by Robert A. Morey
        © 1996 Research and Education Foundation
        Christians must be prepared to answer the typical
        objections made against the Gospel. Most of the
        objections are based on simple logical fallacies. The
        following is a list of some of the most common fallacies
        used by Muslims. 
        Note: The average Muslim does not know that his
        arguments are logically erroneous. He is sincere in his
        beliefs. Thus you must be patient and kind in sharing
        with him why his arguments are invalid. 
        1. The Fallacy of False Assumptions: In logic as well
        as in law, "historical precedent" means that
        the burden of proof rests on those who set forth new
        theories and not on those whose ideas have already been
        verified. The old tests the new. The already established
        authority judges any new claims to authority. 
        Since Islam came along many centuries after
                Christianity, Islam has the burden of proof and
                not Christianity. The Bible tests and judges the
                Qur'an. When the Bible and The Qur'an contradict
                each other, the Bible must logically be given
                first place as the older authority. The Qur'an is
                in error until it proves itself.
Some Muslims violate the principle of historical
                precedent by asserting that Islam does not have
                the burden of proof and that the Qur'an judges
                the Bible. 
        
        2. Arguing in a circle: If you have already assumed in
        your premise what you are going to state in your
        conclusion, then you have ended where you began and
        proven nothing. 
        If you end where you began, you
                got nowhere. 
        
  Examples:
          - Proving Allah by the Qur'an and then proving
                the Qur'an by Allah.
 
            - Proving Muhammad by the Qur'an and then
                proving the Qur'an by Muhammad.
  
            - Proving Islam by the Qur'an and then proving
                the Qur'an by Islam.
 
 
       3. False Analogy: Comparing two things as if they
                are parallel when they are not really the same at
                all. 
                Examples: 
            - Many Muslims erroneously assume that Muslims
                and Christians share the same concepts of God,
                revelation, inspiration, textual preservation,
                the Bible, prophethood, biblical history,
                conversion, etc... 
 
            - Because a false analogy is drawn between Islam
                and Christianity, some Muslims think that any
                argument which refutes the Qur'an will likewise
                refute the Bible; any argument which refutes
                Muhammad will also refute Jesus Christ, etc...
 
            
            - For example, many Muslims claim that Muhammad
                and all prophets were sinless. They even deny
                that Abraham was an idol worshipper. Thus when a
                Christian points out all the wicked things that
                Muhammad did (mass murder, child abuse, lying,
                etc.), the Muslims will say, "If you are
                right, then you must also reject your biblical
                prophets for doing wicked things as well." 
 
          
            What he is really saying is, "If you reject
                my prophet, then you must reject your prophets as
                well. If Muhammad was a false prophet, then your
                prophets are false as well." 
            
           The root problem is that the Muslim concept of
                prophethood is not the same as the Christian
                concept of prophethood. We teach that prophets
                sin like anyone else. Thus while Islam is refuted
                by the sins of Muhammad, Christianity is not
                jeopardized at all. The Muslim is guilty of
                setting up a "false analogy." 
            Whenever a Muslim responds to a Christian attack
                on the Qur'an, Muhammad, or Allah by flipping the
                argument around and applying it to the Bible,
                Jesus or the Trinity as if Islam and Christianity
                either stand or fall together, he is guilty of
                the fallacy of false analogy. Islam can be false
                and Christianity be true at the same time. 
            4. The Fallacy of Irrelevance: When you introduce
                issues which have no logical bearing on the
                subject under discussion, you are using
                irrelevant arguments. 
                Examples: 
            - Some Muslims argue, "The Qur'an is the
                Word of God because the text of the Qur'an has
                been preserved perfectly." This argument is
                erroneous for two reasons: 
 
            - Factually, the text of the Qur'an has not been
                preserved perfectly. The text has additions,
                deletions, conflicting manuscripts, and variant
                readings like any other ancient writing.
 
            
            - Logically, it is irrelevant whether the text
                of the Qur'an has been preserved because
                preservation does not logically imply
                inspiration. A book can be perfectly copied
                without implying its inspiration. 
 
            
            - When Muslims attack the character and motives
                of anyone who criticizes Islam, they are using
                irrelevant arguments. The character of someone is
                no indication of whether he is telling you the
                truth. Good people can lie and evil people can
                tell the truth. Thus whenever a Muslim uses slurs
                such as "mean," "dishonest,"
                "racist," "liar,"
                "deceptive," etc., he is not only
                committing a logical fallacy but also revealing
                that he cannot intellectually defend his beliefs.
 
        
            - When confronted with the pagan origins of the
                Qur'an, some Muslims defend the Qur'an by
                answering, "So what! Didn't you Christians
                get Christmas from the pagans?" 
 
        
        This argument is erroneous for several reasons. 
        
