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Israel was unsuccessful attacked in 1948-49, 1956, 1967, 1973-74, and 1982. Since the Qu’ran teaches that the Torah is inspired word of Allah (Sura 10:94) then Muhammad not the Qu’ran must of been wrong at points that conflict. Since Israel has not or will not seed the land of Palestine.

The Qur'an teaches that Ishmael was the child of promise (Sura 19:54; compare Sura 37:83-109 with Genesis 22:1-19) and so Muslims believe that God's covenant promises were meant for Ishmael's descendants, not Isaac's. Muhammad descended from Ishmael and so Muslims seek to lay claim to these covenant promises, namely the land of Palestine.

2007-01-26 01:40:55 · 3 answers · asked by ALI 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

3 answers

The only answer is that the Quran is wrong, its not the inspired word of God. The bible tells us that Israel would indeed become a nation again, which it did. Its pretty obvious which one is wrong, and its not the bible.

2007-01-26 01:49:18 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Vatican has already admitted that the story of Ishmael was altered

http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0839/__PN.HTM

2 Placing the child on her back: the phrase is translated from an emended form of the Hebrew text. In the current faulty Hebrew text, Abraham put the bread and the waterskin on Hagar's back, while her son apparently walked beside her. This reading seems to be a scribal attempt at harmonizing the present passage with the data of the Priestly source, in which Ishmael would have been at least fourteen years old when Isaac was born; compare ⇒ Genesis 16:16 with ⇒ Genesis 21:5; cf ⇒ Genesis 17:25. But in the present Elohist story Ishmael is obviously a little boy, not much older than Isaac; cf ⇒ Genesis 15:18.

2007-01-26 10:07:11 · answer #2 · answered by Kimo 4 · 2 1

Where does it say in the Quran that the Jews will never have a land of their own? I have not found that claim, if you have please enlighten us.

The verse you mention, Sura 19:54 says: "Also mention in the Book (the story of) Isma'il: He was (strictly) true to what he promised, and he was a messenger (and) a prophet."

What does it have anything to do with Israel?

2007-01-26 09:58:37 · answer #3 · answered by wafer 2 · 1 1

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