Gk: Iesous
(
Jesus is perhaps the most controversial character in Islam, and thus there is a tremendous amount of Islamic literature about Jesus. In general, while Muslims affirm that Jesus performed miracles and has special attributes that other prophets did not have, Muslims still believe that Jesus was no more than a prophet. Muslims believe that He ranks above other prophets, but below the status of Muhammad, despite Jesus having attributes that even Muhammad did not have.
The article The Muslim Jesus, known as Isa is an excellent introcuction on the Islamic beliefs about Jesus in contrast to the Biblical record.
Muslims call Jesus "Isa".
There have been various attempts to explain this
rather bizzare connection.
Ahmad Deedat wrote:
The word is very simply - "E S A U" - a very common Jewish
name, used more than sixty times in the very first booklet
alone of the Bible, in the part called "Genesis". There
was at least one "Jesus" sitting on the "bench" at the trial
of Jesus before the Sanhedrin. Josephus the Jewish historian
mentions some twenty five Jesus' in his "Book of Antiquities".
The New Testament speaks of "Bar-Jesus" - a magician and a
sorcerer, a false prophet (Act 13:6); and also "Jesus-Justus"
- a Christian missionary, a contemporary of Paul (Colossians 4:11).
These are distinct from Jesus the son of Mary. Transforming
"Esau" to (J)esu(s) - Jesus - makes it unique. This unique (?)
name has gone out of currency among the Jews and the Christians
from the 2nd century after Christ. Among the Jews, because it
came to be the proper name of their God(?) - their God incarnate.
The Muslim will not hesitate to name his son - "Eesa" -
because it is an honoured name, the name of a righteous servant
of the Lord." (Ahmad Deedat, Christ in Islam, Chapter
2)
What is Jesus' Islamic Name? Isa, Esau or Yesu?
"The Holy Quran refers to Jesus as "Eesa", and this name is
used more times than any other title, because this was his
"Christian" name. Actually, his proper name was "Eesa" (Arabic),
or "Esau" (Hebrew); classical "Yeheshua", which the Christian
nations of the West Latinised as Jesus. Neither the "J" nor
the second "s" in the name Jesus is to be found in the
original tongue - they are not found in the Semitic language.
Esau is Jacob's
older twin brother, and his name
in Hebrew means "hairy", because he was a man of much hair.
He was also called Edom, which means "red",
because he also looked red
(Genesis 25:25).
Jesus' name, however, means "God saves".
Deedat attempted to turn Esau into Jesus by stripping away the letters "J" and "s". In other words, he was playing on the spelling Esau <--> esu, a difference of only one letter. The reader, however, should be able to spot the fatal mistake of playing with English spelling rather than Hebrew. Secondly, Deedat completely forgot that he should be concentrating on the etymological connection between "Esau" and "Yehoshua", i.e., between "hairy" or "red" with "God saves". Given the difference in meaning between these two Hebrew names, the connection is not only less than tenuous, but downright mischievous. It is quite astonishing that Deedat should simply disregard the name Joshua, which is the Hebrew equivalent of Jesus.
Deedat was also very mischievous when he cites the example of Esau appearing more than 60 times (in Genesis) in the Bible to show that it was a common Jewish name. What Deedat failed to reveal to his readers is that every of the 81 occurrences in the Bible refers to Esau himself or to his descendents (as a nation). Deedat seems to think that the more times the same person is mentioned, there must mean more of such persons around. In fact, no other person was called Esau in the Bible! If we apply that same logic, Muhammad must have been an extremely common name, more common than other, since it appears so many times in the Qur'an.
By the way, can someone explain what Deedat meant by "(The name Jesus had gone out of currency). Among the Jews, because it came to be the proper name of their God(?) - their God incarnate"? How can a Jew do that? A slippage in his pen, perhaps?
A Muslim wrote over the internet that: "One explanation had it that Muhammad learned the name from unbelieving Jews in Medina. In their supposed hatred for the Christians, the Jews called Jesus Esau, the son of Isaac who lost his blessing to his brother Jacob (Gen. 27). Muhammad picked up the name without carrying with it the derogatory meaning the Jews intended. Jesus is mentioned 97 times in the Qur'an, 23 times [my note: or is it 25?] as Jesus son of Mary."
