiling of the

Jeremy:

nature of

Jeremy:

God.

Jeremy:

And so, so the Islamic view of God is, is very transcendent as well.

Jeremy:

I would not call the Islamic view of Allah as like imminent or near.

Jeremy:

to humanity.

Jeremy:

And Muslims would say, that's why angels are so important.

Jeremy:

That's why Allah did not speak to Muhammad.

Jeremy:

Gabriel spoke to Muhammad.

Jeremy:

And then if you can take it even a little step further and think

Jeremy:

about the, the Christian concept of incarnation, when you learn then

Jeremy:

what Muslims view about Allah, the incarnation is hugely offensive.

Jeremy:

The idea that God took on flesh and dwelt among us is seen as, as a defiling.

Jeremy:

Of the nature of God, because why would God become

Jeremy:

a human?

Jeremy:

That's so, so much lower than he is.

Jeremy:

And what's funny is like Christians

Mike:

funny,

Mike:

like Christians

Jeremy:

You know what I mean?

Mike:

say,

Jeremy:

That's how much he loves us.

Jeremy:

Right?

Jeremy:

And so Christians operate with this, this idea of God is transcendent yet imminent.

Jeremy:

He is, he is, he is far and above creation, but he has chosen to

Jeremy:

make himself near and lowly.

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

And that's actually an interesting thing to like Christ describes himself as

Jeremy:

gentle and lowly, right?

Jeremy:

These are not Islamic concepts at all.

Jeremy:

And so what they say happened at Calvary and this is actually what my friend

Jeremy:

in the Iowa said is, is he stopped me and he said, see, we disagree.

Jeremy:

Isa was not killed on the cross

Jeremy:

and one of the beliefs that developed that explained what happened at Calvary is

Jeremy:

that Allah took Jesus from the cross and replaced him with somebody else and sort

Jeremy:

of fooled People into thinking that it was

Jeremy:

ESA, that

Jeremy:

it

Jeremy:

was

Jeremy:

Jesus.

Mike:

Interesting.

Mike:

Yeah.

Mike:

and, And

Mike:

actually, and is this, is this in the Quran?

Mike:

This is, or is it just a belief

Jeremy:

so there's like one, there's like one mention of it.

Jeremy:

It's kind of like a throwaway comment.

Jeremy:

And then really throughout time.

Jeremy:

Muslims have developed this

Jeremy:

belief,

Jeremy:

Which is sort of common in some instances like how the Quran interpreted the Old

Jeremy:

and New Testament, there's sort of these asides that that Mohammed threw out.

Jeremy:

In the Quran in that throughout Islamic history, the Hadith and then

Jeremy:

the Sharia, like the consensus sort of developed into what maybe most

Jeremy:

Muslims would consider to be true now.

Jeremy:

And so, you know, sitting in that coffee shop you know, he expressed

Jeremy:

that it was like, no, we don't believe he said died on the cross.

Jeremy:

We believe it's somebody else.

Jeremy:

And, and I had actually had a conversation with a friend of mine who

Jeremy:

we were working with that, that while we were there basically like, . What

Jeremy:

do you say when people say that?

Jeremy:

And.

Jeremy:

He had kind of told me what he shared and I thought it was brilliant.

Jeremy:

And what I, I shared with, with my friend in the Iowa and Jr was sitting

Jeremy:

across the table and I found out later, cause he hadn't said anything.

Jeremy:

He was just praying the whole time, which is, which is great.

Jeremy:

And it's a big reason why I always encourage to like for people to as

Jeremy:

best as they can, you know Do this

Jeremy:

kind

Jeremy:

of work

Jeremy:

in community

Jeremy:

is what I said is what my friend had kind of shared with me that he

Jeremy:

says, which is, Hey, listen, I know that that's what Muslims believe,

Jeremy:

but let me ask you this question.

Jeremy:

I know that family is really important to most Muslims and especially

Jeremy:

here in the Arab part of the world.

Jeremy:

Like family is essential.

Jeremy:

And he agreed because it is.

Jeremy:

And I was like, let me ask you this, you know, that Miriam was at the cross

Jeremy:

and he said, yeah.

