Looking at FALSE Christian beliefs in... Son of God pt. 2

Sam Shamoun


As promised, here is the second part of our response. Nisar claims: 

This Surah expresses the most important doctrine in the Qur'an, the teaching on God's oneness (tawhid). The Qur'an rejects every notion of trinity as irreconcilable with the doctrine of the one true God. God has never fathered a son.

How Was The Son of God Conceived

Luke 1:35 explains why Jesus was God at the beginning of His human life. The angel told Mary, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God". Jesus was born of a virgin, His conception being effected by the Holy Ghost. Because of this ("therefore"), He was the Son of God. In other words, Jesus is the Son of God because God, and not a man, caused His conception. God was literally His Father... "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son…" (John 3:16). To beget means to father, sire, procreate, or cause. Jesus was begotten by God in the womb of the virgin Mary.

Isaiah 7:14 also links the virgin conception with the recognition that the Son thus born would be God. In other words, at the moment of conception, God placed His divine nature in the seed of the woman. The child to be born received its life and the fatherly side of its nature from God at this time. From the mother's side it received the human nature of Mary; from the father's side (God, not Joseph) it received the nature of God. Jesus obtained His divine nature through the conception process; He did not become divine by some later act of God. The virgin birth of Jesus establishes His deity. 

RESPONSE:

Nisar erroneously assumes that Isaiah and Luke place Jesus’ divine sonship at his virgin conception. Yet, an accurate reading of the texts in question would demonstrate otherwise: 

Although Isaiah refers to the birth of the Messiah, he clearly states that the Messiah is also a Son that is given who is the Mighty God. This implies the Messiah’s preexistence. This point is made explicit by the fact that Isaiah applies the title Mighty God to the true God Yahweh:  

For Isaiah to call the Messiah “Mighty God” indicates that Isaiah believed that the Messiah is the eternal God Yahweh. Furthermore, Luke is clearly dependent upon Isaiah 7 and 9 as the following citations show: 

The italicized portions highlight the fact that Jesus’ birth and ministry were a direct fulfillment of the Isaiah passages. This affirms that Luke did not believe that Jesus became God’s Son at the moment of his virginal conception. Rather, Luke’s allusions to Isaiah show that the former believed that Jesus is the divine preexistent Son of God who had now come to deliver his people.  

Finally, it may be true that some Christians erroneously believe that the virginal conception made Jesus God’s Son. Yet most, if not all, informed Christians do not claim this. Rather, they believe that Jesus is God’s eternal Son and that God’s Holy Spirit miraculously conceived the human nature of Christ from the virgin.  

NISAR:

Sons Of God In The Bible

The term 'Son of God' was not solely given to Jesus Christ. As can be seen from the excerpts below this term was used commonly in the Old Testament to describe those who were close to God.

Sons of God : Roman Catholic Encyclopedia

The title "son of God" is frequent in the Old Testament. The word "son" was employed among the Semites to signify not only filiation, but other close connexion or intimate relationship. Thus

"a son of strength" was a hero and a warrior,

"son of wickedness" a wicked man,

"sons of pride" wild beasts,

"son of possession" a possessor,

"son of pledging" a hostage,

"son of lightning" a swift bird,

"son of death" one doomed to death,

"son of a bow" an arrow,

"son of Belial" a wicked man,

"sons of prophets" disciples of prophets etc.

The title "son of God" was applied in the Old Testament to persons having any special relationship with God. Angels, just and pious men, the descendants of Seth, were called "sons of God" (Job, i, 6; ii, 1; Ps. lxxxviii, 7; Wisd., ii, 13; etc.). In a similar manner it was given to Israelites (Deut., xiv, l); and of Israel, as a nation, we read: "And thou shalt say to him: Thus saith the Lord: Israel is my son, my firstborn. I have said to thee: Let my son go, that he may serve me" (Ex., iv, 22 sq.).

