Moses was a Muslim who led Muslims in Exodus from Egypt

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By Itamar Marcus and Nan Jacques Zilberdik.. A Palestinian university lecturer taught during a recent Palestinian Authority TV program on religion that Moses, a Muslim, brought “the Muslims of the Children of Israel out of Egypt.” He refers to the subsequent Israeli conquest of the Land of Israel as the “first Palestinian liberation… of Palestine.” This conquest, he taught, was led not by Joshua, as the Bible tells, but by Saul (Talut) who is also said to have slayed Goliath. 

While some of this is retelling of Islamic tradition, some of it is a distortion of even the Quran for political purposes. The Quran refers to the “Children of Israel” in their land in many chapters (e.g., Sura 5), but it never refers to them or anyone else as “Palestinians.” Likewise the Quran never refers to Israel’s conquest as a “Palestinian” conquest. The lecturer on PA TV, however, deviates from Islamic tradition, and calls the nation of Israel’s conquest of the Land of Israel “the first Palestinian liberation through armed struggle to liberate Palestine.”

This is another example, among many documented by Palestinian Media Watchof  PA historical revision for political purposes, in this case, rewriting even their own Islamic traditions.

The following is the interview with Dr. Omar Ja’ara, lecturer at Al-Najah University in Nablus and specialist in Israeli affairs, on PA TV religion program:

“We must make clear to the world that David in the Hebrew Bible is not connected to David in the Quran, Solomon in the Hebrew Bible is not connected to Solomon in the Quran, and neither is Saul or Joshua son of Nun [of the Bible]. We have a great leader, Saul, [in the Quran] who defeated the nation of giants and killed Goliath. This is a great Muslim victory. The Muslims of the Children of Israel went out of Egypt under the leadership of Moses, and unfortunately, many researchers deny the Exodus of those oppressed people who were liberated by a great leader, like Moses the Muslim, the believing leader, the great Muslim, who was succeeded by Saul, the leader of these Muslims in liberating Palestine.  This was the first Palestinian liberation through armed struggle to liberate Palestine from the nation of giants led by Goliath. This is our logic and this is our culture.”

[PA TV (Fatah), Feb. 15, 2012]

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5 Comments to “Moses was a Muslim who led Muslims in Exodus from Egypt”

  1. Going by the first scripture in the world, which the Quran agree to, I can vehenmentally said that the lecturer should go back to school and learn his history very well. He should study the QURAN very well and said exatly the truth of the matter. For at the end or the life there after every person would give account of himself.

  2. JOS says:

    My friend, stop that crap…….
    There was no Islam or Christian religion during the period of Moses. This is how you people cause confusion all over the world and twist the truth.
    Please, read your bible very well and I am sure Quaran did not teach what you wrote here. The misunderstanding of God’s purpose for his creation is what has put the world in a mess today imagine some group of people in the name of Islam killing God’s creation in the name of going to heaven… remember the scripture that says Only Jesus can save!
    Repent and believe the scripture……
    Hell is real and Heaven is real….
    Bible is in several languages now….please read and understand it. You and your household will be saved…. God bless you….

  3. JOS says:

    KNOWING JESUS THROUGH HIS MESSENGER

    “‘See, I will send My messenger, who will prepare the way
    before Me. Then suddenly the Lord you are seeking will come
    to His temple; the Messenger of the covenant, whom you desire,
    will come,’ says the LORD Almighty” (Malachi 3:1).

    The prophet Malachi gave God’s final promises of the Old Testament. One of the greatest of these promises is found in Malachi chapter three, verse one. God assured His people that He would send a messenger. This messenger would have a special task–”to prepare the way.” For whom? He “will prepare the way before ME,” said the LORD (Yahweh)!

    VOICE IN THE DESERT

    Also in the book of Malachi (4:5) God promised to send a prophet, “Elijah.” Elijah had lived in dry, desert places. An earlier prophet, Isaiah, had foretold the coming of a voice in the desert.

    “A voice of one calling: ‘In the desert prepare the way for
    the LORD; make straight in the wilderness a highway for our
    God….And the glory of the LORD will be revealed, and all
    mankind will see it. For the mouth of the LORD has spoken’”
    (Isaiah 40:3-5).

