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The Mystery of the Messiah: The Messiahship of Jesus in the Qur'an, New Testament, Old Testament, and Other Sources ebook

by Louay Fatoohi


The Qur'an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has The Messiah is the central figure of the largest religion in the world, as Christianity was formed around Jesus' messiahship.

The Qur'an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has The Messiah is the central figure of the largest religion in the world, as Christianity was formed around Jesus' messiahship. Judaism also gives the Messiah a special and high position, although it denies that Jesus was the Messiah, so the Jews continue to wait for the coming of their Messiah. The Qur'an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has fundamental differences with the Christian representation of the Messiah

All New testament writers recognise Jesus as the Christ but in the New Testament the concept of the Messiah  . The Qur’an does not support this concept of returning Messiah. The Qur’an messiah fulfilled his mission on earth

All New testament writers recognise Jesus as the Christ but in the New Testament the concept of the Messiah reflect the substantially bigger role as opposed to the Hebrew Bible. However Fatoohi explains Jesus of the Gospels was not properly anointed according to jewish tradition so that Jewish authorities and most jews did not recognise his messiahship. The Qur’an messiah fulfilled his mission on earth. Although there are a number of hadiths attributed to Prophet Muhammad that seems to confirm Jesus second coming, it must have been influenced by Christian understanding.

The New Testament frequently cites Jewish scripture to support the claim of the Early Christians that Jesus was the promised Jewish Messiah, but only a handful of these citations are actual predictions in their original contexts. The majority of these quotations and references are taken from the Book of Isaiah, but they range over the entire corpus of Jewish writings

All New testament writers recognise Jesus as the Christ but in the New Testament the concept of "the Messiah"reflect the substantially bigger role as opposed to. .Fatoohi dedicated a chapter discussing Al-Masih in the Qur'an.

All New testament writers recognise Jesus as the Christ but in the New Testament the concept of "the Messiah"reflect the substantially bigger role as opposed to the Hebrew Bible. The same chapter Fatoohi highlight that the term "Christ"makes most of its appearance in Paul's letters. Paul incorrectly use the term "Christ" as a proper name not title  .

Download The Mystery of the Messiah: The Messiahship of Jesus in the Qur'an, New Testament,.

Books by Louay Fatoohi The Mystery Of The Historical Jesus. The Qur’an and Other Scriptures. The Messiah’s Entry into Jerusalem. Al-Masih in the Qur’an. 14. The Divine Son of God That Jesus Never Was. The Mystery Of The Historical Jesus. The Mystery Of The Historical Jesus: The Messiah in the Qur’an, the Bible, and Historical Sources. A new pioneering and comprehensive study of the story of Jesus: Jesus in the Qur’an, Christian writings, and historical sources. Contextual Displacement as a Form of Scriptural Textual Manipulation.

The Mystery of the Historical Jesus : The Messiah in the Qur'an, the Bible, and Historical Sources (Louay Fatoohi) - ISBN: 9789675062124 Author: Louay Fatoohi Publisher: The Other Press, Islamic Book Trust (2009) Pages: 802 Binding: Paperback Description from the publisher: Jesus remains one of the most studied characters in history.

The Qur'an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has fundamental . It examines the portrayal of the Messiah in the Old Testament and other Jewish writings, the New Testament, and the Qur'an.

The Qur'an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has fundamental differences with the Christian representation of the Messiah. Islam has even more differences with the Jewish concept of the Messiah. This book compares the concept of "Messiah" in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It develops a complete picture of how this concept appeared, what it originally represented, and how it was changed over time by different believers.

For each one, we included a verse showing its fulfillment in the New Testament. It's our hope that your faith is strengthened as you peruse these prophecies about Jesus. Prophecies of Jesus's birth

For each one, we included a verse showing its fulfillment in the New Testament. Prophecies of Jesus's birth. Not only was Christ's miraculous birth prophetically revealed, but God planned his lineage from the very beginning. Here are eight prophecies predicting elements of Jesus’ birth and childhood. 1. The nations will be blessed through Abraham's lineage

The Qur’an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it. Messiahship in Judaism. Historical Messiahs in the Old Testament. Future Saviors in the Old Testament.

