Islam & Christianity
A respectful, logical exploration for Christians who want to understand what Islam claims — and why.
Is Christianity the complete truth?
The Bible you hold today was compiled by councils centuries after Jesus. Scholars document thousands of manuscript variants. The doctrine of the Trinity — God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — appears nowhere explicitly in the original text; the word "Trinity" is not in the Bible. Jesus himself prayed to God, called God greater than him (John 14:28), and said "I can do nothing on my own" (John 5:30). These are the words of a prophet, not God incarnate.
Islam does not reject Jesus — it honors him as one of the mightiest prophets of God. Islam's claim is that Jesus's original message of pure monotheism was altered after him, and that the Quran restores it.
God sends prophets — and the line didn't end with Jesus
Jesus himself foretold a coming after him: "I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate to help you and be with you forever" (John 14:16). The Greek word "Paraclete" — interpreted by Muslims as a reference to Muhammad (ﷺ) — was to come and "guide you into all the truth" (John 16:13).
The pattern of prophethood is consistent throughout scripture: God sends a messenger, people deviate, God sends another. Muhammad (ﷺ) came not to contradict Jesus, but to confirm and complete what all the prophets brought.
Islam is the truth — here is the evidence
The Quran was revealed to an unlettered man in 7th-century Arabia and has remained textually unchanged for 1,400 years — the only religious scripture with this claim verified by manuscript evidence. It contains precise descriptions of embryological development, the water cycle, and the expansion of the universe — knowledge unavailable in the 7th century.
Islam's monotheism is logically airtight: one God, uncreated, without form or partner, who sent prophets to every nation, and whose final message is the Quran — preserved, clear, and open to all.