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Make It Make Sense: How Islam Exalted a Man, Diminished the Christ, and Recast God

Par : Bilal Al-Habashi
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8231589371
  • EAN9798231589371
  • Date de parution10/08/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurWalzone Press

Résumé

Make It Make SenseBy Bilal al-HabashiA Messiah stripped of meaning. A prophet crowned without lineage. A theology tangled in its own reverence. In Make It Make Sense, author and polemicist Bilal al-Habashi launches an unrelenting investigation into the contradictions at the heart of Islamic Christology and prophetic succession. This is not a call for interfaith harmony - it's a courtroom for inherited theology.
Why is a man born of a virgin, called the Word of God, sinless, alive in heaven, and destined to return as judge - still framed as just a prophet in Islam? Why does the Qur'an affirm Jesus' exceptional status, while denying the cross that gives it meaning? And how does Mu?ammad - a man with no prophetic lineage, no continuity with Israel's covenant, no verifiable miracle - claim to complete the Abrahamic narrative while rewriting its terms? Islam reveres Jesus yet revokes His mission.
It canonizes Mu?ammad while severing him from the stream of revelation that preceded him. The Qur'an offers a muted Christ; the Hadiths offer an inflated Prophet. The result? A theology that exalts men but evacuates meaning. Make it make sense - how sacred titles are assigned but their significance denied. How a Messenger is enthroned without ancestry. How revelation is rewritten to fit a new center of power. Bold, incisive, and relentless in its logic, Make It Make Sense is a challenge to narrative compromise.
For those who prize coherence over comfort, this book is not merely an argument - it is an awakening.  
Make It Make SenseBy Bilal al-HabashiA Messiah stripped of meaning. A prophet crowned without lineage. A theology tangled in its own reverence. In Make It Make Sense, author and polemicist Bilal al-Habashi launches an unrelenting investigation into the contradictions at the heart of Islamic Christology and prophetic succession. This is not a call for interfaith harmony - it's a courtroom for inherited theology.
Why is a man born of a virgin, called the Word of God, sinless, alive in heaven, and destined to return as judge - still framed as just a prophet in Islam? Why does the Qur'an affirm Jesus' exceptional status, while denying the cross that gives it meaning? And how does Mu?ammad - a man with no prophetic lineage, no continuity with Israel's covenant, no verifiable miracle - claim to complete the Abrahamic narrative while rewriting its terms? Islam reveres Jesus yet revokes His mission.
It canonizes Mu?ammad while severing him from the stream of revelation that preceded him. The Qur'an offers a muted Christ; the Hadiths offer an inflated Prophet. The result? A theology that exalts men but evacuates meaning. Make it make sense - how sacred titles are assigned but their significance denied. How a Messenger is enthroned without ancestry. How revelation is rewritten to fit a new center of power. Bold, incisive, and relentless in its logic, Make It Make Sense is a challenge to narrative compromise.
For those who prize coherence over comfort, this book is not merely an argument - it is an awakening.