The Koran's Challenge to Christians Who Believe in the Incarnation

Introduction

I have asked Christian after Christian after Christian (the ones who believe in the incarnation, anyway, this being the party which constitutes the majority of the religion) the following question, and just as I expected, not a single one of them actually answered the question. I have yet to hear any Christian actually give a straight answer. Usually they would just come up with illogical reasons why the question is invalid, all of which I debunked. Anyway, the question is:

They are unbelievers who say, “God is the Messiah, Mary’s son.” Say: “Who then shall override God in any way if He desires to destroy the Messiah, Mary’s son, and his mother, and all those who are on earth?”

(- 5:17 -)
Noble Quran

If you believe in the Trinity, dear reader, and it helps you to understand this verse, substitute “God” in this verse with “God the Father”. (He is, after all, the only part of the Trinity that the Koran says is real.) If Jesus (on whom be peace) was God incarnate, then who could stop God the Father from wiping him out of existence? After all, he was, according to Christians who believe in the incarnation, human as well as divine, and God the Father can destroy any human being. God can do anything, remember? This is attested to in the Bible (as well as in the Koran):

With God all things are possible. (Matthew 19:26)

So what could stop God the Father from annihilating God the Son? Remember that God the Father is in apparent control of the other two parts of the Trinity (assuming, of course, and falsely so, as I demonstrate in numerous articles on this site, that the Trinity doctrine is true). He is the one who sends the other two; they answer to him. Jesus (on whom be peace) is spoken of in the Bible as even praying to him (Mark 1:35). The Holy Spirit, if it is indeed meant in the Trinitarian sense in John 14:26, is also sent by the Father. The Father is obviously the dominant part of the Trinity. So who could stop God the Father from annihilating the Messiah (on whom be peace) if he ever decided to do that? (I know that He never would, but the question is purely theoretical, demonstrating a specific principle.)

Like I’ve said, no Christian I’ve yet asked has answered this question, and that does not surprise me at all. The Koran is always right, and as such I don’t think that a real answer to the question is even possible. If you, dear reader, are a Christian who believes in the incarnation, and you actually have an answer—a real answer, a straight answer, and not an evasion—then feel free to tell me in an e-mail (my e-mail address is fadetoyellow@graffiti.net) or in this site’s shoutbox. But I am not holding my breath for such an event to happen. Like I said, the challenge cannot be met, because this question, this challenge, unravels the doctrine of the incarnation completely.

The question, once again, is “Who…shall override God in any way if He desires to destroy the Messiah, Mary’s son, and his mother, and all those who are on earth?” This is the Koran’s challenge to Christians who believe in the incarnation; I can only hope that if such a Christian is reading this, he or she will realize that the Koran has him or her trapped, and subsequently do the right thing and give up their belief in the incarnation.

May God bless us all and guide us all to Truth.