Jeremy:

And I said, okay.

Jeremy:

And I, I won't share his name, but you know, Hey.

Jeremy:

If, if that was

Jeremy:

you

Jeremy:

on that cross and your mother was there, don't you think she would have

Jeremy:

known if it was somebody else in your

Jeremy:

place?

Jeremy:

And He stopped.

Jeremy:

He was actually, it was kind of a funny moment because he was

Jeremy:

drinking his tea and he stopped and kind of gave me like a look out

Jeremy:

of

Jeremy:

out of the corner of his

Jeremy:

eye

Jeremy:

and he paused and I'll pause here to not that there's not a

Jeremy:

response to be given to that.

Jeremy:

Because obviously we are talking

Mike:

about

Jeremy:

God.

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

So it would be very easy for a Muslim to say, well, yeah, like Allah could

Jeremy:

have done that, which then kind of begs the question of like, why

Jeremy:

is Allah being so deceptive here?

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

But we didn't even get into that because he just stopped and he kind of laughed

Jeremy:

and me and JR just kind of laughed because it was like this funny moment.

Jeremy:

And he said, Well, you know, if I understood as much about Christianity,

Jeremy:

as you know, about Islam, then I think I could answer that question.

Jeremy:

And I was

Jeremy:

like,

Jeremy:

that's

Jeremy:

fine.

Jeremy:

That's a perfectly acceptable answer.

Jeremy:

, but listen,

Jeremy:

when

Jeremy:

I want to learn more about Islam, I read the Quran and I talked to Muslims.

Jeremy:

If you want to learn more about ESA and Christianity, you should read

Jeremy:

the NGO and talk to Christians.

Jeremy:

And I said, and I believe that the NGO that I have is Is the true in

Jeremy:

Jill and that it wasn't corrupted.

Jeremy:

Would you be willing.

Jeremy:

If we came back tomorrow to read it with

Mike:

us, And the Inge is just the

Jeremy:

the gospel, yeah, the new Testament is usually the word that they

Jeremy:

use for the gospel or the new Testament.

Jeremy:

And amazingly, he said, yes.

Jeremy:

And and you know, we, I still actually I'm in touch

Jeremy:

with

Jeremy:

that guy.

Jeremy:

Yeah, through, through the wonders of, of WhatsApp.

Jeremy:

And, and we, we, we did make more contact with him while we were there.

Jeremy:

To this point, , he's not a believer.

Jeremy:

I do believe he's open to, to the message of Christianity, but even the reason

Jeremy:

that I wrote that article was that really.

Jeremy:

What I learned from that conversation is not even so much about teaching others

Jeremy:

is that Getting people to the point where they understand that just because you call

Jeremy:

someone Jesus And I call somebody Jesus.

Jeremy:

We're not necessarily talking about the same

Jeremy:

Jesus

Jeremy:

And we see that too with other groups like latter day saints, you know And

Jeremy:

i've done a lot of other writing and podcasting about the idea that just

Jeremy:

because we're talking about God or we say Heavenly Father, or we, we say Allah,

Jeremy:

which is just the Arabic word for God.

Jeremy:

Or we say Jesus or Isa doesn't mean that we're talking about the same person and

Jeremy:

that it's important to get people to the point where you ask those questions

Jeremy:

that lead them to the conclusion.

Jeremy:

Okay.

Jeremy:

Who actually was Jesus and what did he

Jeremy:

do?

Jeremy:

And give them the opportunity to say, like, Well, no that's

Jeremy:

not what we believe about Jesus.

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

Cause at the beginning of the conversation, I think, yeah, that

Jeremy:

was in the Middle East and an Arabic population in this open air.

Jeremy:

Ah, wow.

Jeremy:

But like conversations like that happen here in the, in our context as well,

Jeremy:

which is like, that's not my Jesus.

Jeremy:

And I actually joke all the time.

Jeremy:

Like when I was a student pastor, I used to use the scene from Talbot.

Jeremy:

You've ever seen Talladega nights, right?