Such an attempt to smooth over the difficulty begs another question. Why should Muhammad use a name with such derogatory connotations, instead of his original name which has no such "historical" baggage. Muslims often alleged that Jews and Christians portray the prophets of God in a bad light (eg. by recording their sins in the Bible, which Muslims deny ever happened). In this case, however, not only did Muhammad failed to return the proper name to Jesus, he and all Muslims thereafter continued to give Jesus a name with derogatory connotations, and worse still, a name that bears no relation to Jesus at all, not even coming close in meaning.
A far more detailed discussion is found in the article, Is 'Isa the true name of Jesus?
This miraculous conception is recorded in the Bible simply as ``The
angel answered, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the
power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be
born will be called the Son of God."''
(Luke 1:35).
No sexual connotation was involved whatsoever.
In Christianity, the Holy Spirit is the third person in the Godhead.
The reader should be reminded that in Islam, the Holy Spirit does
not necessarily refer to God, but instead refers to the angel
Gabriel, who was supposed to have appeared to Muhammad.
Thus, it is easy to understand how Muslims come to think that
Christians believe that Jesus was conceived due to a union
between Gabriel and Mary. The thinking reader will easily see that
Christians will of course find such an assertion
extremely offensive and blasphemous.
The Qur'anic passages dealing with this event are to be found in
Maryam 19:19-21; at-Tahrim 66:12.
Al-Saddi's version of the miracle states the following:
The wife of Zachariah said, "I find the child in my
womb worships that which is in yours."
Another account relates that the breathing was in her mouth and
reached her womb and immediately she conceived.''
Note: As in many other cases, the Qur'an does not identify the wife
of Zechariah by name, but the Bible states that the wife of
Zechariah is Elizabeth.
The Bible says that she is Mary's relative (see
Luke 1:5-56),
while Al-Saddi said that she is Mary's sister.
The son of Zechariah is of course John the Baptist.
What is most interesting is that
Al-Saddi said that John the Baptist worshipped Jesus
while in the womb.
Al-Baidawi commented on the miraculous birth of Jesus,
This statement is rather significant in that it also meant that
Jesus Christ was set apart from Muhammad and any other prophet.
Al Fakhr el Razi explained that "faultless" means first that
Christ was without sin; second, that He grew in integrity, as it is said
that He who has no sin is chaste and in the growing plant there is purity;
and third, he was above reproach and pure. Even Muhammad was not
sinless. See Muhammad for more details.
According to Ibn Said, p. 244,
Jesus lived 125 years:
However, no such evidence have been produced to support this theory.
The less than clear passages in the Qur'an
dealing with the death of Jesus are
Âl 'Imran 3:55; an-Nisa' 4:155-159; al-Ma'idah 5:110-117; Maryam 19:33.
See also death of John (Maryam 19:15).
The phrase "It appeared so to them" (shubbiha lahum
in 4:157) is quite controversial:
In particular, the phrases 'they did not kill him, nor did they crucify
him' do not necessarily mean that there was no crucifixion, but that,
even if there was, it was God who was responsible for all that happened
during the last hours of the Messiah's life and that the Jews had done
whatever they did only by permission of God's will. A similar figure of
speech occurs in
al-Anfal 8:17
in which the Muslim's actions at the Battle of Badr are attributed to
God and not to their own volition; they did in fact and kill, but only
by God's permission and direction.
These verses, therefore, do not explicitly deny the Christian story of
the crucifixion, for they refer primarily to Jewish claims against the
Christians....''
(David Brown, The Cross of the Messiah, SPCK,
1969, pp. 31-32)
Both these verses refer to the return of Jesus to God at the
end of his life, and the most straightforward interpretation of them
is to suppose that they refer to a natural death of Jesus at the end
of his earthly life. Tawaffa is often used in the Qur'an in
the sense of bringing a soul to God at death, both when the subject
of the verb is God
(e.g., Âl 'Imran 3:193; Yunus 10:46),
and when the subject is the angels
(eg, an-Nahl 16:28; as-Sajdah).