The leaders of the people, kings, princes, judges, as holding authority from God, were called sons of God. The theocratic King as lieutenant of God, and especially when he was providentially selected to be a type of the Messiahs, was honoured with the title "Son of God".

Sons of God by Brother Mishael al Kandy

Let us begin by asking: How many sons does the Bible tell us that God Almighty has?

As we can see, the use of the term "son of God" when describing normal human beings was not at all an uncommon practice among Jesus' people.

Sons of God in the Old Testament by F. Rice

A clear example of the term "Son of God" being used in Jewish scripture is that Prophet Solomon (peace be with him) is called "Son of God" in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), and is even quoted by God as saying he is His Son, in the book 1 Chronicles. The relevent passages are these:

1 Chronicles, chapter 17: [God is being quoted as speaking to Nathan, telling him to say the following things to David.] 13: I will be his Father, and he shall be my Son; 

1 Chronicles, chapter 22: He shall be my Son, and I will be his Father.

In the first underlined section, David repeats the words of God (according to the Hebrew Bible), that the person referred to will be the "Son of God". The second underlined part shows that the person who will be the "Son of God" is "you," that is, Solomon, to whom David is speaking. 

Finally, here is the third and last passage....

1 Chronicles, chapter 28: [Here, David is being quoted about Solomon.] I have chosen him to be my Son, and I will be his Father.

Here, again God is quoted as directly saying that Solomon is His "Son".

These passages establish that the term "Son of God" is used in Jewish scripture to mean someone who is close to God, and in particular it is used for Jewish kings of the House of David. The term "Son of God" as used in Jewish scripture (such as for Solomon, peace be with him) has absolutely nothing to do with a person being God, or having any share in divinity. It is a metaphorical term meaning someone who is close to God.

Sons of God in Judaism by Shaikh Ahmad Deedat

The Bible ascribes sons by the tons to God. (a) 'Which was the son of Enos, which was the son of Seth, which was the son of Adam, which was the SON OF GOD." GENESIS 6:2 and 4 (c) " . . Thus- saith the Lord, Israel is MY SON even my FIRSTBORN." EXODUS 4:22 (d) " . . and Ephraim is my FIRSTBORN," JEREMIAH 31:9 (e) " . . Thou (o David) ART MY SON; this day have I (God) BEGOTTEN thee. " PSALMS 2:

As a Prophet Ezra was the heavenly Scribe and as a priest and a heavenly scribe like Enoch he would have been anointed like Jesus.

Solomon: 

1 Kings 1:39 "And Zadok the priest took an horn of oil out of the tabernacle, and anointed Solomon. And they blew the trumpet; and all the people said, God save king Solomon."

David: 

1 Samuel 16:13 "Then Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the midst of his brethren: and the Spirit of the LORD came upon David from that day forward. So Samuel rose up, and went to Ramah."

Jewish priests: 

Leviticus 4:3 "If the priest that is anointed do sin according to the sin of the people; then let him bring for his sin, which he hath sinned, a young bullock without blemish unto the LORD for a sin offering."

Ezra 

In Neh 8, Ezra appears again upon the scene at the Feast of Tabernacles as the chief scribe of the law of Moses, the leader of the priests and Levites who read and explained the law to the people.The Jews say "Ezra would have been worthy to have made known the law if Moses had not come before him."

THE TERM 'SON OF GOD' IN A MONOTHEISTIC SENSE

In the Tenach, the term 'Son of God' does speak of divine son-ship. Usually it is in conjunction with three specific groups of people

(1) Angels (cf. Gen6:2; Job 1:6; Dan 3:25)

(2) Israel (cf. Ex 4:22,23; Hos 11:1; Mal 2:10)

(3) King Sam (cf. 7:14; Ps 2:7; 89:26,27)

One of the most famous verses that illustrate this special relationship is "You are the children of the LORD your God" (Deutronomy 14:1). The sonship in reference to Israel means belonging in a special way to the Almighty God. Jewish Tradition refer to God as 'Avinu, Malkanu' meaning 'our father, our king' and such a metaphor describes the close relationship between Israel and God which is akin to how a father loves his son. God loves the just, and his love cannot be destroyed by sin. The King also in his capacity as a Son of God exercises authority over both the people of Israel and the nations and as such is restricted to the descendants of David.

