Both Muslims as well as Christians affirm that God Almighty
is a just and merciful God. Muslims believe that the sign of
God's mercy is that He multiplies the good deeds of mankind from
ten to seven hundred times, or even more. He also counts an evil
deed as a single evil deed or forgives it. The Church, on the
other hand, claims that the sign of God's mercy is that He
sacrificed His only begotten son to save mankind. Let us study
this claim:
If God Almighty decided to sacrifice His only son for the
redemption of mankind, then we have one of two cases:
1) Jesus (pbuh) did not know of this plan and the fate God
had decreed for him.
2) Jesus (pbuh) knew of this plan and the fate God had
decreed for him.
In the first case, if Jesus (pbuh) did not know
of God's plan, then this insinuates that God either tricked
Jesus (pbuh) into this fate, or God forced Jesus (pbuh) into
this fate. In other words, Jesus' mercy and sacrifice require
God Himself to be savage, blood-thirsty, and ruthless. This, of
course, is preposterous.
In the second case, if Jesus (pbuh) did know of
this plan, then we are faced with three problems:
a) If Jesus' (pbuh) sole mission to mankind was to die on the
cross, free them from the original sin, free them
from the law of Moses (pbuh), and provide salvation
for them, then why did he never in his lifetime mention it to
his followers? Why did he not spend night and day drumming these
new concepts into their minds? Why did he himself observe the
commandments of Moses (pbuh) so completely and so faithfully
even up till his alleged death? In Matthew 19:16-21 when Jesus (pbuh)
was asked for the path to heaven, why did he emphasize the
keeping of the commandments of Moses but never mention the
crucifixion nor the redemption or having "faith" in them? Why,
when he was pressed for more, did he still not mention
either a crucifixion nor a redemption but only claim that anyone
who kept the commandments of Moses (pbuh) and sold his
belongings would be "perfect"? Why did he not
say "have faith in my crucifixion and forsake the commandments
and you shall be 'perfect'"?
b) If Jesus' (pbuh) sole mission to mankind was to die on the
cross, free them from the original sin, free them
from the law of Moses (pbuh), and provide salvation
for them, then why, when he was in the garden of Gethsemane did
he plead with God Almighty and implore Him "Eli, Eli Lama
sabachthani", meaning "my God, my God, why have you forsaken
me?" (Matthew 27:46)? Why are the words of Matthew 27:46 the
only words of all of the New Testament reported in
their original Aramaic form? Could it be that Jesus' alleged
helpless cry left such a vivid impression of a man seemingly
bereft of hope that anyone who heard them would remember the
exact words? Why did he allegedly beseech God to "let this cup
pass" (Matthew 26:39, Mark 14:36, Luke 22:42)? Did he get cold
feet? Was he trying to back out of a fate he had previously
accepted? Was the redemption of mankind not so important any
more?
c) If Jesus' (pbuh) sole mission to mankind was to die on the
cross, free all of Mankind from the original sin,
free them from the law of Moses (pbuh), and provide
salvation for them, then why when he spoke to the Canaanite
woman in Matthew 15:22-8 did he refuse to heal her daughter on
the grounds that he was sent to the Jews alone "I am not sent
but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel,"? According
to Jesus' words in these verses, his mission was for the Jews
alone, therefore it was not fitting for him to even heal
a non-Jewess woman since in his own words "It is not meet to
take the children's bread and to cast it to dogs." Was Jesus
to die on the cross for the Jews alone? If Jesus (pbuh)
did not see fit to even heal non-Jews then how could we
claim that he knew and accepted from the beginning of time that
he was going to endure torture, humiliation, and finally a very
gruesome death in order to provide eternal salvation for
all of mankind? Did God and Jesus (pbuh) not know when
he was first sent what his ultimate mission would be? Did his
mission change later on? Did they not decide that it was
necessary for Jesus (pbuh) to die for the "original sin" until
the end of Jesus' mission?
Once again, we find both alternatives preposterous. As has
been previously proven in chapter one from both the Old
Testament as well as the Qur'an, mankind does not inherit sin,
nor does God hold them responsible for the same. God only judges
mankind according to their own individual actions and forgives
much of their transgressions. Jesus (pbuh) was human messenger
of God sent to the Jews alone in order to return them to
the message of Moses and discard the innovations
that had crept into their book over the ages. The "universal
messenger" (Muhammad, pbuh) would not come until six hundred
years later. He would teach mankind that God Almighty was
capable of all things and that mankind's salvation lies within
their own hands if they worship Him as He commanded and seek His
boundless mercy.