The Qur’an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has fundamental differences with the Christian representation of the Messiah. It examines the portrayal of the Messiah in the Old Testament and other Jewish writings, the New Testament, and the Qur’an. The Future Saviors Become One Eschatological Messiah.

The Messiah is the central figure of the largest religion in the world, as Christianity was formed around Jesus' messiahship. Judaism also gives the Messiah a special and high position, although it denies that Jesus was the Messiah, so the Jews continue to wait for the coming of their Messiah. The Qur'an confirms the Christian belief that Jesus was the Messiah, but it has fundamental differences with the Christian representation of the Messiah. Islam has even more differences with the Jewish concept of the Messiah. This book compares the concept of "Messiah" in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. It examines the portrayal of the Messiah in the Old Testament and other Jewish writings, the New Testament, and the Qur'an. It develops a complete picture of how this concept appeared, what it originally represented, and how it was changed over time by different believers. The study shows why and how the Messiah was developed in Judaism into a military king whose main role is to re-establish Israel and restore its glory. It also explains how Christianity turned this victorious Jewish warrior into a suffering spiritual king. The author's ultimate goal is to show that the Qur'anic Messiah is the historical one. Neither a victorious royal with a political agenda nor a defeated spiritual teacher who ended up on the cross, the Messiah was a prophet sent by God. This new critical reading of the history of the "Messiah" challenges deep-rooted prejudices and misunderstandings about this concept. This focused and detailed study is for anyone interested in the concept of "Messiah." Both the general reader and the expert would benefit from the wealth of information in this thought-provoking book.
Kazigrel
To my knowledge there is no academic studies of what the messiahship of Jesus means in the Qur'an in comparison with the messiahship in Judaism and Christianity. This book: The Mystery of the Messiah: The Messiahship of Jesus in the Qur'an, New Testament, Old Testament, and Other Sources, by Louay Fatoohi (Luna Plena Publishing, 2009 ), is the only one of its kind.

I consider Dr. Louay Fatoohi a unique muslim scholar of comparative religion. He came from Arab Christian background and has been passionate in studying the Qur'an, Islam and comparative religion since his youth . He is one of a few muslim author I know who is equally conversant with scholarly works on religion on both Christian and Islamic tradition, modern and classical as well as other historical sources, or on combinations of these writings.

This book, I must say, is concise yet dense with information with meticulous crafted analysis on why and how the Messiah was developed in Judaism and Christianity. Fatoohi seeks to show that the Qur'anic Messiah is actually the historical one. Fatoohi drew upon his extensive study on the historical Jesus as he went through the concept of the "Messiah" in the Qur'an, the Bible (canonical and non canonical sources) and Dead Sea Scrolls and scholars from this field.

In one chapter Fatoohi examines the concept of "Messiah" in the Hebrew Bible and other Jewish sources, including the Dead Sea Scrolls,. He make a very important observation that this title "Messiah" in the Hebrew Bible is applied only to historical never prophetic / future saviour figures, only later Jewish theology and literature started to invent this title as prophetic King, the salvational eschatological Messiah serving to free an oppressed jews abandoned by God. Fatoohi also explains different messiahs in other Jewish writings, the most prominent is the one described as the "son of David" the Royal military saviour and other is the priestly Messiah of Aaronic decendant, albeit the jews were not unanimous in their depiction of the awaited Messiah.

In another chapter Fatoohi go through the concept of the term Messiah in the greek New Testament, Christos (''''''') from which "Christ" is derived. All New testament writers recognise Jesus as the Christ but in the New Testament the concept of "the Messiah"reflect the substantially bigger role as opposed to the Hebrew Bible. However Fatoohi explains Jesus of the Gospels was not properly anointed according to jewish tradition so that Jewish authorities and most jews did not recognise his messiahship. The same chapter Fatoohi highlight that the term "Christ"makes most of its appearance in Paul's letters. Paul incorrectly use the term "Christ" as a proper name not title. This show his flawed understanding of what the term mean. Paul's Christ is a spiritual figure who came to redeem people, by being crucified and raised from the dead. This version of Christ, Fatoohi argues, blur the historical Jesus because it is lack of Jesus historical details. Over centuries, most christians took Paul version of historical Jesus and focus only on the alleged crucifixion and the resurrection of him.

