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Zuko Explains — Islam: An Invitation from the Qur’an

Before You Read — An Invitation, Not an Attack

This article is written with respect, patience, and sincerity. It is not an attack on Islam, Muslims, or their faith.

It is an invitation to consider what the Qur’an itself says about Allah (God), about His earlier revelations, about ʿĪsā (Jesus), and about where a sincere seeker is directed to find answers when questions arise. (Before preceding please read: Acts 17:16-34)

Many Muslims love Allah deeply, desire truth, and wish to obey Him. This article honours that desire.

Revelation Did Not Begin with the Qur’an

The Qur’an repeatedly affirms that Allah revealed guidance before the Qur’an.

  • The Torah (Tawrat) was given as guidance
  • The Gospel (Injil) was given as guidance and light
  • These books came from Allah

(Surah 3:3–4; Surah 5:44–46; Surah 6:154)

The Qur’an presents itself not as a replacement that erases earlier revelation, but as a confirmation of what came before it.

(Surah 5:48)

When Questions Arise, Where Does the Qur’an Send You?

The Qur’an gives a striking instruction:

“If you are in doubt about what We have revealed to you, then ask those who read the Book before you.” 

(Surah 10:94)

Related affirmations include:

  • The People of the Book possess knowledge (Surah 3:113)
  • They can bear witness to the truth (Surah 5:83)

This assumes:

  • The earlier Scriptures still exist
  • The people who read them still exist
  • They are a valid reference point
  • The Qur'an is not talking about itself and your teachers.  It clearly points backwards, before the time the Qur'an was first written.  

This creates a gentle but serious question: why would Allah direct someone outward if the earlier books were unreliable or lost?  Why would Allah direct you to the followers of the Injil if they could not be trusted?

Can the Word of Allah Be Corrupted?

The Qur’an makes a clear statement:

“There is no changing the words of Allah.”

(Surah 6:115; Surah 18:27)

At the same time, the Torah and Gospel are described as revelation from Allah.

The Qur’an also states that the People of the Book are commanded to stand upon what was revealed to them:

“If they had upheld the Torah and the Gospel and what was revealed to them from their Lord, they would have consumed provision from above them and from beneath their feet.” 

(Surah 5:68)

This presents a tension that deserves careful thought: if the earlier books are from Allah, and no one can change His words, how could they be corrupted?

Meeting ʿĪsā (Jesus) Through the Qur’an

The Qur’an speaks about  ʿĪsā (Jesus) in ways that set him apart from every other prophet.

  • Born of a virgin (Surah 3:45–47; Surah 19:16–21)
  • Called the Word of Allah (Surah 4:171)
  • Called a Spirit from Him (Surah 4:171)
  • Performs miracles by the power of Allah (Surah 3:49; Surah 5:110)
  • Raises the dead (Surah 3:49; Surah 5:110)
  • Taken up alive (Surah 4:158)
  • Still living
  • Will return (Surah 43:61)

This raises an honest question: if ʿĪsā is only a prophet, why is he described so differently from all the others?  Why was he treated so differently by Allah than the others?  Why is he coming back?  Why has he that authority?

An Unfinished Story

Every prophet’s story ends.

ʿĪsā's (Jesus') does not.

He was raised alive. He remains with Allah. He will return.

The Qur’an does not explain this fully. It leaves the story open.

Is there somewhere the Qur'an asks you to go to find out how this story ends?

Shirk — The Most Serious Sin in Islam

In Islamic theology, shirk refers to associating partners with Allah — giving to anyone or anything what belongs to Allah alone.

This is not considered a minor error. Shirk is regarded as the most serious spiritual offense in Islam.

What Shirk Includes

Shirk includes any act that compromises Allah’s absolute oneness (tawḥīd) by attributing divine qualities, worship, or authority to someone or something else.