The word tawaffa, however, was originally used of a person
receiving the full payment of his due or his rights, and when used of
God in the Qur'an refers to men being called to pay their accounting in
his presence, either at death, or in sleep when the soul comes to God
but is returned to the body for a further term of life on earth....
Thus the use of the word tawaffa in these two passages with
reference to the Messiah, is ambiguous and its exact meaning must be
determined by consideration of other verses in the Qur'an: it could
mean that Jesus died a natural death, but it can also mean that he was
taken to heaven without undergoing the experience of
physical death."
(David Brown, The Cross of the Messiah, SPCK, 1969, pp.29-30)
"Peace on me the day I was born, and the day I die, and the
day I shall be raised alive!
(Sura Maryam 19:33, Pickthall)
Al Muthanna says, quoting Abd Allah Ibn Salih, Muawiheh, and Ali
Ibn Abbas, that Inni mutawaffeeka means "I cause you to
die."
In Sahih Bukhari, we have the following :
"As We began the first creation, We shall repeat it. A promise
We have undertaken: Truly we shall do it.." (21.104)
The Prophet then said, "The first of the human beings to be
dressed on the Day of Resurrection, will be Abraham. Lo! Some
men from my followers will be brought and then (the angels) will
drive them to the left side (Hell-Fire). I will say. 'O my Lord!
(They are) my companions!' Then a reply will come (from
Almighty), 'You do not know what they did after you.' I will say
as the pious slave (the Prophet Jesus) said: And I was a witness
over them while I dwelt amongst them. When You took me up. You
were the Watcher over them and You are a Witness to all things.'
(5.117) Then it will be said, "These people have continued to be
apostates since you left them."
(Sahih Bukhari 60.149).
Suyuti, in the popular Tafsir Al-Jalalayn,
commented that mutawaffika was take you without death
(p. 48).
Actually, many Muslims, cultured or not, believes in this theory.
Regarding the theory of substitutional death, Parrinder gave the
following bit of information about early Christians:
Khalifites
believed that Jesus' soul was taken up into heaven
before the Jews could crucify him and that he is now dead. They quote
an-Nisa' 4:171, al-Ma'idah 5:75,117
as evidence.
There is circumstantial evidence that early Muslims believed that
Jesus did die. At the death of Muhammad, one of companions, Umar
Faruq, drew his sword from the sheath and threatened to behead
anyone who dared announce that Muhammad had died. He maintained that
he 'had ascended to heaven as Moses had gone to his Lord for a time
and would return to punish the hypocrites.'
On hearing this, Abu Bakr recited the Quranic verse
Âl 'Imran 3:145
and declared: 'Those amongst you who worship God, let them know that
God is alive and will remain alive. But those amongst you who worshipped
Muhammad, let them know that Muhammad has passed away'
(Sahih Bukhari 59.733).
With these words, Abu Bakr convinced the early Muslims that Muhammad
had died like all other prophets before him. Had the son of Mary been
alive, Umar could have argued that if the son of Mary could ascend to
heaven and still be alive, why not Muhammad? The fact that Abu Bakr
managed to convinced the other early Muslims indicate that the early
Muslims did believed that Jesus did die.
When the religious authorities came to arrest Jesus, one of his
disciples used a sword and cut off one of the ears of the enemies.
Muslims do not believe that Jesus is the Son of God. Most of the
time, Muslims continually misunderstand the title in a biological
manner which is abhorent to both Muslims and Christians alike. Often
Muslims quote
John 3:16
and say that the Bible talks of God begetting a son. This is not
just a misunderstanding. The Greek word translated "only
begotten" in KJV is monogenes which means one and only,
unique. It is used of Jesus Christ in
John 1:14,18,
John 3:16,18,
Hebrew 11:17 and
1 John 4:9.
The Qur'an gives Jesus titles like "Word from God",
"illustrous in this world and hereafter",
"Messiah"
(Âl 'Imran 3:45),
"sign for all peoples"
(al-Anbiya' 21:91)
Imam Abu Al Su'ud, commenting on the phrase "confirm a word
from Allah," states that John the Baptist was the first to
believe in Jesus and to support His being the Word of God and a
spirit from Him.
