Sunday 20 April 2014

Who Will Be The Muslim Antichrist And What He Will Look Like

By Essie Osborn


The three Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Islam and Christianity, have a lot more in common than it appears at first glance. All three have Abraham as a common starting point. One belief that all three religions have in common is the coming of a Messiah, who will be preceded by an anti-Christ or "false messiah." This does not imply that the false messiah that the Christians have been warned to look out for is going to be of the Islamic faith. The muslim antichrist, in Islamic eschatology, is an evil figure who will attempt to impersonate the Messiah in the time leading up to the Day of Resurrection.

The name of the imposter is recorded as Masih ad-Dajjal. Literally translated, this means, "false messiah." This last Dajjal will be preceded by no fewer than 29 other Dajjals. While he is expected to be blind in one eye, which will "bulge like a grape, " any self-respecting false prophet should probably make an effort to disguise this fact.

The term eschatology refers to what is going to happen at the end of the world. In Judaism, this is called the end of days. There is a surprising amount of overlap among the three Abrahamic faiths. It is, however, easier to compare Christian end times with Islamic end times than it is to compare either of them with Judaic end times.

Christians expect an increasing number of earthquakes, famines and wars (Matthew 24:7). This is the same in Islamic eschatology (Hadith - Bukhari 9.237). Both Christianity and Islam agree that the date and hour of the Messiah's return is unknown.

The majority of Christians would probably be very surprised to learn what Muslims think of Jesus. A large proportion love Jesus, believe He is the Messiah and put him up there with prophets like Moses, Abraham and Noah, along with Muhammad. They believe Him to be the Son of God and worship him accordingly. Others think He is a false prophet.

The role of Mary and her role in the virgin birth of Jesus Christ are mentioned in the Quran, the Islamic authoritative document similar in function to the Holy Bible. According to Islam, Allah (or God), Mary and Jesus are collectively known as the Trinity. Muslims, like their Christian brothers and sisters, believe that Jesus performed many miracles. Like followers of Christ, they attribute the power behind these miracles as God, and not the Man himself.

Basically, there is sufficient overlap between the three Abrahamic faiths that maybe we should stop kicking the crap out of each other and consolidate our common ground. Where there are differences, these can be attributed to Satan, the Father of all Lies, whose self-made mission it is to separate Man from God.

While it is true that some fossils seem to dispel the story of Creation as a myth, and no, nobody has yet found the rotted skeleton of a 4,000 year-old wooden ship that was the ark, the overlying principles remain. God is our Creator, he should be praised and worshiped and we should be nicer to one another.




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