Know what they'll say before they say it. Every response is built on primary source evidence — Torah, manuscripts, and Islamic scholars' own documentation.
Muslims claim the Torah and Gospels were altered after Muhammad's time to remove prophecies about him.
Translation diversity is presented as proof of corruption. It is actually evidence of the opposite.
A common objection claiming Jesus only said he was a prophet and the church invented his divinity later.
Islam teaches the Trinity means three separate gods — shirk, the gravest sin in Islam.
Islam claims the covenant, the sacrifice, and the promises were made through Ishmael, not Isaac.
Muslims claim the Paraclete in John 14 and the prophet in Deuteronomy 18 refer to Muhammad.
Some Muslims equate the Holy Spirit with Gabriel, citing Quranic references to Ruh al-Qudus.
A common claim that the real Jesus taught Islam but Paul invented a new religion around him.
Muslims claim the Quran's linguistic perfection is proof of divine authorship — the inimitability challenge.
Citing Surah 5:48 or Surah 109 as a divine permission slip to end the conversation when the argument is lost.
Demanding a specific word-for-word phrase as a debate-ending gotcha — a standard applied to no other historical claim.
Claiming the Trinity was a political invention by Constantine — not original Christianity.
Using Jesus's prayers as evidence he could not be divine — arguing God cannot pray to God.
Presented as Islamic tolerance and reverence — but it is a demotion of Isa disguised as honor.
Arguing that “Son of God” implies sexual reproduction, beneath God (Surah 112:3).
The question that unlocks the most unsettling layer of the isra'iliyyat argument.
Muslims cite this verse expecting a quick win. It is actually one of the most powerful verses in the entire isra'iliyyat argument — and it belongs to you.
The Quran critiques the Trinity — but identifies it as Father, Jesus, and Mary. That's not Christianity. It's a fringe Arabian sect. The Quran is arguing with the wrong target.
Every madrasa on earth is named after a Jewish school. Islam's first legal ruling came from a Torah scroll. The word, the concept, and the content all trace to the same source.
The Quran names the Sabians three times and never defines them. Classical scholars couldn't agree. Modern scholarship points to two candidates — and the ambiguity itself is the argument.
A pre-Islamic Gnostic sect in Mesopotamia had a three-tier purity system that maps forensically onto wudu, ghusl, and zakat — centuries before Muhammad. This is a convergence that requires explanation.
Islam's own interior mystical tradition emerged in Basra — the same city the Mandaeans called home. The World of Light, fana, and the Nur Muhammadi all carry Gnostic DNA Islam never acknowledged.
There were two destructions of Jerusalem centuries apart. Confusing them collapses the apologetics argument. The Talmud was not born after 70 AD — it was the product of 1,200 years of Jewish life inside Mesopotamia.
The Quran mandates modest covering but never explains why “because of the angels.” The answer is in the Torah.
Yom Kippur's two goats are one of the Torah's most precise foreshadowings — and Islam has no fulfillment for them.
The Mosaic covenant was never meant to be permanent. The Torah itself promises its own replacement — and Islam has no fulfillment for this promise.
Islam's most visible pillar — a month of daylight fasting — predates Muhammad. The Quran admits it. The hadiths document the pivot from Ashura. And historians trace the structure directly to Syriac Christian Lent.