Cited to argue that even the children of pagans are with Abraham in heaven, as a counterexample against the claim that Islam sends all non-Muslim children to hell.
Debating an Entire Panel Of Muslims!
Unmapped reference
Sahih al-Bukhari 7047 - 00:07:08
- 1UnmappedHadithReferenceHell and judgment
Unmapped reference
Quran 18:74 - 00:14:50
- 1UnmappedQuranReferenceIslamic Theology
Cited in the debate over the boy killed by al-Khidr; critics used the verse to argue an innocent boy was killed, while defenders appealed to the broader story to say al-Khidr ac...
Unmapped reference
Luke 18:15-17 - 00:27:36
- 1UnmappedBibleReferenceHell and judgment
Cited to argue over Jesus' teaching about children and the kingdom of God: one side tried to use it against unbaptized children, while the other read the whole passage to argue ...
Unmapped reference
Tafsir Ibn Kathir on Quran 18:74 - 00:40:53
- 1UnmappedTafsirReferenceIslamic Theology
Cited to reinforce the claim that the boy in the al-Khidr story had done nothing wrong yet; the tafsir was used to say he was a young, innocent boy when killed.
Unmapped reference
Sahih Muslim 2662c - 00:47:21
- 1UnmappedHadithReferenceHell and judgment
Cited as a hadith where Muhammad says that an apparently innocent child may have been created for hell, to support the claim that in Islam some children may go to hell.
Unmapped reference
John 14:1-2 - 01:29:41
- 1UnmappedBibleReferenceEncouragement / patience
Cited to comfort and encourage trust in Jesus, especially with the promise of the Father's house and a prepared place for believers.
Unmapped reference
Matthew 5:10-12 - 01:32:35
- 1UnmappedBibleReferenceEncouragement / patience
Cited pastorally to encourage someone expecting backlash for following Christ, by framing persecution for righteousness as blessed and rewarded by God.
- John 14:1-211 citation
- Luke 18:15-1711 citation
- Matthew 5:10-1211 citation
- Quran 18:7411 citation
- Sahih al-Bukhari 704711 citation