Jeremy:

Not an appropriate movie necessarily, but not one that you would typically get

Jeremy:

sermon illustrations from, but there's the scene in that movie where will Farrell.

Jeremy:

Is praying and he's like, well, I like

Jeremy:

to

Jeremy:

pray to

Jeremy:

baby Jesus,

Jeremy:

right?

Jeremy:

And John C.

Jeremy:

Riley's like, I like to picture Jesus.

Jeremy:

It's like the lead singer of Lynyrd Skynyrd, right?

Jeremy:

And it's stupid and it's silly and it, you know, it's not

Jeremy:

academic at all or whatever.

Jeremy:

It's not missional at all.

Jeremy:

But I really don't think even what we experience here in the West

Jeremy:

is that different than what we experienced in an Arab population,

Jeremy:

which is, we all just kind of like to say, well, this is who Jesus

Jeremy:

is

Jeremy:

to me.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

But the merit of the conversation really boils down to, well, who actually

Mike:

was

Mike:

Jesus and

Mike:

what did he do?

Mike:

Who did he say that he was,

Mike:

, Jeremy: the conclusions that we come to those conversations are important,

Mike:

just like the conversation I had with this guy, which is to say like,

Mike:

well, Hey, one of us is wrong.

Mike:

Or, or maybe both of us are wrong.

Mike:

That's the other thing.

Mike:

Just like, Hey, either, either one of us is right, or both of us are wrong, but

Mike:

we both can't simultaneously be right.

Mike:

I believe he died on

Mike:

a cross

Mike:

and was resurrected

Mike:

three days later.

Mike:

And because of that, my sins can be forgiven.

Mike:

Now you believe he wasn't killed on a cross and you believe that you have

Mike:

to do all these things to please God.

Mike:

So which one of us is right.

Mike:

If one of us is, you know, and, and the answer to

Mike:

that matters a great

Mike:

deal.

Mike:

Mm-Hmm.

Mike:

.And it goes kind of along with the last episode we just did on on truth,

Mike:

but when we're trying to reach people, the discussions about religion, I think

Mike:

can sometimes feel almost like a game of tug of you know, and that's kind

Mike:

of the debate mindset of I'm trying to pull you over to my side and you're

Mike:

trying to pull me over to your side.

Mike:

and we'll see Who's stronger.

Mike:

who really knows their stuff more and whose beliefs are stronger.

Mike:

But if truth is real, if truth exists, we believe that Christianity

Mike:

is

Mike:

the

Mike:

truth.

Mike:

And so we don't have to try to pull them over.

Mike:

If we get the attitude of coming alongside them and saying,

Mike:

Hey, let's seek truth together.

Mike:

Let's work together to try to figure out what is true because we

Mike:

believe that this is what is true.

Mike:

So if we're honestly pursuing truth, we're going to end up at Christianity.

Mike:

Right.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

And, and one thing that I, I, I, in my experience is like talking about faith

Jeremy:

with Muslims is you don't experience as much of Like the relativism that we

Jeremy:

were talking about in the last episode with them because really what they're

Jeremy:

saying is no actually you're wrong

Jeremy:

about Jesus

Jeremy:

and we're right and I'm like, okay.

Jeremy:

Well we can have a conversation about this, right?

Jeremy:

Another thing that is important to remember And this is one thing I've just

Jeremy:

learned extensively from missionaries to The predominantly Muslim world is to

Jeremy:

try and get them to read what they call

Jeremy:

the Angeal because most of them haven't.

Jeremy:

And something amazing really happens when you really

Jeremy:

read

Jeremy:

the gospels and you really, Oh man, like, no, like if, if this Jesus

Jeremy:

is the real Jesus, I like, there's something really desirable about that.

Jeremy:

And not just that it's like, well, our narrative is better than the Islamic

Jeremy:

narrative, but it's like, man, if what the Christians are saying about Jesus is true.

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

That's the end of the any three method, which, which I really didn't

Jeremy:

get to be able to, to, to get to.