In the Talmud, miracle workers were sometimes described as 'Sons of God'.

God in the Old Testament is represented to have used for Solomon, as applicable to Christ: 'I will be to him a father, and he shall be to me a son'. By these words was meant that God would distinguish Solomon with peculiar favours, would treat him as a father treats a son.

Here we have the term son of God being presented as a special relationship between the son and the father. It is a historical fact that the Israelites had borrowed from the Canaanite heathenism the statement 'sons of God' but used it only as a symbolic statement' to denote those qualities which recommend moral beings to the favour of God; those which bear such a likeness to his moral attributes as may be compared with the likeness which a son has to his father' those which constitute one, in the Oriental (Eastern) style, to be of the family of God. The Israelites were created by God and as such symbolically might be called His 'children', not literally. 

RESPONSE:

Nisar basically thinks that by taking lengthy quotations from authors regarding God having many sons he will somehow refute Jesus’ unique divine eternal Sonship. Nisar is guilty of the fallacy of false analogy and the fallacy of equivocation. Although acknowledging that the term “son” or “sons” can have different meanings, he does not allow for the fact that Jesus is God’s Son in a completely different sense from the rest. Since Nisar realizes that terms may have different meanings in different contexts, we present the biblical evidence to demonstrate that unlike the others, Jesus is the divine preexistent Son of God, the One through whom God made all things and for whom all things exist: 

In this parable Jesus states that the prophets are the servants God and that Christ is God's beloved Son and the Heir of all the things. Continuing further: 

As the Son, Jesus has all the omni-attributes of God such as self-existence and omnipresence:  

As the Son, Jesus is the object of God’s eternal love: 

"This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased." Matthew 3:17  

"Then a cloud appeared and enveloped them, and a voice came from the cloud: 'This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!'" Mark 9:7  

As the Son, Jesus claims to exist in the same diving glory of the Father and demands to be glorified by the Father: 

Furthermore, as the Son Jesus demanded that the same exact honor given to the Father must be also given to him:  

This honor entails worshiping and praying to Jesus:  

This should sufficiently put to the rest Nisar’s attempt of using the Holy Bible to undermine Jesus’ divine eternal Sonship. 

NISAR:

Allah Hath Taken A Son

The statement of the fourth gospel that the Logos became flesh is a literal way of speaking. The truth is that the Logos took on flesh so much that it could be said he had become it. This is more like adoptionist thinking. 

RESPONSE:

Nisar has obviously not understood what it means that the Logos became flesh. To become flesh affirms that the Logos took on a true human nature, becoming fully and truly human. Yet, prior to his becoming an actual human being the Logos already was fully and truly God in nature, having all the attributes of true Deity. Therefore, John’s prologue affirms that the eternal Logos who was truly God in essence, took on the additional nature of humanity. Since John teaches that the eternally existing Logos became flesh, indicating that Christ is an eternal Being, Nisar’s claim that this is adoptionist thinking is incredulous to say the least. Adoptionism teaches that Christ was became the Son of God through adoption at some point in his earthly life, i.e. at the Baptism, the Resurrection etc., something quite foreign to John’s Gospel. 

NISAR:

The Logos became a hypostasis separate from God. Hence, he first came into existence. From the moment when he was begotten the Logos is a being distinct from the Father. (Something different in number, another God, a second God). But his personality only dates from that moment. There was a time when the Father has no Son. Wherefore in rank he is below God in the second place and a second God, the messenger and servant of God. The apologists Logos appears as the highest creature, IN SO FAR AS HE IS CONCEIVED AS THE PRODUCTION OF GOD.