  • Worshiping or praying to anyone besides Allah
  • Attributing divine status to a human being
  • Saying Allah has partners, equals, or offspring
  • Elevating prophets, angels, or saints to divine roles
  • Trusting intermediaries as necessary mediators
Why Shirk Is Called “Unforgivable”

The Qur’an states:

“Allah does not forgive association with Him, but He forgives what is less than that for whom He wills.” 

(Surah 4:48; Surah 4:116)

At the same time, shirk can be forgiven if a person repents before death.

This makes shirk a matter of eternal consequence.

Why Christians Are Seen as Committing Shirk

From an Islamic perspective, Christianity appears to violate Allah’s oneness by worshiping Jesus.

Because Jesus is prayed to, trusted for salvation, and described with divine titles, Islam concludes that Christianity associates a human with Allah.

An Honest Question That Remains

The earliest followers of Jesus were Jews — strict monotheists who fiercely rejected idolatry.  Some of his followers were the most devoted Jews  (Zealots and Pharisee's) were capable of great violence to defend the monotheistic laws of Allah. One of them tried to single handedly wipe out this new "Sect of the Way" until he was confronted with the obvious truth of the scriptures.

Yet they worshiped ʿĪsā, prayed in His name, healed all manner of sickness and death in his name, and were willing to suffer and die for that conviction.

If worshiping ʿĪsā is shirk for the Jews, how did monotheistic Jews come to do this without believing they had abandoned the worship of the one true God?

This is not an accusation. It is an invitation to think carefully.  Don't take our word for this look up the Qur'an for yourself.  Pray to Allah for his guidance.  What does submitting to Allah really mean?

