Cited as the contrasting annunciation passage where a single spirit appears, as part of a dispute over whether differing details imply contradiction.
Quoted to argue that one Quran passage has multiple angels announcing Jesus' birth, setting up a comparison with another passage for an alleged internal tension.
Added as another crucifixion saying in order to argue that the Gospel narratives preserve inconsistent final statements from Jesus.
Paired with Matthew's crucifixion saying to support the claim that the Gospel passion narratives report different words from Jesus.
Quoted as one of the crucifixion sayings to argue that the Gospel accounts differ in detail and therefore conflict.
Quoted to argue that the Gospel is a preached message already present in Jesus' ministry, countering attempts to reduce Injil to an unknown lost book.