J. N. D. Kelly

That they all (APOLOGISTS), Athenagoras included, dated the generation of the Logos, and so His eligibility for the title "Son", not from His origination from within the being of the Godhead, but from His emission or putting forth for the purposes of creation, revelation and redemption. 

RESPONSE:

Nisar quotes sources without giving us a page number to verify the accuracy of his citations. Be that as it may, we reproduce the following lengthy quote from J.N.D. Kelly in order to demonstrate Nisar’s misquoting: 

The Apologists were the first to frame an intellectually satisfying explanation of the relation of Christ to God the Father. They were all, as we have seen, ARDENT MONOTHEISTS, determined at all costs NOT TO COMPROMISE THIS FUNDAMENTAL TRUTH. The solution they proposed, reduced to essentials, was that, AS PRE-EXISTENT, Christ was the Father’s THOUGHT OR MIND, and that, as manifested in creation and revelation, He was its EXTRAPOLATION OR statement. In expounding this doctrine they had recourse to the imagery of the divine Logos, or Word, which had been familiar to later Judaism as well as to Stoicism, and which had become a fashionable cliché through the influence of Philo. Others had, of course, anticipated them. In the Fourth Gospel, for example, the Word is declared to have been with God in the beginning and to have become flesh in Christ, while for Ignatius Christ was the Father’s Word issuing from silence. The Apologists’ originality (their thought was more Philonic than Johannine) lay in drawing out the further implications of the Logos idea in order to make plausible the twofold fact of Christ’s pre-temporal oneness with the Father and His manifestation in space and time. In so doing, while using such Old Testament texts as Ps. 33, 6 (‘By the word of the Lord were the heavens made’), they did not hesitate to blend with them the Stoic technical distinctions between the immanent word (logos endiathetos) and the word uttered or expressed (logos prophorikos).

Their teaching appears most clearly in Justin, although his theology is far from being systematic… The Logos, however, had now ‘assumed shape and become a man’ in Jesus Christ; He had become incarnate in His entirety in Him. The Logos is here conceived of as the Father’s INTELLIGENCE OR RATIONAL THOUGHT; but Justin argued that He was not only in name distinct from the Father, as the light is from the sun, but was ‘numerically distinct too’ (kai arithmo heteron). His proof, which he was particularly concerned to develop against Jewish monotheism, was threefold. The Word’s otherness, he thought was implied (a) by the alleged appearances of God in the Old Testament (e.g. to Abraham by the oaks of Mamre), which suggests, that ‘below the Creator of all things, there is ANOTHER Who is, and is called, GOD AND LORD’, since it is inconceivable that ‘the Master and Father of all things should have abandoned all supercelestial affairs and made Himself visible in a minute corner of the world’; (b) by the frequent Old Testament passages (e.g. Gen. I, 26: ‘Let us make man etc.’) which represent God as conversing with ANOTHER, Who is presumably a rational being like Himself; and (c) by the great Wisdom texts, such as Prov. 8, 22ff. (‘The Lord created me a beginning of His ways etc.’), since everyone must agree that the offspring is other than the begetter. So the Logos, ‘having been put forth as an offspring from the Father, was with Him BEFORE ALL CREATURES, and the Father had converse with Him’. And he is DIVINE: ‘being the Word and first-begotten of God, HE IS ALSO GOD’. ‘Thus, then, He is adorable, HE IS GOD’; and ‘we adore and love, next to God, the Logos derived from the increate and ineffable God, seeing that for our sakes He became man’.

The incarnation apart, the special functions of the Logos, according to Justin, are two: to be the Father’s agent in creating and ordering the universe, and to reveal truth to men. As regards to His nature, while other beings are ‘things made’ (poiemata) or creatures (ktismata), the Logos is God’s ‘offspring’ (gennema), His ‘child’ (teknon), and ‘UNIQUE SON’ (ho monogenes);BEFORE ALL CREATURES God begat, in the beginning, a rational power OUT OF HIMSELF’. By this generation, Justin means, not the ultimate origin of the Father’s Logos or reason (this he does not discuss), but His putting forth or emission for the purposes of creation and revelation; and it is conditioned by, and is the result of, an act of the Father’s will. But this generation or emission does not entail ANY SEPARATION BETWEEN THE FATHER AND HIS SON, as the analogy between human reason and its extrapolation in speech makes clear… Elsewhere Justin uses the analogy of the impossibility of distinguishing the light from the sun which is its source in order to argue that ‘this Power is indivisible and inseparable from the Father’, and that His numerical distinction from the Father does not involve any partition of the latter’s essence.

