Jesus or Muhammad Choose Your Role Model
- Sermon By: Evangelist Noah Oriyomi Ezekiel
- Categories: Our Books
Jesus or Muhammad Choose Your Role Model
Every religion rises or falls on the character, teaching, and example of its
founder. Creeds, laws, and rituals ultimately flow from the life of the one who
established them. For this reason, any honest evaluation of Christianity and
Islam must move beyond slogans and sentiment and return to a simple but
unavoidable question: Who better reflects the character and will of
God—Jesus Christ or Muhammad?
This book is not written out of hatred for Muslims, nor is it a cultural attack
on Islamic people. It is written out of concern for truth, moral clarity, and
faithfulness to Scripture. Ideas must be examined, claims must be tested, and
moral examples must be weighed. The Bible itself commands believers to
“test the spirits” and to give a reasoned defense for the hope that is within
them. Silence in the face of serious moral and theological contradictions is
not humility; it is negligence.
Christianity and Islam both claim divine origin. Both appeal to Abraham.
Both speak of revelation, prophecy, judgment, heaven, and hell. Yet when
their founders are examined side by side—using their own authoritative
sources—the differences are not minor or superficial. They are foundational.
They concern the nature of God, the value of human life, the treatment of
women, the use of violence, the meaning of holiness, and the way sinners are
addressed.
Jesus Christ stands at the center of Christianity not merely as a teacher, but as
the incarnate revelation of God’s character. His life, words, and actions are
presented in the New Testament as the definitive expression of divine
holiness, love, and truth. Muhammad, in Islam, is not divine, but he is
presented as the final prophet and the supreme moral example whose actions
and commands shape Islamic law and ethics. What Muhammad did, ordered,
and approved matters profoundly, because Muslims are commanded to
imitate him