Al-Saddi writes that the mother of John inquired of Mary,
Concerning
Âl 'Imran 3:45,
the Muslim scholar, Al Sheikh Muhyi Al Din Al Arabi
writes, "The word is Allah in theophany. . .and is the one
divine person, not any other." He also said that the word is a
divine person (Fusus al Hugm, Part 2, pp. 13).
Compare this with the Bible's statement:
We have also seen that the hadiths say that John the Baptist
worshipped Jesus while in the womb.
Note: Muslims believed that Jesus spoke from the cradle when
people accused his mother of unchastity, yet isn't it odd that
we do not find Jesus condemning the Magis for worshipping him,
if indeed Jesus is human as Muslims believed.
Articles examining the issue of the worship of Jesus:
The Qur'an states that Jesus was able to impart life to the bird
shaped from clay.
Concerning the phrase "I raise the dead," Wahab ibn
Minabbeh relates that while 'Isa was playing with boys, a youth
sprang on one and killed him, then threw him bleeding into the arms
of 'Isa. Onlookers accused 'Isa, then seized him, took him to a
judge, and said, "This boy 'Isa has killed another boy."
The judge questioned him and 'Isa replied, "I do not know the
one who killed him, neither am I one of his friends."
When they wanted to strike 'Isa He said to them, "Bring the
boy to me," and they asked Him, "Why?" He replied,
"I will ask him who killed him." They asked, "How can
he speak to you if he is dead?" Then they took Him to the dead
boy and 'Isa began to pray for him, and Allah restored him to life.
This story is to be traced to the apocryphal
Infancy of Jesus Christ.
Then they were angry with him and said, "If you are
truthful show us a servant who can raise the dead and heal the
blind and the leper and who, creating from clay the form of a
bird, will breathe into it so that it becomes a bird -- isn't He
Allah?" Muhammad said nothing until Gabriel came to him and
said, "O Muhammad! They have blasphemed who said that Allah
is Christ the Son of Mary." Then Muhammad replied, "O
Gabriel! They asked me to tell them to whom 'Isa (Jesus) is
similar," and Gabriel said, "'Isa is just as
Adam."''
Secondly, the context of this verse shows clearly that this verse
has nothing to do with the birth of Jesus. Many Muslims, however,
use this verse to say that the Jesus was created just like Adam.
This is in spite of the fact that Adam was created fully grown,
while Jesus was born the infant of a virgin. Adam was created
without the use of any other human being, whereas Jesus was
borned through a women. There is a difference in the way Adam
and Jesus came into this world.
The title Messiah (al-Masih) in Hebrew means anointed. Al
Jalalan observed, "Illustrious in the world by the ministry of
prophecy and in the hereafter by intercession and position and being
one of those brought near unto Allah."
Al Badawi contended that "According to some, what was
intended here was the high place that Jesus was to have in Paradise.
. . and in the Society of Angels."
Muslims believed that Jesus will come again during the last
days. Some traditions attribute that Jesus will be a just ruler.
Some identify Jesus with the Mahdi, while others that he will
be a follower of Imam Mahdi. see
MAHDI.
In Islam, it is not clear what the status of Jesus is at the
present moment in heaven. It is said that the sign of his coming is
the moon and sun eclipsing in the same month of Ramadan. Ahmadis
believe that it happened to Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian in 1894.
[We certainly need astronomers to confirm this.]
There are some hadiths that say that when Jesus comes back, he will
change some laws.
Rashid Khalifa taught that
an-Nisa' 4:158
taught that Jesus' soul was taken to heaven before the
Crucifixion. Khalifites do not believe that Jesus will come back to
earth during the last days, as is the belief of most Muslims. Using
al-Mu'minun 23:100,
they claimed that the soul taken to heaven cannot return
to earth.
This supposed miracle was not recorded in the Bible. This story
is to be traced to the apocryphal Gospel of Infancy. Al Razi says
that when Zechariah came to Mary during a debate with the Jews
concerning the birth of Jesus, he said to Jesus, "Speak for
yourself if you have been commanded so to do." And 'Isa said,
"I am the Servant of Allah. He has given me wisdom and made me
a prophet."