Tatian was a disciple of Justin’s, and like his master spoke of the Logos as existing IN THE FATHER as His rationality and then, by an act of His will, being generated. Like Justin, too, he emphasized the Word’s ESSENTIAL UNITY with the Father, using the same image of light kindled from light. ‘The birth of the Logos involves a distribution (merismon), but NO SEVERANCE (apokopen)…’ At the same time Tatian threw into sharper relief than Justin the contrast between the two successive states of the Logos. Before creation God was ALONE, the Logos BEING IMMANENT IN HIM as His potentiality for creating all things; but at the moment of creation HE LEAPED FORTH FROM THE FATHER as His ‘primordial work’ (ergon prototokon). Once born, being ‘spirit derived from spirit, rationality from rational power’, He served as the Father’s instrument in creating and governing the universe, in particular making men in the divine image.

The teaching of Theophilus of Antioch followed similar lines, although he frankly used Stoic technical terms appropriate to the underlying system of ideas. ‘God’, he wrote, ‘having His Word immanent (endiatheton) in His bowels, engendered Him along with His wisdom, emitting Him before the universe.’ He used this Word as His assistant in His creative work, and by Him He has made all things. This Word is called First Principle because He is the principle and Lord of all things fashioned by Him’. Again, dealing with the sonship of the Logos, he wrote: ‘He is NOT the Son in the sense in which poets and romancers RELATE THE BIRTH OF SONS TO GODS, but rather in the sense in which the truth speaks of the Word as ETERNALLY IMMANENT (endiatheton) IN GOD’S BOSOM. ’ For BEFORE ANYTHING CAME INTO BEING He had Him as His counsellor, HIS OWN INTELLIGENCE AND THOUGHT. But when God willed to create what He had planned, He engendered and brought forth (egennese prophorikon) this Word, the first-begotten of all creation. He did not thereby empty Himself of His Word, but having begotten Him consorts with Him always’. Like Justin, Theophilus regarded the Old Testament theophanies as having been in fact appearances of the Logos. God Himself cannot be contained in space and time, but it was precisely the function of the Word Whom He generated to manifest His mind and will in the created order.

A rather fuller account is given by Athenagoras. In a famous passage, after stating that the unoriginate, eternal and invisible God has created and adorned, and actually governs, the universe by His Word, he goes on to identify the Word as the Son of God. Repudiating the objection THAT THERE IS SOMETHING RIDICULOUS IN GOD’S HAVING A SON, he protests that God’s Son IS NOT LIKE THE CHILDREN OF MEN, but is ‘the Father’s Word IN IDEA AND IN ACTUALIZATION’ (en idea kai energeia). It was by Him, and through Him, that everything was made, and the Father and the Son FORM A UNITY. ‘The Son being IN the Father and the Father IN the Son by the unity and power of the divine spirit, the Son of God is the Father’s INTELLIGENCE and Word (nous kai logos). To make his meaning clearer, Athenagoras then points out that, while He is God’s offspring, HE NEVER ACTUALLY CAME INTO BEING (ouk hos genomenon), ‘for God from the beginning, being eternal intelligence, had His Word (logon) IN HIMSELF, BEING ETERNALLY RATIONAL (aidios logikos). A more correct account would be, that He ‘issued forth’ (proelthon: again the idea of logos prophorikos) into the world of formless matter as the archetypal idea and creative force. In support of this he quotes Prov. 8, 22, ‘The Lord created me as a beginning of His ways for His works’, without stressing, however , the verb ‘created’. In a later chapter he speaks of ‘the true God and the Logos Who derives from Him’, dwelling on the unity and fellowship which exist between Father and Son; and elsewhere he describes the Son as the Father’s ‘intelligence, Word, wisdom’.