Jeremy:

With our friend that day, because of the objection

Jeremy:

to

Jeremy:

the

Jeremy:

fact

Jeremy:

that Jesus

Jeremy:

didn't die on the cross, but the end is no, but I can know that

Jeremy:

my

Jeremy:

sins

Jeremy:

are

Jeremy:

forgiven now.

Jeremy:

And so works are important, but they don't save me.

Jeremy:

And that's really like, so, so the end of that story is right.

Jeremy:

We, We walk him back to his travel agency.

Jeremy:

We're, we're kind of laughing.

Jeremy:

We had, we had really in a very short amount of time

Jeremy:

had, had grown close to him.

Jeremy:

Weirdly, you know, I mean, just, and I think actually a lot of it was

Jeremy:

because we were talking about issues of faith, like in our, in our society.

Jeremy:

We're not supposed to talk about faith.

Jeremy:

We're not supposed to talk about religion.

Jeremy:

And so we kind of don't know how.

Jeremy:

And so we hear about conversations like this.

Jeremy:

We're like, I,

Jeremy:

I'm

Mike:

scared

Mike:

to even

Mike:

ask

Mike:

these questions.

Mike:

Mm hmm.

Mike:

You feel like somebody's going to be mad at

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

And luckily, and this is an encouragement to listeners that if

Jeremy:

you're talking about a population.

Jeremy:

Or a religious demographic that isn't a Westerner from the

Jeremy:

United States, most of the world

Jeremy:

doesn't feel

Jeremy:

that way about religion.

Jeremy:

I mean, you can talk

Jeremy:

up

Jeremy:

to

Jeremy:

a

Jeremy:

Muslim

Jeremy:

about Islam.

Jeremy:

Like they're usually not going to be taken aback by that.

Jeremy:

And so we had, You know, we had gotten really friendly with him.

Jeremy:

So we're laughing, we're talking, and then the ending of that story

Jeremy:

for us was walking away and looking forward to telling someone more

Jeremy:

about Jesus who only knew Isa, the hope, was that we could convince him.

Jeremy:

Through the merit of scripture through the merit of the work of the Holy

Jeremy:

Spirit in his heart and mind, because ultimately we're not going to convince

Jeremy:

him that no, he wasn't just a prophet who

Jeremy:

was pointing

Jeremy:

to Muhammad.

Jeremy:

He was

Jeremy:

God in human form, like he took on flesh and blood.

Jeremy:

He took on your sin so that now submission to God is a joy.

Jeremy:

It's

Jeremy:

not a

Jeremy:

duty, you know, and that's really the hope of those types of conversations

Jeremy:

with, with not just Muslims, but really anybody who thinks that they

Jeremy:

know Jesus, but has sort of fallen for some counterfeit version of him,

Mike:

which

Mike:

I feel like the longer you're in Islam, trying to earn your way into

Mike:

heaven without ever knowing that you can never really know if you've been

Mike:

good enough or, or done enough good.

Mike:

with Your life that the longer you're in that the more appealing

Mike:

. grace has to become that to, To think of, of isa as, as taking

Jeremy:

the punishment

Mike:

so

Mike:

you

Mike:

don't

Mike:

have to

Mike:

earn it.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

I mean, you would think so and, and, and, and ultimately, like the

Jeremy:

people who have come out of Islam.

Jeremy:

To convert to Christianity.

Jeremy:

I think that's the testimony, but it is, it is a tough pill for them to swallow

Jeremy:

because, because they do and part of

Mike:

is like, honor tied up in that

Jeremy:

yeah.

Jeremy:

I mean the idea, yeah.

Jeremy:

So I think it's important for Christians to understand like what, what, what

Jeremy:

we're asking them to believe it goes against the entire nature of a law,

Jeremy:

like the idea that, okay, so you're telling me he took on flesh, became

Jeremy:

a human, or also that he's three, he's three persons in one, right.

Jeremy:

Which is, goes against, you know, the whole confession of, of Islam,

Jeremy:

which is that God is only one, but that even after all of that, that

Jeremy:

he died, he, he experienced one of those brutal, brutal execution methods

Jeremy:

that the humanity has ever known.

Jeremy:

And then he came back to life.

Jeremy:

So it's, it is a tough pill to swallow.