            - It is a false analogy to parallel the pagan
                origins of the rites commanded in the Qur'an with
                the present day holidays nowhere commanded in the
                Bible. What some modern day Christians do on Dec.
                25th has no logical bearing on what the Qur'an
                commands Muslims to do (eg. the Pilgrimage, the
                Fast, etc.). 
 
            
            - It is irrelevant that some Christians choose
                to celebrate the birth of Christ. Since the Bible
                nowhere commands it, it is a matter of personal
                freedom. But Muslims are commanded in the Qur'an
                to believe and practice many things which came
                from the paganism of that day. 
 
            
            - The Muslim by using this argument is actually
                admitting that the Qur'an was not "sent
                down" but fabricated from pagan sources.
                This means he has become an unbeliever (Surah
                25:4-6). 
 
            
            - Some Muslims argue that the Qur'an is the Word
                of God because it contains some historically or
                scientifically accurate statements. This argument
                is irrelevant. Just because a book is correct on
                some historical or scientific point does not mean
                it is inspired. You cannot take the attributes of
                a part and apply it to the whole. A book can be a
                mixture of true and false statements. Thus it is
                a logical fallacy to argue that the entire Qur'an
                is true if it makes one true statement. 
 
            
            - When a Muslim argues that history or science
                "proves" the Qur'an, this actually
                means that he is acknowledging that history and
                science can likewise refute the Qur'an. If the
                Qur'an contains just one historical error or one
                scientific error, then the Qur'an is not the Word
                of God. Verification and falsification go hand in
                hand. 
 
            
            - The present meaning of a word is irrelevant to
                what it meant in ancient times. The word
                "Allah" is a good example. When
                confronted by the historical evidence that the
                word was used by pagan Arabs in pre-Islamic times
                to refer to a high god who was married to the
                sun-goddess and had three daughters, some Muslims
                will quote dictionaries, encyclopedias, etc. to
                prove (sic) that "Allah means God."
                They are thus using modern definitions to define
                what the word meant over a thousand years ago!
                What "Allah" means now has no bearing
                on what it meant before Muhammad. 
 
            
            5. The Fallacy of Equivocation: If we assume that
                everyone has the same definition of such words as
                God, Jesus, revelation, inspiration, prophet,
                miracle, etc., we are committing a very simple
                logical fallacy.
            
            - When a Muslim says, "Christians and
                Muslims worship the same God," he is
                committing the fallacy of equivocation. While
                Christians worship the Triune God of Father, Son,
                and Holy Spirit, Muslims worship a Unitarian
                deity. Obviously, they are worshipping different
                Gods. 
 
            
            - When a Muslim says, "We believe in Jesus
                too," he is committing the fallacy of
                equivocation. The "Jesus" of the Qur'an
                is not the Jesus of the Bible. Islam preaches
                "another Jesus" (II Cor. 11:4). The
                Jesus of the Bible is God the Son who died on the
                cross for our sins. But the "Jesus" of
                the Qur'an is not God the Son and he did not die
                on the cross for our sins. Thus it is erroneous
                for Muslims to tell Christians that they believe
                in Jesus, too. 
 
            
            - When a Muslim assumes that Christians have the
                same concept of revelation as Muslims, he is
                guilty of the fallacy of equivocation. According
                to Islam, the Qur'an was written in heaven by
                Allah and has no earthly sources. When we prove
                that it comes from earthly sources, this
                threatens the inspiration of the Qur'an. On the other hand, the Bible does not claim that
                it dropped out of heaven one day. It openly
                quotes from earthly sources. It uses pre-existing
                sources without any difficulty whatsoever, thus
                while the Qur'an is threatened by historical
                sources, the Bible is actually confirmed by them.
 
            - When a Muslim tells you that the word
                "Allah" has only one meaning: "the
                one, true, universal God," he is assuming a
                fallacy. The word "allah" has many
                different meanings. 
 
            
            - It can be used as a generic term like the
                English word "God." Thus it can be
                applied to any god or goddess regardless if a
                true or false god is in view. (ex. The
                "Allahs" of Hinduism.) 
 
            
            - The Nation of Islam uses it to refer to
                Wallace Dodd Ford, Elijah Muhammad, and Louis
                Farrakhan as "Allah" and teaches that
                all black people are "Allahs." 
 
            
            - It has been used by some Christians in Arabic
                speaking countries as a generic name for the Holy
                Trinity. 
 
            
            - It was used in pre-Islamic times by pagan
                Arabs to refer to the moon-god who was the father
                of al-Lat, al-Uzza and Manat. 
 
            - It is used by Muslims to refer to their god. 
 
            
            Islam and Christianity do not worship the same
                God. The Christian worships the Holy Trinity
                while the Muslim worships a unitarian deity. 
        
6. The Fallacy of Force: The Qur'an commands Muslims
        to wage war against non-Muslims and apostates (Surah
        5:33; 9:5, 29). 
        