The Conception of Jesus
``He took hold of her sleeve and breathed into her
side, and it entered her breast and she conceived. Then Mary's
sister, the wife of Zachariah, came to visit with and help her,
and while she was assisting her she knew that Mary was pregnant
and Mary mentioned her state to her.
"That distinction sets Christ apart from other humans and
messengers, because He was born without any human embrace or
relationship."
Death of Jesus
The death of Jesus is another very controversial topic in Islam.
... and there has been no prophet but he has lived half the life of
the prophet preceding him. Jesus the son of Mary lived for one
hundred and twenty five years, and this is the sixty second year of
my life. He (prophet) died half the year after this.
``These verses are intended to be a rebuke to the Jews, and
particularly to Muhammad's contemporaries in Medina for various acts
of unbelief, and they only refer in passing to the story of the
crucifixion. Within this context of an attack on the Jews for their
opposition towards Muhammad as well as for other acts of unbelief,
the reference to the crucifixion does no more than dispute the claim
made by the Jews that they had disposed of the Christian Messiah and
repudiated his claims to be an apostle of God by crucifying him.
mutawaffi-ka used in this Qur'anic verse 'means to receive
something as a whole and hence it could be used to indicate (i) To
recieve an object or amount completely. (ii) To take one's soul at
night during sleep. (iii) To take one's soul finally when a person
has fully received the portion of his life'
[Hasan, S: The Study of Al Quran: Lesson 14]
"In Âl 'Imran 3:55,
the phrase I am gathering thee, and in
al-Ma'idah 5:117,
the phrase "when Thou tookest me" are forms of the same
Arabic word tawaffa.
"I am gathering thee" in Arabic is Inni muta-waf-feeka
which means death. Compare the similarity between what the Qur'an say
was Jesus' words in
Maryam 19:33
with John the Baptist's death in
Maryam 19:15:
"Peace on him the day he was born, and the day he dieth and
the day he shall be raised alive!"
(Sura Maryam 19:15, Pickthall)
Interestingly, no Muslim scholar contends that John the Baptist did
not die, while they contend that Jesus did not die, despite the
almost exact words in the Qur'an.
``It is significant that the early commentators were not agreed
about the interpretation of these verses. It would appear that for
several centuries there was considerable debate among Muslims about
the crucifixion, and that many different answers were given by
orthodox Muslims.''
(Colin Chapman, You Go and Do the Same,
1983, pp. 83)
Narrated Ibn Abbas:
The translator used the phrase, "When You took me up". However, in
the context of that hadith, Muhammad was also refering to his death.
And all Muslims are agreed that Muhammad did die and was not raised
into paradise.
Allah's Apostle delivered a sermon and said, "O people! You will
be gathered before Allah bare-footed, naked and not
circumcised." Then (quoting Quran) he said:--
'The expression mutawaffi-ka used here means, I will
protect thee from being killed by the people and will grant thee full
lease of life ordained for thee, and will cause thee to die a natural
death, not by being killed'
[Zamakhshari, Imam Mahmud ibn 'Umar: Al Kashshaf' an Ghawamid lal
Tanzil]
He also mentions sleep and take as possible meanings.
``The idea of a substitute for Christ is a very crude view of
explaining the Qur'anic text. They had to explain a lot to the
masses. No cultured Muslim believes in this nowadays. The text
is taken to mean that the Jews thought they killed Christ, but
God raised him unto him in a way we can leave unexplained among
the several mysteries which we have taken for granted on faith
alone." (Kamal Husein, City of Wrong, p. 222)
`There early arose in some Christian circles a reluctance to
believe that Jesus, as a divine being and Son of God, could
really die. Ignatius, writing about AD 115, said that some
believed that Jesus 'suffered in semblance'. The apocryphal
Gospel of Peter in the second century said that on the cross
Jesus was silent, since he 'felt no pain', and at the end 'the
Lord cried out, saying, "My power, my power, you have
left." And when he spoke he was taken up...' The apocryphal
Acts of John, about the middle of the second century, said that
Jesus appeared to John in a cave during the crucifixion and
said, 'John, unto the multitudes below in Jerusalem I am being
crucified and pierced with lances and reeds, and gall and
vinegar is given to me to drink. But unto thee I speak.' And
later it said, 'Nothing, therefore of the things which they will
say of me have I suffered... I was pierced, yet I was not
smitten; hanged and I was not hanged; that blood flowed from me,
and it floweth not.'"