There are two points in the Apologists’ teaching which, because of their far-reaching importance, must be heavily underlined, viz. (a) that for all of them the description ‘God the Father‘ connoted not the first Person of the Holy Trinity, but the one Godhead considered as author of whatever exists; and (b) that they all, Athenagoras included, dated the generation of the Logos, and so His eligibility for the title ‘Son’, not from His origination within the Being of the Godhead, BUT FROM HIS EMISSION OR PUTTING FORTH FOR THE PURPOSES OF CREATION, REVELATION AND REDEMPTION. Unless these points are firmly grasped, and their significance appreciated, A COMPLETELY DISTORTED VIEW OF THE APOLOGISTS’ THEOLOGY IS LIABLE TO RESULT. Two stock criticisms of it, for example, are that they failed to distinguish the Logos from the Father until He was required for the work of creation, and that, as a corollary, they were guilty of subordinating the Son to the Father. These objections have a superficial validity in the light of post-Nicene orthodoxy, with its doctrine of the Son’s eternal generation and its fully worked-out conception of hypostases or Persons; but they make no sense in the thought-atmosphere in which the Apologists moved. It is true that they lacked a technical vocabulary adequate for describing eternal distinctions within the Deity; but that they apprehended such distinctions ADMITS OF NO DOUBT. Long BEFORE CREATION, FROM ALL ETERNITY, God had His Word or Logos, for God is essentially rational; and if what later theology recognized as the personality of the Word seems ill defined in their eyes, it is plain that they regarded Him AS ONE WITH WHOM THE FATHER COULD COMMUNE AND TAKE COUNSEL. Later orthodox was to describe His eternal relation to the Father as generation; the fact that the Apologists restricted the term to His emission should not lead one to conclude that they had no awareness of His existence prior to that. Similarly, when Justin spoke of Him as a ‘SECOND GOD’ worshiped ‘in a secondary rank’, and when all the Apologists stressed that His generation or emission resulted from an act of the Father’s will, their object WAS NOT SO MUCH TO SUBORDINATE HIM AS TO SAFEGUARD THE MONOTHEISM WHICH THEY CONSIDERED INDISPENSABLE. The Logos as manifested must necessarily be limited as compared with the Godhead Itself; and it was important to emphasize that there were not two springs of initiative within the Divine Being. That the Logos was ONE IN ESSENCE WITH THE FATHER, inseparable in His fundamental being from Him as much after His generation AS PRIOR TO IT, THE APOLOGISTS WERE NEVER WEARY OF REITERATING. (Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, revised edition [HarperSan Francisco, 1978], pp. 95-101; bold and capital emphasis ours)  

The following citations from Athenagoras regarding his views on the deity of the Lord Jesus and the essential Trinity are taken from A Dictionary of Early Christian Beliefs, Hendrickson Publishers, Massachusetts, 1998, edited by David W. Bercot. All bold and capital emphasis ours: 

What is meant by the Son? I will state briefly that He is the first product of the Father. I DO NOT MEAN THAT HE WAS BROUGHT INTO EXISTENCE. For, from the beginning, God, who is the eternal Mind, HAD THE LOGOS IN HIMSELF. From ETERNITY, He is instinct with Logos. However, [the Son is begotten] inasmuch as He came forth to be the Idea and energizing Power of all material things, which lay like a nature without attributes… The prophetic Spirit also agrees with our statements. “The Lord,” it says, “made me the beginning of His ways to His works.” Athenagoras (c. 175, e), 2.133. (p. 104)  

The universe has been created and set in order through His Logos… For we acknowledge also a Son of God. Athenagoras (c. 175, e), 2.133. (p. 113) 

