I CHALLENGED 2 Billion Muslims On THESE Topics...Then THIS Happened (LIVE DEBATES)
Dec 3, 2025 • 30 references
Debate titles
Jesus' Divinity and Sonship13 • 43%
Muhammad in the Bible3 • 10%
Gospel Reliability2 • 7%
wisdom / correction2 • 7%
Hell and judgment1 • 3%
Islamic Theology1 • 3%
Jesus and Mosaic Law1 • 3%
salvation and revelation1 • 3%
Topics
Jesus' Divinity and Sonship13 • 43%
Muhammad in the Bible3 • 10%
Gospel Reliability2 • 7%
wisdom / correction2 • 7%
Hell and judgment1 • 3%
Islamic Theology1 • 3%
Jesus and Mosaic Law1 • 3%
salvation and revelation1 • 3%
Top 3 references
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Debate Summary
Overview
The references center on a live debate-oriented discussion in which Bible passages are most often used to argue for Jesus' divinity, unique sonship, salvation through the Son, continuity between the New Testament and earlier revelation, and related issues such as law, free will, and exhortation, while Quran passages, one hadith, and a church-history citation are brought in for comparison or challenge on topics including scripture reliability, the status of Jesus, hell, and claims about Muhammad in prior scripture.
Main themes
- Jesus' divinity and sonship
- Biblical canon, textual authority, and continuity with earlier revelation
- Islamic theology, Quranic interpretation, and Muslim-Christian debate points
- Salvation, judgment, and hell
- Practical exhortation, wisdom, and Christian commitment
- Law, prayer, free will, and moral accountability
Source types used
- bible: Most references are from biblical books and are used across themes such as Jesus' identity, salvation, revelation, law, prayer, and accountability.
- quran: Several references come from the Quran and are discussed in relation to Jesus, scripture corruption, judgment, and appeals to earlier revelation.
- hadith: One reference comes from Sahih Muslim and is used in a discussion of substitution and moral critique.
Notable patterns
- Biblical passages dominate the references and are frequently used to argue that Jesus shares divine identity, titles, authority, and sonship.
- Several Quran passages are discussed in relation to prior scripture, corruption claims, the identity of Jesus, judgment, and arguments about Muhammad in earlier texts.
- One hadith reference is used in a moral and theological comparison concerning substitution and judgment.
- A church-history reference from Eusebius is invoked by both a caller and the host in opposite ways during a discussion about early Christian views of Christ's divinity.
- Some references involve correction or clarification of citations, including spoken mistakes such as 'James 15' for James 1:5 and 'Hebrews 15' for Hebrews 1:5.
- A few references come from audience interaction such as a viewer correction and superchat submissions, alongside live caller exchanges.