(Geoffrey Parrinder, Jesus in the Qur'an, p.109)
Jesus' command over angels
"Put your sword back in its place," Jesus said to him,
"for all who draw the sword will die by the sword. Do you
think I cannot call on my Father, and he will at once put at my
disposal more than twelve legions of angels? But how then would
the Scriptures be fulfilled that say it must happen in this
way?" (Matthew
26:52-54)
Jesus' command over angels indicated that Jesus has authority over
them. If Jesus was a human only, this biblical assertion would be
rather puzzling.
Second Coming of Jesus in Bible, Qur'an and Islamic Tradition
The Qur'an alludes to the second coming of Jesus in only one verse:
az-Zukhruf 43:61, YA:
And (Jesus) shall be a Sign (for the coming of) the Hour (of Judgment):
therefore have no doubt about the (Hour), but follow ye Me:
this is a Straight Way.
i.e. (the second coming of) Jesus will be a sign that the end of the world and
the judgment of God is imminent. However, this verse immediately turns the
attention from Jesus to the obedience to Muhammad. Only later Islamic tradition
makes the return of Jesus a prominent issue. This topic is discussed in detail by
M.N. Anderson in his series Jesus
The Light And The Fragrance Of God.
Son of God
Word of God
"Mary, have you felt my pregnancy?" Mary
answered, "I too am pregnant." John's mother then
replied, "I find that what is in my belly worships what is
in your belly."
How was it that John the Baptist in the womb worshipped
Jesus, if as Muslims argue, was only human?
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word
was with God, and the Word was God. . . . And the Word became
flesh."
(John 1:1,14)
Worship of Jesus
On coming to the house, they [Magis] saw the child [Jesus] with
his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshipped him. Then
they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold
and of incense and of myrrh.
(Matthew 2:11)
Compare with the Bible: "... I am returning to my Father
and your Father, to my God and your God."
(John 20:17f)
Note the phrases "my Father" and "my God" as
opposed to "your Father" and "your God". Jesus
never did once say "our Father" except when showing his
disciples how to pray to God.
A hadith authenticated by both Ibn Hajar Haythami and Ibn Hajar
Asqalani states that on the night of Isra' and Mi'raj, Muhammad was
ordered by Angel Jibril to pray two rak'ats in Bayt Lahm
(Bethlehem), and Jibril asked him: "Do you know where you
prayed? When the Prophet asked him where, he told him: "You
prayed where 'Isa was born."
This verse is actually quite puzzling, for it attributes to the Jews
as saying that Ezra is the son of God.
A hadith concerning how this verse came about is as follows:
Al Qisam, Ibn Jaraij, and A'krama reported, ``We
hear that the Christians of Najran sent a deputation to
Muhammad, among them Al Aquib and As Sayyid, who said, "O
Muhammad, why do you revile our Friend?" He replied,
"Who is your Friend?" They said, "'Isa (Jesus),
Son of Mary. You allege He is a servant," to which Muhammad
replied, "Truly, He is a servant of Allah and His Word,
bestowed on Mary and a Spirit from Him."
This story is interesting in that (i) Muhammad did not know how to
answer the Christians, and (ii) the answer provided by this supposed
Gabriel in this story failed to answer the questions raised by the
Christians either. The Christians of Najran wanted to know if there
was another person who can raise the dead, heal the blind and the
leper, etc. Notice also that according to this story, these
Christians believed in the apocryphal stories concerning Jesus at
his young age, which is conspicuously absent from the Bible.
However, it is never asserted in the Qur'an or the hadiths that Adam
performed the type of miracles as Jesus (in the same quantity and
quality). Thus, this Gabriel's supposed answer raises more
questions.
Compare this with the Bible in
Isaiah 52,
53, and
43.
Compare that with the "revelation" that Muhammad had. A being
claiming to be Gabriel brought these "revelations" to him.
