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Islam Is Unreliable! | LIVE DEBATES

Apr 14, 202525 references

Debate Summary

Overview

The references center on comparative Christian-Muslim debate topics, with biblical texts used to argue that Jesus fulfills prophecy and is divine, Qur'anic texts used to dispute whether earlier Jewish and Christian scriptures were confirmed or corrupted and to discuss preservation and theology, hadith used as supporting material in doctrinal disputes, and several passages raised in connection with end-times interpretation and contested Islamic legal issues involving divorce, captives, and child marriage.

Main themes

  • Whether Jesus fulfills messianic prophecy and is presented as divine or the Son of God
  • Whether the Qur'an confirms, preserves, or critiques earlier Jewish and Christian scripture
  • How Islamic theology is interpreted through Qur'anic verses and hadith
  • Eschatology, especially rapture and end-times sequencing
  • Islamic legal and ethical debates involving marriage, divorce, sexual relations, and child marriage

Source types used

  • bible: Used for claims about messianic prophecy, Jesus' divinity and sonship, eschatology, and polemical application against Islam.
  • quran: Used for debates about confirmation or corruption of earlier scripture, preservation, theology, and legal rulings on marriage, divorce, and captives.
  • hadith: Used as supplementary Islamic-source evidence in arguments about divine appearance and whether Islamic tradition supports corruption claims.

Notable patterns

  • Qur'anic passages are repeatedly cited in debates over whether prior scriptures were available, confirmed, or corrupted.
  • Biblical passages are used both constructively to support Christian claims about Jesus and defensively in response to objections about his divinity.
  • Hadith references appear as supplementary evidence in disputes about divine manifestation and the status of earlier revelation.
  • Several later references focus on Islamic law, especially verses connected to divorce rules, captive women, and prepubescent marriage.
  • Some references are introduced through superchats, especially in the eschatology discussion and certain critiques of Islamic theology.