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2006-06-05 12:31:02 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

The last poster proved my point. SOme muslims are taught that Jesus says Allah Allah on the cross, but in the same breath will tell you it wasnt him on the cross.

The eastern muslims will. The western muslims ( the ones on yahoo ), will tell you it just wasnt him, because they face christians everyday. While the middle eastern ones, dont, so they dont have to be perfect in their deception.

2006-06-06 14:19:02 · update #1

5 answers

This question fails cuz Muslims don't believe he was on the cross. But if he was he would be dying of a combination of blood loos and suffocation due to his lungs inability to contract so he wouldn't have said anything.

2006-06-05 15:16:04 · answer #1 · answered by neveroutnumbered 4 · 2 1

.Muslims trying to prove their position from the Bible point to the Old Testament with the word alleluyah, interpreting the first portion of the word alle as Allah. The word [H]alleluyah is not a compound Hebrew word. It is not two words but a singular word meaning praise to Yahweh. (alle- praise, lu-to, yah-Yaweh). The beginning of the word is Hallel meaning praise. This has nothing to do with an Allah, and the last syllable of the word is a reference to Yahweh the God of the Bible, this is hardly any evidence for their assertions. They are also confusing Aramaic with Arabic. This is not unusual, as Muslims will often take words and meanings set in another language and culture and adopt them for proof of their own book or religion.

This word play only gets more ludicrous as they try to have Jesus saying the name of their God. When Jesus was on the cross they claim when he cried out Eli, Eli it was really is Allah, Allah. The New Testament was written in Greek, however it points us to him speaking the Aramaic language, not Arabic. Jesus was quoting Psalm 22:1 which read in full says, Eli, Eli Sabbathani “My God, My God why have you forsaken me.” What makes even less sense for this position is the fact that they don't believe that it was Jesus on the cross in the first place, but that another took His place. Some think it was Judas; so it was Judas crying out Allah, Allah?

The first Arabic translation of the Bible came into existence about the 9th century. Nowhere is the name of Allah found in the Old or New Testament. When Islam became the dominant political force people were coerced to use the name Allah for God or suffer the consequences from the hands of militant Muslims. Because of Islam's dominance Allah became the common name of God. The translators of the Bible gave in to the religious pressures and substituted Allah for Yahweh in the Arabic Bibles, but this is not the name of the God of the Hebrews, nor of the creator who made heaven and earth because of its source in paganism. His nature and attributes have only a few basic similarities and many more differences. And the most important point is that all through the Qu'ran it says Allah has no son.

2006-06-05 19:43:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Eloi Eloi, lama sabachthani? (Mark 15:34) is also the first line of David's Psalm 22. Which makes it possible that Jesus was reciting the Hebrew psalm.

But what does it matter the language in which the word "God" is said, whether it be Eli, Eloi, Allaah, Elohim, YHWH, Jehovah, I AM, Deus, Dios, or simply God?

2006-06-05 21:43:07 · answer #3 · answered by frodo 6 · 0 0

If He cried Allaah Allaah, the people would not have misinterpreted His calling for Elijah. They would think He was calling for Alibaba,

2006-06-05 19:35:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My Jesus said "Abba, Abba (Father, Father) why have you forsaken me?"

2006-06-05 19:34:24 · answer #5 · answered by Jedi for Christ 4 · 0 0

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