Compare with the above qualities that show that Jesus is definitely
no ordinary human. In fact, in the Qur'an and Islamic literature,
Jesus is described with qualities that place Him in a class on His
own when compared with the other prophets, one that Muhammad cannot
even aspire to.
"[Jesus said:] But you are not to be called
'Rabbi,' for you have only one Master and you are all
brothers."
(Matthew 23:8)
Jesus, however, allowed his disciples and others to address him as
Rabbi (eg:
Matthew 26:25).
Jesus therefore acknowledged implicitly that he is their
Master, different from them since they are just brothers.
Narrated Abu Huraira:
Allah's Apostle said, "By Him in Whose Hands my soul is,
son of Mary (Jesus) will shortly descend amongst you people
(Muslims) as a just ruler and will break the Cross and kill the
pig and abolish the Jizya (a tax taken from the
non-Muslims, who are in the protection, of the Muslim
government). Then there will be abundance of money and no-body
will accept charitable gifts.
(Sahih Bukhari 3.425,
also Muslim, Bab: Bayan Nuzul 'Isa;
Tirmidhi, Abwab-al-Fitan: Bab: Fi Nuzul 'Isa; Musnad Ahmad,
Marwiyat Abu Huraira)
Narrated Abu Huraira:
Allah's Apostle said, "The Hour will not be established
until the son of Mary (i.e. Jesus) descends amongst you as a
just ruler, he will break the cross, kill the pigs, and abolish
the Jizya tax. Money will be in abundance so that nobody
will accept it (as charitable gifts).
(Sahih Bukhari 3.656,
also
Sahih Bukhari 4.657,
and Ibn Majah, Kitab-ul-Fitan
al-Dajjal)
Narrated Abu Huraira:
Allah's Apostle said "How will you be when the son of Mary
(i.e. Jesus) descends amongst you and he will judge people by
the Law of the Quran and not by the law of Gospel
(Fateh-ul Bari page 304 and 305 Vol 7)
(Sahih Bukhari 4.658)
Abu Huraira reports that the Apostle of Allah observed:
"What will you be like when the son of Mary shall descend
among ye and a person among ye will discharge the office of Imam
(leader in Prayers)."
(Sahih Bukhari, Kitab Ahadith
Anbiya, Nuzul Isa; Muslim, Nuzul Isa; Musnad Ahmad, Marwiyat Abu
Huraira)
Khalifites do not believe that Jesus will come back again. They
reasoned that since no prophets is supposed to come after Muhammad
(al-Ahzab 33:40)
and that Jesus is a prophet, therefore Jesus will not
come back after Muhammad. Other Muslims believe that when Jesus comes
again, he will not be in a prophetic role, but is simply a follower.
Also, some argue that Muhammad is the seal of the prophets, not the
last prophet.
Narrated Abu Huraira:
Allah's Apostle said, "By Him in Whose Hands my soul is, son of
Mary (Jesus) will shortly descend amongst you people (Muslims)
as a just ruler and will break the Cross and kill the pig and
abolish the Jizya (a tax taken from the non-Muslims, who are in
the protection, of the Muslim government). Then there will be
abundance of money and no-body will accept charitable gifts.
Sahih Bukhari 3.435.
The following accounts we found in the book of Joseph the
high-priest, called by some Caiaphas: He relates, that Jesus
spake even when he was in the cradle, and said to his mother:
Mary, I am Jesus the Son of God, that word which thou didst
bring forth according to the declaration of the angel Gabriel to
thee, and my father hath sent me for the salvation of the world.
(from the 5th cenutry compilation of The first Gospel of
Infancy of Jesus Christ
Âl 'Imran 3:1-3,
or Injil Al-Tufuliyyah, also quoted by Tisdall, p.
169-170)
In the Bible, we read:
"[Jesus said:] Nor are you to be called 'teacher,' for you
have one Teacher, the Christ."
(Matthew 23:10).
Jesus, however, used the title of "Teacher" for himself:
"He replied, 'Go into the city to a certain man and tell him, `The
Teacher says: My appointed time is near. I am going to
celebrate the Passover with my disciples at your house.`'"
(Matthew 26:18).
thus, claiming that He is also the Christ or Messiah.