Jeremy:

And I think that when you say honor, like the idea that God

Jeremy:

would allow that of himself, once again, kind of goes to that idea, that's not

Jeremy:

befitting their, their version of a law, which kind of goes once again to that

Jeremy:

great exclamation point of Christianity,

Jeremy:

which is, yeah,

Jeremy:

that's the

Jeremy:

whole point.

Jeremy:

And actually I find that, I find that.

Jeremy:

When I, when I have those conversations with the Muslims,

Jeremy:

my appreciate your, I'm like,

Mike:

actually,

Mike:

you're

Mike:

right.

Mike:

It's not

Mike:

befitting.

Mike:

It's not befitting.

Mike:

It's like Peter saying, Lord, you will never wash my feet.

Mike:

And Christ says, You don't

Mike:

get it.

Jeremy:

don't get it.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

Or it's same thing.

Jeremy:

Well, we'll kind of keep it along with Peter too, is like, you know, when Jesus

Jeremy:

is saying like, Hey, all these horrible things are going to happen to me.

Jeremy:

And Peter

Jeremy:

pulls

Jeremy:

him

Mike:

aside

Mike:

and

Mike:

it's like,

Mike:

no, no,

Jeremy:

no, no,

Jeremy:

that no,

Jeremy:

we're not

Jeremy:

going to let that happen.

Jeremy:

And

Jeremy:

he's, you know, get behind me, Satan, because he's like, you don't understand.

Jeremy:

And it is part of me kind of goes, no, you are right.

Jeremy:

You, it wasn't befitting of God, but God is so loving of the world.

Jeremy:

Right, you know, John, John three, God so loved the world that he gave his

Jeremy:

son that whoever would believe in him, Paul later would say, whoever would.

Jeremy:

confess with their mouth that he is Lord and believe in their

Jeremy:

heart that God raised him from the dead, that they would be saved.

Jeremy:

And that's the message for Muslims or for anybody really.

Jeremy:

But it is a tough pill for Muslims to swallow because it goes

Jeremy:

against, yeah, we, we have all

Jeremy:

those similarities, but

Jeremy:

the underlying worldview of who and what is God is so intrinsically different

Jeremy:

that , it

Jeremy:

probably is going to take

Jeremy:

more

Jeremy:

than

Jeremy:

one conversation.

Jeremy:

I think that the image that most people within Islam have of

Jeremy:

Christians is something akin to maybe what we would say is cheap

Jeremy:

grace

Jeremy:

, and of course, some of this fault, the blame for some of this falls at

Jeremy:

our feet, which is that they believe Christians can do whatever you want.

Jeremy:

Say whatever you want, live however you want, believe whatever you want, and that

Jeremy:

everything's going to be fine in the end.

Jeremy:

And, and so I think that there's a balance that Christians need to begin striking

Jeremy:

better with, with their communication to the Islamic world and the witness

Jeremy:

that we're living at least publicly.

Jeremy:

Which is to say that like, no, we don't believe you can do and

Jeremy:

say and be whatever you want.

Jeremy:

In fact, right.

Jeremy:

The whole point of Paul's words there is like, no, Christ has to be your Lord.

Jeremy:

He has to be your master.

Jeremy:

Like, and because we do believe he's God, we hold him in, in, in as

Jeremy:

high regard as Muslims hold Allah.

Jeremy:

But we just believe he loves us personal relationship is a very

Jeremy:

weird thing for them to think.

Jeremy:

About with a law, , there's been instances where I've talked to Muslims and, and

Jeremy:

and asked like, Hey, how can I pray for

Jeremy:

you?

Jeremy:

I've had Muslims kind of struggle

Jeremy:

with that because the idea that like, well, we don't pray

Jeremy:

to a lot to receive things.

Jeremy:

And this isn't all of them, of course, but some Muslims would even say I

Jeremy:

don't want you to just pray for me so that I get something and it's like,

Jeremy:

well, no, that's not the point, right?

Jeremy:

The point is, let's Revere and adore and worship God,

Jeremy:

but

Jeremy:

he does

Jeremy:

want good

Jeremy:

things for

Jeremy:

us.

