Those who follow the Apostle, the
unlettered Prophet, Whom they find mentioned
in their own Scriptures, in the Torah
and the Gospel... (Holy Qu'ran:
VII - 157; Translation: Yusif Ali)
BIBLE PROPHECIES
ABOUT THE ADVENT OF MUHAMMAD
Abraham is widely regarded as the Patriarch
of monotheism and the common father of the
Jews, Christians and Muslims. Through His
second son, Isaac, came all Israelite prophets
including such towering figures as Jacob,
Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon and Jesus.
May peace and blessings be upon them all.
The advent of these great prophets was in
partial fulfillment of God's promises to
bless the nations of earth through the descendents
of Abraham (Genesis12:2-3). Such fulfillment
is wholeheartedly accepted by Muslims whose
faith considers the belief in and respect
of all prophets an article of faith.
BLESSINGS OF ISHMAEL
AND ISAAC
Was the first born son of Abraham (Ishmael)
and his descendants included in God's covenant
and promise? A few verses from the Bible
may help shed some light on this question;
Genesis 12:2-3 speaks of God's promise
to Abraham and his descendants before any
child was born to him.
Genesis 17:4 reiterates God's promise after
the birth of Ishmael and before the birth
of Isaac.
In Genesis, ch. 21. Isaac is specifically
blessed but Ishmael was also specifically
blessed and promised by God to become "a
great nation" especially in Genesis
21:13, 18.
According to Deuteronomy 21:15-17 the traditional
rights and privileges of the first born
son are not to be affected by the social
status of his mother (being a "free"
woman such as Sarah, Isaac's mother, or
a "Bondwoman" such as Hagar, Ishmael's
mother). This is only consistent with the
moral and humanitarian principles of all
revealed faiths.
The full legitimacy of Ishmael as Abraham's
son and "seed" and the full legitimacy
of his mother, Hagar, as Abraham's wife
are clearly stated in Genesis 21:13 and
16:3. After Jesus, the last Israelite messenger
and prophet, it was time that God's promise
to bless Ishmael and his descendants be
fulfilled. Less than 600years after Jesus,
came the last messenger of God, Muhammad,
from the progeny of Abraham through Ishmael.
God's blessing of both of the main branches
of Abraham's family tree was now fullfilled.
But are there additional corroborating evidence
that the Bible did in fact foretell the
advent of prophet Muhammad?
MUHAMMAD: The
Prophet Like Unto Moses
Long time after Abraham, God's promise
to send the long-awaited Messenger was repeated
this time in Moses' words.
In Deuteronomy 18:18, Moses spoke of the
prophet to be sent by God who is:
From among the Israelite's "brethren",
a reference to their Ishmaelite cousins
as Ishmael was the other son of Abraham
who was explicitly promised to become a
"great nation".
A prophet like unto Moses. There were hardly
any two prophets ,who were so much alike
as Moses and Muhammad. Both were given comprehensive
law code of life, both encountered their
enemies and were victors in miraculous ways,
both were accepted as prophets/statesmen
and both migrated following conspiracies
to assassinate them. Analogies between Moses
and Jesus overlooks not only the above similarities
but other crucial ones as well (e.g. the
natural birth, family life and death of
Moses and Muhammad but not of Jesus, who
was regarded by His followers as the Son
of God and not exclusively a messenger of
God, as Moses and Muhammad were and as Muslim
belief Jesus was).
THE AWAITED PROPHET
WAS TO COME FROM ARABIA
Deuteronomy 33:1-2 combines references
to Moses, Jesus and Muhammad. It speaks
of God (i.e. God's revelation) coming from
Sinai, rising from Seir (probably the village
of Sa'ir near Jerusalem) and shining forth
from Paran. According to Genesis 21:21,
the wilderness of Paran was the place where
Ishmael settled (i.e. Arabia, specifically
Mecca).
Indeed the King James version of the Bible
mentions the pilgrims passing through the
valley of Ba'ca (another name of Mecca)
in Psalms 84:4-6.
Isaiah 42:1-13 speaks of the beloved of
God. His elect and messenger who will bring
down a law to be awaited in the isles and
who "shall not fail nor be discouraged
till he have set judgement on earth."
Verse 11, connects that awaited one with
the descendants of Ke'dar. Who is Ke'dar?
According to Genesis 25:13, Ke'dar was the
second son of Ishmael, the ancestor of prophet
Muhammad.
MUHAMMAD'S MIGRATION
FROM MECCA TO MEDINA: PROPHECIED IN THE
BIBLE?
Habakkuk 3:3 speaks of God (God's help)
coming from Te'man (an Oasis North of Medina
according to J. Hasting's Dictionary of
the Bible), and the holy one (coming) from
Paran. That holy one who under persecution
migrated from Paran (Mecca) to be received
enthusiastically in Medina was none but
prophet Muhammad.
Indeed the incident of the migration of
the prophet and his persecuted followers
is vividly described in Isaiah 21:13-17.
That section foretold as well about the
battle of Badr in which the few ill-armed
faithful miraculously defeated the "mighty"
men of Ke'dar, who sought to destroy Islam
and intimidate their own folks who turned
-to Islam.
THE QUR'AN (KORAN)
FORETOLD IN THE BIBLE?