The Holy Spirit Himself, who operates in the prophets, we assert to be an effluence of God, flowing from Him, and returning back again like a beam of the sun. Athenagoras (c. 175, e), 2.133. (p. 345) 

Who, then, would not be astonished to hear men called atheists who speak of God the Father, and of GOD THE SON, and of the Holy Spirit, and who declare both their POWER IN UNION and their DISTINCTION in order? Athenagoras (c. 175, e), 2.133. (p. 652)  

Christians know God and His Logos. They also know what type of ONENESS the Son has with the Father and what type of communion the Father has with the Son. Furthermore, they know what the Spirit is AND WHAT UNITY IS OF THESE THREE: the Spirit, the Son, and the Father. They also know what THEIR DISTINCTION IS IN UNITY. Athenagoras (c. 175, e), 2.134. (Ibid.) 

We acknowledge a God, and a Son (His Logos), and a Holy Spirit. These are UNITED IN ESSENCE- the Father, the Son, and the Spirit. Now, the Son is the Intelligence, Reason, and Wisdom of the Father. And the Spirit is an emanation, as light from fire. Athenagoras (c. 175, e), 2.141. (Ibid.) 

Let us now summarize the testimony of the Apologists: 

1. The Apologists all believed that the person of Christ is eternal, uncreated.

2. The Apologists all believed that the person of Christ eternally existed within the eternal Being of God as His Reason, Intelligence, Word, and Wisdom.

3. The Apologists all affirmed the personal distinctions of the Father and His Word, acknowledging that the two were in communion with one another.

4. The Apologists all believed that God’s eternal Word sprang forth from the Father, without severing from the source, to become the Father’s Agent in creation and redemption. It is at this point that the Logos begins to relate to the Father as the Son. 

These points prove that the Fathers were essentially Trinitarians in their beliefs. This means that Nisar has twisted J.N.D. Kelly’s statements in order to mislead his readers into thinking that the Apologists denied the eternal existence of Christ. Such shoddy scholarship is inexcusable to say the least, especially for one who constantly claims that such research has refuted my arguments. Nisar concludes: 

Orthodox Christians Repudiated 

Parrinder along with Gilchrist, and Cragg says some verses of the Qur'an in references to Jesus as the Son of God is a refutation of Adoptionist and Arians. But passages 169-171 in Surah An-Nisa is more pointed to orthodox Christianity. Some scholars accuse Nestorians of this heresy as well.

O People of the Book! Commit no excesses in your religion: Nor say of Allah aught but the truth. Christ Jesus the son of Mary was (no more than) a messenger of Allah, and His Word, which He bestowed on Mary, and a spirit proceeding from Him: so believe in Allah and His messengers. Say not "Trinity" : desist: it will be better for you: for Allah is one Allah: Glory be to Him: (far exalted is He) above having a son. To Him belong all things in the heavens and on earth. And enough is Allah as a Disposer of affairs. Qur'an Surah Al-Nisa 172  

RESPONSE:

Nisar ends with a citation from the Quran as if the Quran carries any real weight for the serious historian or Christian. Suffice it to say, Lord Jesus willing, I will follow up this rebuttal with an examination of all the Quranic passages dealing with the deity of Christ and document the author(s)’ gross misunderstanding of essential Christian doctrine. 

This concludes this part. More rebuttals to follow shortly, Lord Jesus willing. 

NOTE TO THE READERS- Nisar has rewritten his article on Paul, which is obviously due to my complete refutation of his arguments. This is an implicit admission on the part of Nisar that he was unable to refute my points, and needed to rework his paper without even attempting to interact with any of my arguments. Yet even in this reworked paper Nisar still failed to establish his case and refute any of my points. He simply repeats the same tired assault on Paul. We leave it to the intelligent readers to read the articles for themselves in order to see who in fact as presented the facts.  

  1. Home Back Home
  2. Articles by Sam Shamoun Found on Answering Islam main site

E-mail me Quennel Gale at queball20@yahoo.com