⚡ Allah — Theology, Attributes, and the Deceiver Problem
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Islamic Theology of Allah
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Islamic Theology of Allah
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Christian-Muslim Dialogue
Use this when: discussing how Muhammad received the Quran, or when engaging the claim that Islamic revelation came through a trustworthy angel. The sources below raise serious questions about the nature of Muhammad's revelatory encounter.
Use this when: engaging claims that the hadith corpus is a reliable, divinely guided record — or when a Muslim appeals to it as a source of miraculous wisdom. These are all from canonical collections.
Use this when15).
Use this when: discussing the Islamic vision of salvation, the afterlife, or contrasting the Christian hope with the Islamic one. The sources below reveal a paradise defined largely by sensory gratification and a hell whose population is determined by Allah's arbitrary will.
Use this when: in conversation with a Muslim who claims "Islam is scientifically accurate" or who points to Quranic miracles. These hadith show what the canonical sources actually say about medicine, astronomy, and weather — and none of it aligns with modern science.
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Islamic Christology
Use this when15), but be precise.
Use this when: a specific Islamic topic comes up that does not fit neatly into a larger category, or when making a quick point about the internal contradictions, odd rulings, or historical curiosities in the Islamic corpus.
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Muhammad's Life and Prophethood
Use when: Someone claims the Bible has been corrupted (tahrif), the NT canon was invented at Nicaea, or 2,000 years of copying destroyed the text.
Use this when: a Muslim claims Islam is uniquely egalitarian and anti-racist, or when discussing Islam's record on race in its canonical texts. These sources are from Sahih and Hasan-graded collections.
Use this when: responding to claims that Islam has a high view of sexual ethics or when engaging the topic of slavery, captive women, and age of consent in Islamic jurisprudence. These sources are from canonical texts, not fringe interpretations.
Use this when: engaging with a Shia Muslim, or when a Sunni Muslim argues that Shia Islam is a separate religion. This document covers Shia-specific beliefs, their own hadith sources (thaqalayn), and key differences from Sunni Islam.
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Christian-Muslim Dialogue
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Islamic Permissible Deception
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — The Quranic Treatment of Scripture
Use this when: a Muslim invokes the Sahaba as morally exemplary figures or claims the early Islamic community was a model of purity. The sources below come from canonical collections.
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Christian-Muslim Dialogue
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Quranic Reliability
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Violence in Islam
Use this when: someone objects that sacrificial atonement is morally primitive, that the Aqedah shows God endorses child sacrifice, or that Jesus's death has nothing to do with the Hebrew sacrificial system. Works against Jewish, Muslim, and secular objections.
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Women in Islam
Use this when: discussing Islamic spiritual practices or when a Muslim argues that Islamic ritual purity is divinely prescribed precision. These hadiths come from canonical collections and describe Satan interacting directly with ritual and bodily functions.
Key Claim13–15 are not invented genealogy. Assyrian royal annals, Babylonian chronicles, Greek geographers, Roman historians, and modern archaeology independently confirm tribal names and settlements in the exact territory Genesis assigns to Ishmael's descendants — centuries before Islam existed. This archaeological trail also confirms the theological argument: the Arab/Muslim world descends from Ishmael, and Genesis is explicit that the Abrahamic covenant passed through Isaac, not Ishmael. God kept his temporal promises to Ishmael in full. The covenant promises — including the Messiah — were reserved for the Isaac line.
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Muslim-Christian Dialogue
Type: Doctrine and Apologetics Reference — Trinity
Tractate Sotah deals with the ordeal of the sotah (the accused wife) and related matters. Its 48th folio records a tradition about the cessation of prophetic activity in Israel — a claim with enormous implications for any religion that produces prophets after Malachi.
Status: Debate topic in development (time and format TBD)
Type: Apologetics Reference Document — Christian-Muslim Dialogue
النوع: وثيقة مرجعية دفاعية — الحوار المسيحي الإسلامي