For twenty-three years, God's words (the
Qur'an) were truely put into Muhammad's
mouth. He was not the "author"
of the Qur'an. The Qur'an was dictated to
him by Angel Gabriel who asked Muhammad
to simply repeat the words of the Qur'an
as he heard them. These words were then
committed to memory and to writing by those
who hear them during Muhammad's life time
and under his supervision.
Was it a coincidence that the prophet "like
unto Moses" from the "brethren"
of the Israelites (i.e. from the lshmaelites)
was also described as one in whose mouth
God will put his words and that he will
speak in the name of God, (Deuteronomy 18:18-20).
Was it also a coincidence the "Paraclete"
that Jesus foretold to come after Him was
described as one who "shall not speak
of himself, but whatsoever he shall hear,
that shall he speak (John 16:13)
Was it another coincidence that Isaiah
ties between the messenger connected with
Ke'dar and a new song (a scripture in a
new language) to be sang unto the Lord (Isaiah
42:10-11). More explicitly, prophesies Isaiah
"For with stammering lips, and another
tongue, will he speak to this people"
(Isaiah 28:11). This latter verse correctly
describes the "stammering lips"
of Prophet Muhammad reflecting the state
of tension and concentration he went through
at the time of revelation. Another related
point is that the Qur'an was revealed in
piece-meals over a span of twenty three
years. It is interesting to compare this
with Isaiah 28:10 whichspeaks of the same
thing.
THAT PROPHET-
PARACLETE- MUHAMMAD
Up to the time of Jesus (peace be upon
him), the Israelites were still awaiting
for that prophet like unto Moses prophecied
in Deuteronomy 18:18. When John the Baptist
came, they asked him if he was Christ and
he said "no". They asked him if
he was Elias and he said "no".
Then, in apparent reference to Deuteronomy
18:18, they asked him "Art thou that
Prophet" and he answered, "no".
(John 1: 1 9-2 1).
In the Gospel according to John (Chapters
14, 15, 16) Jesus spoke of the "Paraclete"
or comforter who will come after him, who
will be sent by Father as another Paraclete,
who will teach new things which the contemporaries
of Jesus could not bear. While the Paraclete
is described as the spirit of truth, (whose
meaning resemble Muhammad's famous title
Al-Amin, the trustworthy), he is identified
in one verse as the Holy Ghost (John 14:26).
Such a designation is however inconsistent
with the profile of that Paraclete. In the
words of the Dictionary of the Bible, (Ed.
J. Mackenzie) "These items, it must
be admitted do not give an entirely coherent
picture."
Indeed history tells us that many early
Christians understood the Paraclete to be
a man and not a spirit. This might explain
the followings who responded to some who
claimed, without meeting the criteria stipulated
by Jesus, to be the awaited "Paraciete".
It was Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon
him) who was the Paraclete, Comforter, helper,
admonisher sent by God after Jesus. He testified
of Jesus, taught new things which could
not be borne at Jesus' time, he spoke what
he heard (revelation), he dwells with the
believers (through his well-preserved teachings).
Such teachings will remain forever because
he was the last messenger of God, the only
Universal Messenger to unite the whole of
humanity under God and on the path of PRESERVED
truth. He told of many things to come which
"came to pass" in the minutest
detail meeting, the criterion given by Moses
to distinguish between the true prophet
and the false prophets (Deuteronomy 18:22).
He did reprove the world of sin, of righteousness
and of judgment (John 16:8-11)
WAS THE SHIFT
OF RELIGIOUS LEADERSHIP PROPHESIED?
Following the rejection of the last Israelite
prophet, Jesus, it was about time that God's
promise to make Ishmael a great nation be
fulfilled (Genesis 21:13, 18)
In Matthew 21:19-21, Jesus spoke of the
fruitless fig tree (A Biblical symbol of
prophetic heritage) to be cleared after
being given a last chance of three years
(the duration of Jesus' ministry) to give
fruit. In a later verse in the same chapter,
Jesus said: "Therefore, say I unto
you, The Kingdom of God shall be taken away
from you, and given to a nation bringing
forth the fruit thereof" (Matthew 21:43).
That nation of Ishmael's descendants (the
rejected stone in Matthew 21:42) which was
victorious against all super-powers of its
time as prophesied by Jesus: "And whosoever
shall fall on this stone shall be broken,
but on whomsoever it shall fall, it will
grind him to powder" (Matthew 21:44).
OUT OF CONTEXT
COINCIDENCE?
Is it possible that the numerous prophecies
cited here are all individually and combined
out of context misinterpretations? Is the
opposite true, that such infrequently studied
verses fit together consistently and clearly
point to the advent of the man who changed
the course of human history, Prophet Muhammad
(peace be upon him). Is it reasonable to
conclude that all these prophecies, appearing
in different books of the Bible and spoken
by various prophets at different times were
all coincidence? If this is so here is another
strange "coincidence"!
One of the signs of the prophet to come
from Paran (Mecca) is that he will come
with "ten thousands of saints"
(Deuteronomy 33:2 KJV). That was the number
of faithful who accompanied Prophet Muhammad
to Paran (Mecca) in his victorious, bloodless
return to his birthplace to destroy the
remaining symbols of idolatry in the Ka'bah.
Says God as quoted by Moses:
And it shall come to pass, that
whosoever will not hearken unto my words
which he shall speak in my name, I will
require it of him. (Deuteronomy 18:19)
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