Cited from a Christian perspective to argue that the Quran places Jesus with Allah, in contrast to Muhammad being portrayed as condemned for shirk.
Christ's humanity and sinlessness
Claims
1
Moves
3
Evidence instances
6
Move edges
0
Claim
Jesus is presented as exalted and sinless, and therefore as the one to trust rather than Muhammad.
The Christian closing contrasts Muhammad’s alleged sin with Jesus’ sinlessness and exaltation, calling Muslims to trust Jesus.
Moves
The Christian side contrasts Muhammad’s alleged condemnation with the Quranic statement that Jesus was raised to Allah.
- 1ChristianQuranStatementCross Reference
The Christian side again contrasts Muhammad’s alleged condemnation with Jesus being raised to Allah in the Quran.
- 2ChristianQuranSummaryCross Reference
Cited from a Christian perspective to argue that the Quran presents Jesus as exalted to Allah, contrasting Jesus’ status with the claim that Muhammad is condemned.
The Christian side closes by citing biblical texts on Jesus’ sinlessness, righteousness, and sonship as grounds for trusting him instead of Muhammad.
- 3ChristianBibleStatementPrimary Evidence
Cited to support the Christian appeal that Jesus was without sin and should be trusted instead of Muhammad for righteousness and salvation.
- 4ChristianBibleStatementPrimary Evidence
Cited to support the Christian appeal that Jesus was sinless, took sin on behalf of others, and is the only source of righteousness and salvation rather than Muhammad.
- 5ChristianBibleStatementSupporting Evidence
Cited to support the Christian appeal that Jesus is sinless, able to sympathize with human weakness, and the only source of righteousness in contrast to Muhammad and Islam.
- 6ChristianBibleStatementSupporting Evidence
Cited from a Christian perspective to call Muslims to trust in Jesus as the holy Son of God, emphasizing his sinlessness and unique ability to make believers righteous.
- No move edges yet. 3 moves in this claim have no saved in-topic edge relationships.
Jan 8, 2025 - 3 moves - 6 references