Jeremy:

And he wants us to bring our petitions to him and our needs

Jeremy:

to him because he is our father.

Jeremy:

And, you know, once again, kind of going back to God would never

Jeremy:

have a son is like, they don't look at Allah as their father.

Jeremy:

They, they look at him as God, as, as Allah, as, as, as the high

Jeremy:

one, who's worthy of worship and that if I want to be in paradise

Jeremy:

one day that I'll submit to him

Jeremy:

as

Jeremy:

a

Jeremy:

far and

Jeremy:

distant king

Jeremy:

and So I hate to speak generally in that sense, because of course there,

Jeremy:

there are Muslims who, who, who are more personal and how they view a

Jeremy:

lot, but generally they, they look at the Christian image of who God is and

Jeremy:

say, no, you guys have them all wrong.

Jeremy:

He, he's not.

Jeremy:

He's not concerned with your day to day life.

Jeremy:

He's not concerned with becoming one of you and redeeming you from your sin.

Jeremy:

You have to submit to him and please him.

Jeremy:

And ultimately that's why the communication of the gospel can

Jeremy:

be so tricky because yeah, like I said, we, we, we use the same names.

Jeremy:

We use a lot of the same words, but ultimately who, the

Jeremy:

question of who and what is

Jeremy:

God is so different and it can make things really

Jeremy:

difficult to, to communicate with them.

Jeremy:

I actually do think Christians need to get a more holistic view of that.

Jeremy:

Like we we greatly

Jeremy:

lack

Jeremy:

The

Jeremy:

call to submission and obedience we do buy too much into cheap grace and,

Jeremy:

and therefore validate their, their

Jeremy:

claims about us, but that doesn't make us wrong about the gospel.

Jeremy:

And, and ultimately that's what I think is, is the, the invitation

Jeremy:

to the Islamic world, which is, no, there's a, there's a fuller and more

Jeremy:

beautiful understanding of who God is.

Jeremy:

And what he's done for humanity, and it's found in the person of Jesus, who you

Jeremy:

say was just a prophet pointing towards pointing towards submission to a law.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Mike:

Islamic

Mike:

faith seems to me and I haven't studied

Jeremy:

it nearly

Jeremy:

as

Jeremy:

much

Jeremy:

as

Mike:

you

Mike:

have.

Mike:

so I'm really curious if

Mike:

this seems

Mike:

accurate to you,

Mike:

but

Mike:

it seems

Mike:

like

Mike:

what

Mike:

you would

Mike:

get if

Mike:

you

Mike:

took Christianity?

Mike:

Removed

Mike:

the

Mike:

cross.

Mike:

and then

Mike:

let

Mike:

it

Mike:

develop in the hands of mankind for 150 200

Jeremy:

years.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

I mean, I, I think you're probably like, kind of onto something there.

Jeremy:

I think if you take the cross.

Jeremy:

And the resurrection, of course, out of Christianity, you

Jeremy:

really just have a new branch

Jeremy:

of

Jeremy:

Judaism,

Jeremy:

, and so you find yourself with a lot of law and you find yourself with a lot

Jeremy:

of, like, just trying to please God.

Jeremy:

Have you ever read the cross of Christ by John

Jeremy:

Stott?

Mike:

No

Jeremy:

You would, you would really like it because you like Anglican

Jeremy:

theologians and he just talks about how Christians have really forsaken the weight

Jeremy:

of the cross and the work of the cross that we find kind of this.

Jeremy:

Even bigger emphasis on the resurrection once you really understand the cross.

Jeremy:

And so when you think about Islam, and then you also think about a cross

Jeremy:

list Christianity is, yeah, you end up with like, Oh, it's really all

Jeremy:

about what I can do then when the cross and the resurrection actually

Jeremy:

show us that you can't do anything.

Jeremy:

Right.

Jeremy:

Paul in Galatians talks about how the law was a tutor, you know,

Jeremy:

it pointed towards our need for God's rescue God's redemption.

