When I was Muslim, I would argue that Jesus predicted Muhammad.
This worked until I actually read John 14. “...the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name…”
Break it down:
Helper = parakletos (Greek). This means advocate, intercessor, Spirit of truth. Not a man. Not a prophet. A Spirit.
If you claim that’s Muhammad, you have to take the whole verse: Jesus says the Helper comes in His name.
So, basically, you’re saying Allah sent someone in the name of Jesus.
Pause.
That doesn’t prove Muhammad, that points to Christ. Jesus says this Helper would come after Him and live inside believers.
Unless Muhammad is out here indwelling Christians like the Holy Spirit… it doesn’t fit.
I didn’t want this to be true. It meant the Bible wasn’t corrupt, just inconvenient.
So next time someone says Jesus predicted Muhammad, ask them:
Did He also say that the messenger would come in His name?
Because that’s what the text says. Unless Muhammad changed his name to Jesus Christ on the way out to Mecca, we are done here.
Moses: “Thus says the Lord.”
Joshua: “Thus says the Lord.”
Isaiah: “Thus says the Lord.”
Jeremiah: “Thus says the Lord.”
Ezekiel: “Thus says the Lord.”
The prophets pointed to God.
They spoke on His behalf: “Thus says the Lord.”
But Jesus Christ spoke differently:
Jesus did not just speak for God,
He spoke with His own authority:
“I say to you.”
Not everyone is fornicating
Not everyone is sleeping around
Not everyone is sexually promiscuous
Not everyone is sleeping over in a boyfriend’s house
Do you but don’t think everyone is doing it because you are.
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The Islamic imam who put 1million naira to any Muslim that can behead a pastor for preaching Jesus has said:
“…whoever carries out this job (of beheading the pastor), I swear to Allah I’ll give him one million naira. We have nothing to lose even if after beheading this pastor, the Arewa plunges into chaos, we have nothing to lose…”
Dear @OfficialDSSNG@PoliceNG
We know you will pretend not to see this. But we are bringing this to your attention again.
There are Muslim clerics in northern Nigeria who are openly calling for the beheading of Christian pastors.
Pls help retweet this for the world to see.
@ChristianEmerg1 Their quran issa is different from JESUS in our Bible
Their own Jesus was born under a tree....our own JESUS was born in a manger in Bethlehem
We don't serve the same God
Did you know that Jacob was burried in the caves with Leah and not with Rachael?
He chose the quiet wife.
Not the one he cried for.
Not the one he worked fourteen years to win.
Jacob—yes, that Jacob—was buried beside Leah, not Rachel.
Let that sit.
In Genesis 49:29–31, as Jacob was nearing death, he gave strict instructions:
Bury me with my fathers… in the cave… there they buried Abraham and Sarah… Isaac and Rebekah… and there I buried Leah.
Leah.
Not Rachel.
Rachel was the love story.
Leah was the covenant story.
Rachel had Jacob’s passion.
Leah had his promise.
Rachel died on the road (Genesis 35:19).
Leah was laid to rest in the family grave—the sacred line of promise, the lineage of God’s covenant.
And here’s where it cuts deep—
Leah was the unwanted one.
The overlooked one.
The one Jacob never chose first.
But God did.
From Leah came Judah—and from Judah came Jesus Christ.
Let that shake you.
The woman who was second in a man’s eyes became central in God’s plan.
But here’s what we miss…
We chase being “Rachel”—desired, seen, validated.
But heaven often builds legacy through the “Leah seasons”—the places of rejection, quiet obedience, and unseen faithfulness.
Jacob’s burial wasn’t just about love.
It was about alignment.
At the end of his life, he didn’t choose romance—
he chose covenant.
And that’s the Gospel whispering through the dust:
God doesn’t build His kingdom on human preference.
He builds it on grace.
Leah’s story screams this truth—
You don’t have to be chosen by people to be chosen by God.
And through Jesus, the greater Son of Judah,
the rejected become redeemed,
the unseen become eternal,
and the unloved become fully known.
If you feel like Leah today—
forgotten, overlooked, second place—
hear this:
God sees you.
God uses you.
God writes history through you.