Fatoohi dedicated a chapter discussing Al-Masih in the Qur'an. Essentially Fatoohi shows that the title is never presented as the reason for a special prophethood that make Jesus one of the most favoured prophets (yes , Jesus is one of those prophets) however Qur'an 3:45 give indication that the Messiah was a concept that God had previously revealed: a prophecy, although this prophecy is not specifically cited anywhere in the Qur'an as mentioning it centuries after it was fulfilled would not serve any purpose. Also Fatoohi explains that the use of definite article Al Masih does not necessarily mean that the Qur'an implies that there was only one Messiah although Jesus was the one special Messiah.

The rest of the chapters Fatoohi discuss the different identities and attribute that the Gospel writers presented the Christ and examine each one of them from the Qur'an perspective, here are some salient points from this book, which I find it interesting:

King of the Jews — in addition to anointed priests and prophets , the awaited Messiah is seen by the Jews as King, however the general context in NT, Fatoohi argues that Jesus never sought nor was he ever given the Kingship title. Jesus confirmed that he was the Christ in a way that a prophet and rabbi who remind people to go back to the religion of Abraham, Jacob, Moses, Aaron and all Hebrew prophets. The Christian image of the Messiah as a Spiritual King is the result of blending the Jewish concept of the messiah as an earthly King with the fact that Jesus historical role who was a spiritual leader to the Jews. The Qur’an corrected this distortion and put Jesus as a prophet who teach his people to go back to the teaching of what earlier prophets had brought. Jesus of the Qur'an is not a political leader who was expected to re-establish an earthly kingdom i.e. Israel nor a quasi God who posses the throne of Heaven.
Second Coming — Fatoohi persuasively argues that the concept of Jesus second coming was developed by Jesus early followers to explain his failure to deliver what they thought the Christ was going to do. The Qur'an does not support this concept of returning Messiah. The Qur'an messiah fulfilled his mission on earth. Although there are a number of hadiths attributed to Prophet Muhammad that seems to confirm Jesus second coming, it must have been influenced by Christian understanding. I am surprised that Fatoohi arrive at this conclusion there is Qur'anic verses which indirectly seems to suggest Jesus return e.g.[Sûrah al-Nisâ’: 159, Sûrah al-Zukhruf: 61] as well as those hadiths predicting the returning of Jesus which are considered authentic, nevertheless I still find Fatoohi position plausible albeit minority position among Islamic scholars. I will look into this matter.
Son of David — Many christians are eager to link Jesus as being descendant to David, the second King of Israel (later just Judah) who had descendants also upon the throne. Here Fatoohi shows how contradictory position in the four gospels in relation to Jesus as being the son of David, and how those position were not reconcilable. On the other hand the Qur'anic position is consistent in maintaining that Jesus is "the son of Mary", this mean the Qur'an reject any idea that Jesus is a warrior Messiah like David who was going to restore Israel thus the fulfilment of the prophecy to David in 2 Samuel 7:16. In my opinion Fatoohi also spot on when bringing the point that Jesus link to Aaron because the fact that the Qur'an call Jesus' Mother as "sister of Aaron. While as Fatoohi pointed out it is common mistakes among Biblical scholar to understand the expression "sister of Aaron" as meaning that Mary had brother called "Aaron" not as title of tribal connection , I have personally fascinated by this Qur'an term. To me there is a good reason why the Quran refer Mary to Aaron kinship. It emphatically gives a particular significance that Mary’s son ie. Jesus has the birth right as “the Messiah” or anointed one as we can read in Exodus 30:30-31 when God ordered prophet Moses to anoint his brother Aaron with a special type of anointment with a particular oil for kings .....from this anointing it give him and his heirs the right to the priesthood title down to prophet Jesus, hence the title Jesus "the Messiah".
Saviour — Fatoohi explains that the Qur'anic Messiah of Jesus is neither a saviour to bring the jews to restore its own kingdom nor the one who save people from sin by playing role as atoning agent, he is no unique saviour, a messenger and prophet albeit one of special messenger who was conceived miraculously and performed impressive miracles.
Suffering Messiah — Fatoohi rightly mention that Judaism actually never knew of a suffering or resurrected messiah and the Qur'an reject the idea that the Messiah ever suffered the Passion. The concept of suffering messiah was a novelty that Christian writers introduced.
As a final point, Fatoohi concluded from his study that the messiahship of Jesus in the Qur’an represent the original concept of the messiah or one messiah which was revealed by God which predate any shift in the meaning by Jews and Christian. At first the Jews did not expect a redeemer Messiah as this title is just for any past figures who were anointed as a gesture to sanctify themselves. Later the Jews started to invent a eschatological warrior messiah and associate him with King David to restore the Kingdom of Israel. Christians inherited this type of Messiah and projected it even more on their Christ: a King from throne of Heaven who already came to atone people sin. Jesus saw his messiahship as a mandate to conform divine messages that had been revealed to previous prophets that is calling people back to the way of God of Abraham, Jacob, Moses, Aaron and all Hebrew prophets. That is the historical Messiah the Qur’an is telling us about.