Jeremy:

And so, yeah, so I think, yeah, I think for Christians to imagine what it would

Jeremy:

be like to not have Jesus in the cross and the work of the resurrection and what we

Jeremy:

received from God in those things, that's, yeah, I mean, that's the state of, of

Jeremy:

not just

Jeremy:

Muslims, but

Jeremy:

I

Jeremy:

think that's, that's what we have to offer.

Jeremy:

You know, that's the message of

Jeremy:

the

Mike:

across the US, right?

Mike:

So you mentioned

Mike:

Does the Quran have stories of Jesus, like the gospels

Jeremy:

of

Jeremy:

him

Jeremy:

walking and

Jeremy:

talking

Jeremy:

and

Jeremy:

doing,

Jeremy:

I mean, not a ton, not a ton.

Jeremy:

I mean, so they talk about, Yeah, they talk about him as a baby, and then

Jeremy:

they, they talk about him in, in his ministry, like what the gospels, but

Jeremy:

yeah, I mean, but their mention of Jesus and their mention of Christianity

Jeremy:

is anytime, usually, usually if Jesus or, you know, the book, what would

Jeremy:

they usually refer to Christians and Jews as the people of the book?

Jeremy:

Usually those things are mentioned to further validate the message of the book.

Jeremy:

The Quran or what the Quran didn't exist at that point, but the message

Jeremy:

of what they call the UMA, which is the collection of the early Muslims.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

So, so, so, so, so Issa Issa is a signpost.

Jeremy:

In

Jeremy:

the Quran for Muhammad

Jeremy:

and

Jeremy:

the

Jeremy:

message

Jeremy:

of

Jeremy:

Allah that's

Jeremy:

being

Jeremy:

recited

Jeremy:

in the Quran.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

This is the problem.

Jeremy:

Exactly.

Jeremy:

Exactly.

Jeremy:

I mean, the, the role that Jesus plays in Islam is the role

Jeremy:

that

Jeremy:

Moses played or David played, or, you know, pick, pick a old Testament prophet.

Jeremy:

It's pointing towards something greater to come.

Jeremy:

And that ultimately, like they even look at the New Testament

Jeremy:

where Jesus says, Hey, there's going to be one that comes after.

Jeremy:

Me who's going to bring comfort and Christians would

Jeremy:

say, that's the Holy spirit.

Jeremy:

A lot of Muslims say he was talking about Muhammad and so they view Muhammad as

Jeremy:

the highest prophet, the last prophet.

Jeremy:

So, yeah.

Jeremy:

So, so

Mike:

a

Mike:

conversation with

Mike:

a

Mike:

Muslim

Mike:

Should

Mike:

the goal

Mike:

Of the conversation.

Mike:

as we attempt to reach them with the gospel, be to point out these

Mike:

differences in, between Esau and Jesus?

Mike:

Or

Jeremy:

I think, I think in some sense, you're going to

Jeremy:

have a

Jeremy:

hard

Jeremy:

time

Jeremy:

if

Jeremy:

you're, if you're avoiding that, you know what I mean?

Jeremy:

But , I think it can get very argumentative and you can put somebody on

Jeremy:

the defensive by, you know, kind of like

Jeremy:

when you were

Jeremy:

a

Jeremy:

kid

Jeremy:

find the 10 differences

Jeremy:

between these two pictures

Jeremy:

kind of thing.

Jeremy:

What I prefer to do is just realize most Muslims as, as most non

Jeremy:

believers have not read the Bible.

Jeremy:

And so I firmly believe that the

Jeremy:

best

Jeremy:

thing

Jeremy:

is

Jeremy:

just,

Jeremy:

are they willing to read the Bible with you?

Jeremy:

And.

Jeremy:

If they are, then show them who Jesus actually was and

Jeremy:

allow the Holy Spirit to do

Jeremy:

the work

Jeremy:

of

Jeremy:

convincing.

Jeremy:

Now you're going to be there to help navigate some of the questions

Jeremy:

and, and point out, okay, this is who Christians actually say Jesus

Jeremy:

is and was and, and then just prayerfully walk them through that.

Jeremy:

Now there will be times

Mike:

for.