Return to Islam Landing Page

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SOS Next Level TOC

  1. Facilitator Notes - Mormonism (LDS)
  2. Zuko Explains - The Penitential Psalms
  3. An example Imagination game
  4. Archaeology and the Bible — Evidence the Text Sits in Real History
  5. Authorship and Eyewitness Testimony: Who Wrote the New Testament — and When?
  6. Baptism in Jesus’ Name Only — What Does the Bible Actually Teach?
  7. Books of the Bible Explained: Genres and Chronological Order
  8. Buddhism - 5 strengths, also their 5 weaknesses
  9. Buddhism 2 Can Desire Be Removed — Or Is It Pointing Somewhere?
  10. Buddhism Explained — A Guided Journey Through Belief, Meaning, and Hope
  11. Buddhism: Is Enlightenment Enough — Or Do We Long to Be Known?
  12. Buddhism: Compassion Without a Giver — Where Does Love Come From?
  13. Buddhism: If Suffering Ends, What Happens to Love?
  14. Buddhism: If There Is No Self — Who Is Being Freed
  15. Can Desire and Suffering Be Escaped — Or Are They Pointing Somewhere?
  16. Can the Bible Be Trusted? Historical, Archaeological & Manuscript Evidence
  17. Can These Hopes Be Combined — Or Must One Be Chosen?
  18. Christadelphians - what does the Bible say about the Holy Spirit?
  19. Discovering Your Gifts in the Holy Spirit
  20. Does Buddhism Offer Hope — Or Only Escape?
  21. Does the World Need Escape or Rescue? Buddhism, Suffering, and the Christian Answer
  22. Escape or Redemption? Two Very Different Hopes
  23. Exploring Christadelphian Beliefs — A Self-Discovery Bible Study (SOS)
  24. Facilitator Notes - William Branham
  25. Facilitator Notes – Shincheonji
  26. Facilitator Notes — Jehovah’s Witnesses
  27. Further External Resources on Bible Archaeology
  28. Hinduism Explained — A Guided Journey Through Belief, Meaning, and Hope
  29. How the Canon Was Recognised (Not Decided)
  30. Icebreaker: Category 1 - Predictable Imagination
  31. Icebreaker: Category 2 - Moral Intuition
  32. Icebreaker: Category 3 - Longing and Meaning
  33. Infant Baptism vs Believer’s Baptism: What Does the Bible Actually Say?
  34. Is Satan Personal? A Bible-Only SOS Study
  35. Is the Self an Illusion — Or Something Meant to Last?
  36. Leaders of the Bible Simple Timeline
  37. Phase 2 — When the Gospel Is Challenged
  38. Prophets Of the Bible - Simple timeline
  39. Sikhism and Sufi Islam
  40. Sikhism Part 1: Who are the Sikhs? (Punjab, the Gurus, the community)
  41. Sikhism Part 2: One God, Many Words — What Do Sikhs Mean by “Waheguru”?
  42. Sikhism Part 3: Sin, Karma, and the Problem of the Heart
  43. Sikhism Part 4: Salvation, Grace, and Assurance
  44. Sikhism Part 5: Sikh Scripture Explained - The Guru Granth Sahib
  45. Sikhism Part 6: Jesus in Sikh thought vs Jesus in the Bible
  46. SOS Squared – Study, Obey, Share (Hermeneutics Part 3)
  47. SOS – Next Level (How to read the bible for all its worth Part 2)
  48. Speaking in Tongues — What the Bible Actually Teaches (SOS Study)
  49. The Book of Enoch: Genre, Authority, and How It Should Be Read
  50. What did Jesus Have against the Pharisees
  51. What Does It Mean to “Pray in the Spirit”?
  52. What Happens at the End? Extinction, Enlightenment, or Resurrection
  53. What Is Buddhism? Core Beliefs, Practices, and Everyday Life Explained
  54. What Is Hinduism?
  55. Who Am I, Really? Self, Identity, and Why It Matters
  56. Why Different Bibles Have Different Tables of Contents
  57. Zuko Explains - "Christianese" (A–Z Glossary of Big Words)
  58. Zuko Explains - Agur & Lemuel
  59. Zuko Explains - Christian Conflict Resolution (Matt 18)
  60. Zuko Explains - Doxology & Imprecatory
  61. Zuko Explains - Ecclesiastes
  62. Zuko Explains - Esther
  63. Zuko Explains - Ezekiel
  64. Zuko Explains - Hebrew Acrostic Stanzas
  65. Zuko Explains - ḥesed (חֶסֶד) and agápē (ἀγάπη)
  66. Zuko Explains - Hezekiah’s Men
  67. Zuko Explains - Isaiah - Life & Times
  68. Zuko Explains - Israel's Good & Bad Kings
  69. Zuko Explains - Jeremiah - Life & Times
  70. Zuko Explains - Jewish Festivals
  71. Zuko Explains - Job
  72. Zuko Explains - Lamentations
  73. Zuko Explains - Leaders in the Bible
  74. Zuko Explains - Leadership Quick Reference Tables
  75. Zuko Explains - Names & Titles of God (A–Z)
  76. Zuko Explains - Parables
  77. Zuko Explains - Paul & His Companions
  78. Zuko Explains - Prophet Daniel
  79. Zuko Explains - Prophets' Timeline
  80. Zuko Explains - Restoration of Lost Tribes Chart
  81. Zuko Explains - Song of Songs
  82. Zuko Explains - The Book of Acts
  83. Zuko Explains - The Old Testament Prophets (Big Picture)
  84. Zuko Explains - The Pharisees at a glance
  85. Zuko Explains - The Sabbath
  86. Zuko Explains - The Sadducees at a glance
  87. Zuko Explains - The Samaritan Letter
  88. Zuko Explains - The Samaritans at a Glance
  89. Zuko Explains - The Zealots at a glance
  90. Zuko Explains - What is Scripture?
  91. Zuko Explains - Word of Faith (WoF)
  92. Zuko Explains -The Psalms
  93. Zuko Explains -The Sons of Korah
  94. Zuko Explains Buddhism 1
  95. Zuko Explains Hermeneutics
  96. Zuko Explains New Testament Fasting
  97. Zuko Explains Sikhism - Launch Page
  98. Zuko Explains the Bible - SOS “Next Level” Resources
  99. Zuko Explains the Hindu Caste System
  100. Zuko Explains Wisdom Parallelism

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