I can say Fatoohi’s study is helpful in considering critically how the significance of Messiahship evolved from just anointed past figures to eschatological warrior King of Judaism to Pauline god-men Jesus and later how the Qur’an corrected Jesus messiahship back into rightful role : to led jewish people to salvation by showing them the right way to God.

As no other Muslim writer/scholar I know have ever attempted to author a book focusing on the concept of "Messiah" like this book, I praise the author for his initiative.
Dozilkree
The Mystery of the Messiah: The Messiahship of Jesus in the Qur'an, New Testament, Old Testament, and Other Sources

Louay Fatoohi's writing addresses a dilemma I have been struggling with; how one can approach religion and science with the same methodology. Science gathers evidence through systematic observation. I have always been interested in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, but to approach this topic as a scientist one would a need an extensive background in the Old and New Testaments, the Quran, and history. Fortunately, we are indebted to Fatoohi for his systematic methodology in his scholarly writings analyzing the Old and New Testaments as they compares to the Quran and history. Before reading his current book "The Mystery of the Messiah," I had read the much larger text "The Mystery of the Historical Jesus: The Messiah in the Qur'an, the Bible, and Historical Sources." Fatoohi's books are like an academic text with extensive references. Thus, as a scientist, I spent time going back to the primary sources he quotes for my own education and as a critical reviewer. His earlier Jesus book is packed with information, so I was delighted to find his much smaller current text focused just on the concept of the Messiah addressing this mystery from the various perspectives discussed above.
There is also one other prevailing theme I find very appealing in Fatoohi's writing; how his rigorous methodology also assumes that underlying this work is the existence of one God who revealed universal truths to humans. The real mystery which the reader will need to explore is what was the original truth, how was it changed, and what are the implications for today? Enjoy his books, but keep the Bible, The Quran, and a dictionary near by (the internet is also very helpful).

Howard Hall, Ph.D., Psy.D.
Associate Professor, Case Medical Center
Ubrise
For anyone interested in the historical Jesus and the concept of The Messiah, this book is a must read! Having read the more comprehensive version of this derivative work-The Mystery of the Historical Jesus:The Messiah in the Qur'an, the Bible, and Historical sources, I found this book to be more concise, yet highly informative. A small book with a big punch. I have so far enjoyed reading both books of Dr. Louay Fatoohi who is a British scholar and revert to Islam. I love his literary style especially in the presentation of scriptural data in the form of tables and actual figures, which in essence reflects the hard work and dedication of this scholar in his research. I have ordered two more of Dr. Fatoohi's books and I am looking forward to reading them also. I believe Dr. Louay Fatoohi's books provide the missing link in scholarship of comparative religion as it provides a more holistic approach to studying the Scriptures and other historical sources. This type of scholarship is very much needed in bridging the gap between Islamic and non-Islamic scholarship.
I highly recommend this book as it is not only thought provoking but an enjoyable and enlightening read.
The Mystery of the Messiah: The Messiahship of Jesus in the Qur'an, New Testament, Old Testament, and Other Sources ebook
Author:
Louay Fatoohi
Category:
Bible Study & Reference
Subcat:
EPUB size:
1726 kb
FB2 size:
1831 kb
DJVU size:
1824 kb
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Publisher:
Luna Plena Publishing (May 10, 2009)
Pages:
116 pages
Rating:
4.2
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