In his farewell lecture at Darussalaam, College Park, MD, Muhammad AlShareef expounds on the lessons we learn from the life of Prophet Eesa/Jesus (AS). He begins with the story of Maryam/Mary,(AS) her virtues, the virgin birth as well as the trials she faced. Prophet Eesa’s(AS) compelling connection to us as the Ummah of Muhammad (SAW) is discussed, as well as his virtue of patience, wisdom, humility and the gratefulness to Allah (SWT). Muhammad Alshareef takes this opportunity to remind us that for every obstacle we face, we must remember lessons from the life of the prophets and see these obstacles as way to grow stronger in working for the sake of Allah (SWT).
One of the Greatest dabates in the last century, Sheikh Ahmed Deedat accepted the challange and debated Dr. Anis Shorrosh, in this debate u can see how Anis delt with the audince, how weak is his Arabic language though he is an Arab! and many other things, Worth seeing ...
bro fi_sabilillah, u know the purpose of life lecture series, theres over 30 lectures there???What they all about? I've heard his one hour lecture, how ocme there are so many more here?
Make Dua for your Brothers and the Angels will make Dua for You!
Happy moments, Praise Allah
Difficult moments, Seek Allah
Quiet moments, Worship Allah
Painful moments, Trust Allah
Every moment, Thank Allah
If Allah brings you to it, He will bring you through it
This book examines Jesus as a prophet teaching the Unity of God, and the historical collapse of Christianity as it abandoned his teaching. The author sketches the dramatic picture of the original followers of Jesus who affirmed Unity. What emerges is that "Christianity" is the fiction that replaced their truth. A work that covers the Gospel of Barnabas, the Gospel of Hermes, the Shephard, early and later Unitarian Christians, Jesus in the Gospels and in the Qur'an and Hadith. The author clearly shows the idea of Jesus as part of a Trinity was a Greek Pagan idea adopted by early Christian mission-aries to gain converts among the Greek, and did not become a widely accepted Christian doctrine until after the Council of Nicea in 325 A.D.
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