If you have been on this site for a while, you know who Osama Abdallah is. Feel free to enter his name in the search bar at the top of this site to see some of his work.
Recently, Osama has bombarded David's and my email accounts. His latest craze? The Bible itself denies Jesus' crucifixion! He has uploaded a rather extensive article to his website defending his views (NOTE: I would link to it, but it's been strongly opined that the site has a virus on it. For the protection of this site's readers, I will not link to Osama's site).
One of Osama's last words to David and me in his email (emphasis his):
To say the least: Islam's position about Christ never got crucified remains strongly supported even in your Scriptures, or the Bible.
This brings us to a crucial difference in the average approach Muslim apologists take in exegesis versus Christian apologists. Traditionally, when a Muslim apologist wishes to make a point, he will extract references that support his view, ignore or explain away references that do not, and provide his view as the only logical view.
Take Osama for example. He has said the Bible supports Islam in saying that Jesus was not crucified. He quotes Psalm 91 where it says: "Surely he will save you... no harm will befall you... They will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone... says the Lord 'I will rescue him; I will protect him... I will deliver him and honor him.'" Thus, Osama makes his case that the Bible defends Islam.
And his case would be pretty solid, if the Bible were just the verses he quoted. However, there's more to the Bible than Osama's whims. In the Bible, Jesus says:
- "that he must be killed and on the third day raised to life" (Mt 16:21)
- that the chief priests and teachers of the law "will condemn him to death and will turn him over... to be crucified." (Mt 20:18-19)
- that the Gentiles will "mock him, insult him, spit on him, flog him and kill him. On the third day he will rise again." (Lk 18:33)
But really, if there were ever any question of what happened to Jesus on the cross, the guards should have put the question to rest because "when they came to Jesus, they found that he was already dead" (Jn 19:33).
The Christian, on the other hand, takes all the scriptures and provides the view that is the best fit. Then he bases his theology on all his conclusions. For example, the Christian acknowledges the verses Osama has offered. He then prioritizes the verses according to ambiguity. It is incontrovertible that the Gospels teach Jesus' crucifixion and death. The verses quoted by Osama, then, must be accounted for by some other means than Osama's suggestion. This is easily achieved by attributing those verses to the everlasting protection and safety Jesus has in his resurrection. Through Jesus' resurrection, the Father "delivered him, protected him, and honored him." That is the ultimate rescue and protection. Thus, by interpreting all the evidence together, the Christian apologist arrives at an honest, fair conclusion.
So Osama, the Muslim apologist, pretends that the Bible says Jesus did not die on the cross, whereas the Christian apologist lets the Bible speak for itself.
In sum. Here is comparison of a Christian apologist's approach vs. a Muslim apologist's:
Christian:
1 - Read the text
2 - Draw the best conclusion based primarily off of unambiguous scripture
Muslim:
1 - Determine what you'd like the text to say
2 - Find verses that support your view, even if they are ambiguous
3 - Make your conclusion as if those were the only relevant verses
4 - If need be, deny the legitimacy of all verses that contradict your point of view, especially the clear ones.
Readers, please feel free to post in the comments some prime examples of this Muslim methodology that you may have seen. If we get a good list, it will make for an impressive display when speaking about and presenting Muslim apologetics to the uninitiated.