A Christian attempts to discredit the Quran and lies about the Prophet, so Ali Dawah crushes him, and the magic turns against the magician, who stammers!
Summary
Highlights
The Christian speaker questions why Jesus said he needed to depart so that the Holy Spirit could be sent if the Holy Spirit was already with him, referencing Jesus' statements about doing the Father's will and the Father in Him doing the work. He explains that Jesus went to send the Holy Spirit upon 'all mankind' as prophesied, comparing this to the Holy Spirit being with Jesus from the beginning (Genesis 1).
The debate shifts to whether Prophet Muhammad glorified Jesus. The speaker argues that Muhammad did not glorify Jesus because he did not agree with Jesus' prophecies about his death and resurrection, thus implying Muhammad called Jesus a liar. He emphasizes that a Muslim cannot be a Muslim if they deny Jesus, but highlights their disagreement on the crucifixion.
The Christian speaker shares a personal testimony about how Jesus transformed his life from violence and drug addiction. He preaches that salvation is not earned through works but is a gift through Jesus' sacrifice, urging listeners to accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, stating that 'every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord' upon his return.
The conversation moves to the topic of scriptural contradictions. Ali Dawah claims that the Quran has no contradictions. The Christian speaker challenges this, citing Sura 87:6 where Allah promises Muhammad that he 'shall not forget' revelations, and Sura 2:106 where Allah 'causes Muhammad to forget' revelations, presenting this as a contradiction. He argues that a God who causes his prophet to forget his own words is not a 'level-headed God'.
Ali Dawah defends the Quran, explaining that Sura 87:7 clarifies that Allah wills what he allows to be forgotten, and Sura 2:106 refers to abrogation, where Allah replaces forgotten verses with better or similar ones. He clarifies that this does not imply Muhammad forgot due to his own fault, but rather by divine will. The Christian speaker remains unconvinced, asserting that Allah causing Muhammad to forget verses still represents a contradiction and an unreasonable divine act. The debate ends with the Christian speaker's strong assertion that Ali Dawah's arguments are weak.