After following the Injil, the Qur’an, and Allah’s actions, the reader reaches a crossroads. Surah 4 and Surah 8 reclaim divine agency, leaving one unavoidable question: how did Allah intervene in the case of ʿĪsā—and what does that mean?
If Allah vindicated ʿĪsā after accusations of blasphemy, then Allah affirmed more than innocence. This article explores how vindication narrows the question to authority—and what Allah’s action implies about ʿĪsā’s claims.
If Allah raised ʿĪsā after accusations of blasphemy, then Allah was not silent. This article explores what resurrection would mean as Allah’s verdict—what was vindicated, what was overturned, and why this action demands interpretation.
After accusations of blasphemy and the claim of resurrection, the decisive question is no longer human opinion but Allah’s response. This article explores what resurrection would mean as Allah’s verdict on ʿĪsā’s life, words, and authority.
For Muslims, Jews, and Christians alike, everything begins with a single question: Who is Allah? The Quran speaks often about Allah — His nature, His names, His authority, and His will. This page begins by listening carefully to how Allah is described in the Quran itself, before asking where those descriptions lead a sincere seeker.