    For over a thousand years, from Moses to Malachi, God had spoken often. He had sent many prophets to Israel . Their work had resulted in the Old Testament. But after the prophet Malachi there were about 400 years of silence–no recognized prophets spoke from God. There were no new writers from God for the Old Testament. God’s people wondered when God would fulfill His promises. When would the messenger come to make preparation? When would God’s glory be revealed?

    THE YEARS OF SILENCE

    During those long years more and more people were hearing about God’s promises. New rulers captured the land of Israel . While some Israelites (by then called Jews) stayed in their homeland, others were scattered far and wide. In distant countries they told others of the one true God. They were able to use Greek, the language that many peoples shared at that time.

    OLD TESTAMENT IS TRANSLATED INTO GREEK

    About 150 years after Malachi the full Old Testament was translated from the Hebrew language into the Greek language. During the following 250 years, trained workers made copies of this Greek Bible. The copies were carried to many places. In their weekly meetings, Jews read the Old Testament aloud (Acts 15:21). Even some non-Jews came to believe in God’s promises. More and more people looked forward to the Lord’s coming.

    GOD SPEAKS AGAIN

    Then people in Israel began to hear of amazing events. A child named John was born to a couple named Zechariah and Elizabeth (Luke 1:5-24, 57-80). Yet Elizabeth was well beyond the age for giving birth! An angel, using words from Malachi 4:5-6, had announced,

    “He (John) will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power
    of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to their children
    and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous–to make
    ready a people prepared for the Lord” (Luke 1:17).

    John’s father, Zechariah, had also used words from Malachi 3:1. By God’s Spirit Zechariah prophesied:

    “And you, my child (John), will be called a prophet of the
    Most High; for you will go on before the Lord to prepare
    the way for Him” (Luke 1:76).

    God’s promises, made through Malachi 400 years earlier, were coming true! God was ending His long silence! He was speaking again. Just as He promised, He was speaking through an “Elijah.”

    THE NEW ELIJAH

    John was not the Elijah of the past (John 1:21; Luke 9:30). But John was like that ancient prophet in many ways. Those who knew the Old Testament could recognize John, not only as a true prophet, but as a new “Elijah” (Matthew 11:7-14; 21:26).

    Elijah spent much time in the wilderness — 1 Kings 17-19
    John spent much time in the wilderness — Luke 1:80;Matthew 3:1

    Elijah dressed in rough clothes — 2 Kings 1:8
    Like Elijah, John dressed in rough clothes — Matthew 3:4

    Like Elijah, John’s preaching was full of courage. He had “the spirit and power of Elijah” (Luke 1:17). He spoke out against all sin, even the king’s sin (Luke 3; Matthew 14). John commanded the people of Israel to prepare for the Lord’s coming. John himself quoted from the prophet Isaiah (40:30),

    “I am the voice of one calling in the desert, ‘Make straight
    the way for the Lord’ ” (John 1:23).

    How could they make the way straight? How could they prepare for the King?

    JOHN THE BAPTIZER

    John told them to prepare by repenting and being baptized.

    “In those days John the Baptist came preaching…”Repent, for
    the kingdom of heaven is near’ ” (Matthew 3:1-2).

    John came, baptizing in the desert region and preaching a
    baptism for the forgiveness of sins (Mark 1:4).

    “Repentance” is making up one’s mind to leave sin and to live for God. By repenting the people promised to do right in the future. Yet that decision alone could not change their wrongs of the past. For the pure and holy King there had to be FULL preparation. Even past sins had to be removed, by forgiveness.

    Those who repented had to be baptized. John thus became known as “John the Baptizer,” or “John the Baptist.” (The word “baptize” comes from the Greek Language. In that language it means to immerse or plunge under water. That is why John baptized “in the Jordan River ” and there was “much water,” Mark 1:5; John 3:23).

