@ArewaBizHub@RealShahriqKhan It was done within their society and borders; not to others. That was the nature of the world at the time. Not everyone was a human being, God was guarding the true bloodline which you yourself a semite belongs to.
When I was Muslim, Surah 5:32 was my favorite verse to quote.
“Whoever kills a soul, it is as if he killed all of mankind.”
I put it in every debate. Every conversation about Islam and peace. It felt like the most beautiful verse in the Quran.
Then I read it slowly.
The verse doesn’t say Allah revealed this to Muhammad. It says: “We decreed upon the CHILDREN OF ISRAEL…”
Wait. Decreed where? When? I went looking.
And I found it.
Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:5. A rabbinic commentary on Cain and Abel, written down around 200 AD — four centuries before the Quran.
Rabbis discussing why Genesis says Abel’s “bloods” cry out — plural — and concluding: whoever destroys one soul, it is as if he destroyed an entire world.
Word for word. Same context. Same Cain and Abel story it’s attached to in Surah 5.
The most beautiful verse in the Quran is a rabbi’s classroom commentary.
And that’s when the question changed for me. It was never “is this verse beautiful?” It was: what is a rabbinic homily doing inside a book that claims to be the eternal, uncreated speech of God?
Because there are only two options:
Either Allah quoted the rabbis.
Or a man in Arabia heard Jewish teachers and repeated what they said.
The Bible predicted men would do this too.
Jeremiah 23:30 — “I am against the prophets who steal my words from one another.”
Once I stopped defending man’s word… I found the Living Word. Christ Jesus my King.
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Muslims rarely talk about the death of Muhammad, and for good reason. They’re not proud of how their prophet died. He passed away exactly like a false prophet, just as their own sources describe.
His companions waited by his body, hoping he would resurrect like Jesus. But instead, his corpse began to decay and smell. They had no choice but to rush and bury him.
On the other hand, we Christians boldly proclaim the death of Jesus, because it was a victory, not a defeat.
Jesus clearly said He would die, and He did. He also said, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up” and He rose again, just as He promised.
We celebrate His death and resurrection because it marked the beginning of new life for all who believe in Him. His resurrection is our guarantee that we too will rise again with glorified bodies, just like our Lord.
Jesus conquered death. Muhammad was conquered by it.
@jumaf3 The company directors were forced to return the loot to the government and the guy was threatening them. He thought perhaps walibakishiwa kakitu for the work done.
Never confuse being easy to deal with for being respected. Some people call you mature because you cost them nothing. You absorb the delay, the disrespect, the excuses, the mixed signals, and they praise your patience. Many saints are just unpaid servants with good manners.
Okay, Documentary Twitter. Here are ten of my favourite YouTube documentaries with links. I tend to avoid AI videos because human beings aren't meant to consume AI slop.
A thread.
@G_Man_Explains@GitaGopinath 🫡
It's also why the last 30 years, the West has been losing to China around the world. Too much feminine leadership slows progress. They are not wired to deal with risk effectively
Naturally, in an emergency, women scream to notify the tribe.
Men act to address the threat.
You're right bro, Christianity brainwashed me. I want to spend the rest of my life with one person, pray for those who hate me, forgive easily, raise a beautiful family, stay away from gossip, and find true purpose in Jesus.
When I was in university, my roommate used to wake up every morning at 5am and leave the hostel dressed like she was going to class.
We all thought she had a rich uncle sponsoring her because she always had food, clean clothes, and never borrowed money.
One day I followed her out of curiosity.
Turns out she was working at a bakery before lectures started every morning. She hid it because she didn’t want people mocking her.
Fast forward to graduation day, while most of us were searching for jobs, she already had enough savings to open a small food spot.
Today she owns three restaurants.
That experience taught me something:
Never laugh at humble beginnings. Some people are sacrificing in silence while building the life everyone will admire later.
After finding Christ ❤️
Leandro de Souza was once known as the “most tattooed man in Brazil,” with nearly 95% of his body covered in ink.
But after giving his life to Christ, he began the painful process of removing the tattoos, saying he wanted the outside to reflect what God had already changed on the inside.
So I opened my Bible this morning like I always do. No bookmark. No theme. No plan. Just opened it and started reading.
And I about fell out of my chair.
My eyes landed on a verse I have read before but clearly never felt.
Isaiah 45:3
“I will give you the treasures of darkness, and hidden riches of secret places, that you may know that I, the Lord, who call you by your name, am the God of Israel.”
Treasures.
Of darkness.
That stopped me.
There are things you learn in grief you will never learn in comfort. There is authority forged in suffering that cannot be manufactured on a stage. There is intimacy with God that only grows when everything else has been stripped away.
Hidden riches.
Not obvious blessings. Not flashy miracles.
Hidden.
There is depth being built in you that applause could not sustain.
The darkness is not your grave.
It is your treasury.
And when God brings you out, you will not just be relieved.
You will be refined. You will be stronger. You will know Him in a way you never could have if the lights had stayed on.
I thought I was randomly opening my Bible this morning.
But Heaven had an appointment.
And if you needed this today, maybe it was not random for you either💗
🇨🇳 This might be the most futuristic thing you’ll see today:
Artificial skylights that use LED panels + nanotechnology to create hyper-realistic blue skies and sunlight in completely windowless rooms.
You can even switch from bright midday sun to warm sunset glow with a remote.
We’re now simulating the sky indoors because real windows are apparently too much to ask for in dense cities.
This is either peak innovation…or lowkey dystopian. You decide.
A man spent 50 years teaching at MIT.
Near the end, he knew time was running out. So he recorded one final lecture, everything he learned distilled into one hour.
He passed away 5 months later.
This is that lecture. Bookmark it.
Maya Johnson, a U.S. Army soldier deployed to Iraq (2019–2021), was nicknamed “Church Girl” for praying before every mission despite being mocked by teammates. She remained consistent in her faith, and during the time she joined convoy missions, her team avoided bomb attacks. When she was removed, the unit began getting hit, but after she returned, the attacks stopped again.
After a close call where she drove over a bomb that didn’t explode, she became even more bold in her faith. By the end of the deployment, all 300 soldiers in her unit returned home safely.
Her message: don’t stop praying, even when people mock you; you never know whose life it may impact.