Jeremy:

You know, debate and that's where apologetics and things like

Jeremy:

that comes in and understanding.

Jeremy:

But because, you know, because most of us aren't textual critics,

Mike:

like

Mike:

we're not

Jeremy:

Greek and Hebrew scholars and things like that.

Jeremy:

I try to, avoid getting too deep into the validity of the

Jeremy:

Quran versus the validity of the

Jeremy:

new Testament.

Jeremy:

Even though, I mean, the new Testament greatly wins out in that, in, in like the

Jeremy:

historicity and the validity of the texts.

Jeremy:

But at the end of the day, I think because most of us, the whole point is.

Jeremy:

I want this person to know Christ if they're

Jeremy:

willing,

Jeremy:

, introduce them to him through the word.

Jeremy:

If they're not willing, then that doesn't mean you're not that

Jeremy:

you're done with a person, but.

Jeremy:

You know, I mean, that

Jeremy:

person, we

Jeremy:

would say

Jeremy:

that person's

Jeremy:

probably

Jeremy:

not

Jeremy:

a

Jeremy:

green

Jeremy:

light

Jeremy:

for

Jeremy:

the gospel.

Jeremy:

You know what I mean?

Jeremy:

And continue in a relationship, continue having those conversations.

Jeremy:

But if somebody is willing to sit down and read the scriptures with you, then that's,

Jeremy:

I mean, that's, that's the beginning of hopefully what will be a fruitful journey

Jeremy:

is to them

Jeremy:

going from Issa to,

Jeremy:

to

Jeremy:

Jesus

Jeremy:

to, to Yeshua, to use his, you know, Arabic name.

Jeremy:

But you know, And really beginning to understand, okay, no, he,

Jeremy:

he died for humanity took on the curse and was raised again.

Jeremy:

And I can be forgiven now.

Jeremy:

And that was the whole point of that conversation, which is trying

Jeremy:

to get our friend there in the coffee shop to understand like,

Jeremy:

no, your sins can be forgiven now.

Jeremy:

And you can live a life of freedom and liberty still submitting to God, but being

Jeremy:

known by him and knowing him in return.

Jeremy:

And that's the invitation to the

Mike:

to the Islamic world.

Jeremy:

So if

Mike:

there's a Muslim listening to this who I would say, if

Mike:

somebody's listening to this and they

Jeremy:

of it at this point.

Jeremy:

Is there anything that you would say directly to them?

Jeremy:

I would, I would say, I mean, if somebody is listening to this and they come

Jeremy:

from a Muslim background, I mean, along

Mike:

Muslim,

Jeremy:

know, a tremendous amount of resources there was an, there was

Jeremy:

an apologist, an author named Nabil Qureshi who wrote, Tremendous book.

Jeremy:

He was a, he was a Muslim and he was a very devout Muslim and he wrote a book

Jeremy:

about his testimony of finding Christ called seeking Allah finding Jesus.

Jeremy:

I would read that.

Jeremy:

Yeah.

Jeremy:

There is a a version of the Quran which is, is highly regarded not just within

Jeremy:

Christianity but even most religious scholars would say that it's called

Jeremy:

the Quran with Christian commentary, which was, is a, is a very faithful

Jeremy:

translation of the Quran with Christian commentary written by a scholar named Dr.

Jeremy:

Gordon Nicol who I've had who've actually had on the podcast many years ago.

Jeremy:

But beyond that is if, if Christ is calling you To

Jeremy:

know him,

Jeremy:

look into those resources, but then also just find, find a

Jeremy:

believer, find a Christian to walk through the Bible with you.

Jeremy:

And if you can't, if you can't find that, then just open up to the gospel

Jeremy:

of John and just start in John one and read about who Jesus actually

Jeremy:

was, who he is, what he's doing now on our behalf and what he's calling you

Jeremy:

to, which is to a deep relationship.

Jeremy:

With god with allah, that goes far beyond just

Mike:

submitting

Mike:

to him

Jeremy:

But actually

Jeremy:

knowing

Jeremy:

him

Jeremy:

and being loved

Jeremy:

by

Mike:

him