            Some Muslims use a false analogy to answer this
                argument. They respond by saying, "Well,
                what about the Crusades? You Christians use
                violence just like Muslims." 
            
            It is logically erroneous to set up a parallel
                between Muslims killing people in obedience to
                the Qur'an and Christians killing people in
                disobedience to the Bible. While the Qur'an
                commands Jihad, the New Testament forbids it. 
        7. The Fallacy Of Confusing Questions of Fact with
        Questions of Relevance: Whether something is factually
        true is totally different from the issue of whether you
        feel it is relevant. The two issues must be kept
        separate. 
        
            Examples:
            
            - When a Christian argues that some of the
                beliefs and rituals of the Qur'an came from
                pre-Islamic Arab paganism, the Muslim will deny
                it at first. But as more and more evidence is
                given, the Muslim will often do a flip-flop and
                begin arguing, "So what! Didn't you
                Christians get Christmas from the pagans?"
                The Muslim has now committed three fallacies: 
 
            
            - The "So what!" argument is dealing
                with the issue of relevance, not fact. You must
                stop the Muslim at that point and ask him,
                "Since you are now dealing with the issue of
                whether the pagan origins of the Qur'an are
                relevant, does this mean that you are now
                agreeing to the fact of the pagan origins of
                Islam?" 
 
            
            - The Muslim has also committed the fallacy of
                equivocation, The Bible is not threatened by
                historical sources. It freely refers to them and
                even quotes them (Acts 17: 28). But the Qur'an
                denies that it has any earthly historical sources
                (Surah 25:4-6). 
 
            
            - He also committed the fallacy of false
                analogy. The Bible and the Qur'an are two totally
                different books. The inspiration of the Bible
                does not depend upon the fate of the Qur'an
                because what Muslims claim for the Qur'an is not
                what Christians claim for the Bible. 
 
        
        8. Phonic Fallacies: The phonetic sound of a word
        should not be used to twist its meaning. For example, 
        
            - Some Muslims try to prove that the word
                "Allah" is in the Greek New Testament
                because of the Greek word alla. But while the
                word is pronounced "alla," it only
                means "but" in Greek. It has nothing to
                do with the Arabic "Allah." 
 
            
            - Some Muslims have claimed that the word
                "Allah" is in the Bible because the
                Biblical word "Allelujah." They then
                mispronounce the word as "Allah-lujah"
                But "Allelujah" is not a compound
                Arabic word with "Allah" being the
                first part of the word. It is a Hebrew word with
                the name of God being "JAH" (or Yahweh)
                and the verb "alle" meaning
                "praise to." It means "praise to
                Yahweh." The Arabic word "Allah"
                is not in the word. 
 
            
            - The same error is found in the Muslim argument
                that the word "Baca" (Psa. 84:6) really
                means "Mecca." The valley of Baca is in
                northern Israel. 
 
            
            - Some Muslims have tried to go from
                "Amen" to "Ahmed" to
                "Mohammed!" Such nonsense is beyond
                belief.
 
        
        9. "Red Herring" Arguments: When a Muslim is
        asked to defend the Qur'an, if he turns around and
        attacks the reliability of the Bible, the Trinity, the
        deity of Christ, the Crusades, etc., he is introducing
        irrelevant issues that have no logical bearing on the
        truthfulness of Islam. He is trying to divert attention
        from Islam to other issues. 
            Furthermore, he is assuming that if he can refute
                the Bible, then the Qur'an wins by default. If he
                can refute the Trinity, then Allah wins by
                default. But this is logically erroneous. You
                cannot prove your position by refuting someone
                else's position. The Bible and the Qur'an could
                both be wrong. Muslims must prove their own book.
            
            10. Straw Man Arguments: When you put a false
                argument into the mouth of your opponent and then
                proceed to knock it down, you have only created a
                "straw man" argument, Muslims sometimes
                either misunderstand or deliberately misquote the
                arguments Christians give them. 
                
Example: 
            Some Muslims have built a "straw man"
                argument that claims that we teach, "The
                Qur'an teaches that Allah is the Moon-god and
                that Muslims knowingly believe in and worship the
                Moon-god and his daughters." They then knock
                down this "straw man" argument and
                claim victory. Of course, we never said such
                nonsense. What we have said is that while the
                Qur'an claims that Allah is God and Muslims think
                they are worshipping the one true God, in reality
                they are worshipping a false god preached by a
                false prophet according to a false book. 
        Conclusion
        The average Muslim has been deceived by Muslim
        apologists who use such logical fallacies without regard
        to reason, fact or honesty. But there are many Muslims
        who want to be rational in their religion and thus have
        an open mind to rational discourse. Once they see that
        their arguments are based on logical fallacies, they will
        be open to the wonderful news that Jesus Christ is the
        Son of God who died for our sins on the cross.