    Through baptism John separated the people. Those who wanted to get ready for the Messiah confessed their sins and were baptized. But others, especially the religious leaders, were too proud. They would not admit how sinful they were. They refused to be humbled by being dipped under the water. Baptism required simple obedience to God’s command. It meant trusting God for forgiveness. Their hard hearts had no room for such trust and obedience.

    All the people, even the tax collectors…acknowledged that God’s way was right, because they had been baptized by John. But the Pharisees and experts in the law rejected God’s purpose for themselves, because they had not been baptized by John (Luke 7:29-30).

    ONE GREATER THAN JOHN

    The leaders should have listened to John. He was “a prophet…and more than a prophet,” a truly great man (Matthew 11:9-11). Yet, as great as John was, the Coming One would be much greater. John himself said,

    “I baptize you with water for repentance. But after me will
    come One who is more powerful than I, whose sandals I am
    not fit to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and
    fire” (Matthew 3:11).

    John hardly dared to touch the shoes of the Coming One. John used water for baptism; the Coming One could do something far greater–he would baptize using God’s Spirit! The Holy Spirit is part of God Himself. Who would be so high and exalted that He could use the Holy Spirit as John used water?

    Yet this Coming One looked like an ordinary man. So John, by himself, had no way to recognize Him. God told John to look for this sign: The Holy Spirit would take the shape of a dove and come down on the Coming One, the One about whom John preached (John 1:33).

    THE BAPTISM OF JESUS

    While John was prophesying about the Coming One, Jesus was over 100 kilometers (62 miles) away, at the village of Nazareth . He was a humble carpenter, helping to care for his mother, brothers and sisters.

    Jesus then traveled to meet John and to be baptized by him. John knew of Jesus’ goodness. He did not want to baptize Jesus. John said,

    “…I need to be baptized by You, and do You come to
    me?” (John 3:14).

    Jesus had no sins to confess. He had no need of forgiveness. But He always fulfilled God’s righteous will. He commanded John to baptize Him (Matthew 3:13-15). When Jesus was baptized, the Spirit of God came down and settled on Him. A voice from heaven said,

    “You are My Son, whom I love; with You I am well pleased”
    (Luke 3:21-22).

    John realized then that the Coming One was JESUS. The One for whom John had been looking had arrived!

    “…John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, ‘Look, the
    Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world! This is
    the One I meant when I said, I myself did not
    know Him, but the reason I came baptizing with water was
    that He might be revealed to Israel .’ Then John gave this
    testimony: ‘I saw the Spirit come down from heaven as a
    dove and remain on Him. I would not have known Him, except
    that the One who sent me to baptize with water told me,
    ‘ I have seen and I
    testify that this is the Son of God” (John 1:29-34).

    LISTENING TO JOHN

    Isaiah and Malachi had drawn a picture of the special messenger who would prepare the way. John the Baptizer was the only one who fit that picture. John prepared for the Great One to come.

    For whom did he prepare? Jesus!

    John led all the people toward Jesus (John 3:22-36). John’s part is so important that it helps to begin each of the first four books of the New Testament — Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Anyone who seeks to know the truth about Jesus should give careful thought to the report of John. For John too was a lover of truth.

    John spoke the truth so boldly that he was later killed by King Herod (Mark 6:14-29). He was an eyewitness of heaven’s sign, which pointed to Jesus. Through John’s testimony we can be sure that the Coming One promised by the Old Testament is JESUS. John helps us to see the Light.

    “There came a man who was sent from God; his name was John.
    He came as a witness to testify concerning that Light, so
    that through him all men might believe. He himself was not
    the Light; he came only as a witness to the Light”
    (John 1:6-7).

    SUMMARY

    God closed the Old Testament with wonderful promises. He would come to visit His temple. A special messenger would prepare for His coming. 400 years passed. Then God spoke again. The New Testament opened by telling of John the Baptizer, the new “Elijah.” He was the preparing prophet predicted by Malachi and Isaiah. For whom did John prepare? John prepared for, and pointed to, JESUS.

  4. Mary says:

    History can not be rewritten. I challeged the writer to read he/her Quaran and other books very well, the parsian nations are present iran and Iraq

  5. YD Solomon says:

    A lie that is half truth is deadlier than a blatant one.

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