Do Muslims love Jesus?
Look, I’ll just say it straight. The claim that “Muslims love Jesus” sounds pretty reasonable at first. It feels like a nice bridge between the two faiths. But if you look a little closer, it gets more complicated than that.
You’ve probably seen what Tucker Carlson said the other day. On April 14 he came out with “Muslims love Jesus,” and he listed some things that are technically true.
”The people in charge don't want you to know this, but Muslims love Jesus. Islam reveres Him as a major prophet and messenger of the Lord, believes He performed miracles, and states that He will return to Earth to defeat the Antichrist. That's why Donald Trump's painting depicting himself as the Son of God offended the president of Iran. It was an attack on his religion as well as Christianity.”
Islam does talk about Jesus. It calls him a prophet, says he did miracles, and teaches that he’ll come back one day. Those points are fine as far as they go. But there’s more to the picture. The Jesus you find in the Quran shares the name, but he’s part of a very different story.
In Christianity, Jesus is the Son of God, fully divine, part of the Trinity. The crucifixion and resurrection are the whole foundation of the faith. The Quran handles it differently. It says Jesus is not the Son of God. It rejects the Trinity. And it tells the story of the crucifixion another way. One verse says:
“They did not kill him, nor did they crucify him, but it was made to appear so to them… rather, Allah raised him up to Himself.”
Another passage is pretty direct:
“It is not befitting for Allah to take a son… He says to it, ‘Be,’ and it is.”
So when people say Muslims love Jesus, it makes sense to ask: which Jesus are we talking about? In Islam, he’s a respected prophet and miracle worker with a special place among the messengers. But that respect sits inside a bigger framework where Muhammad is the final prophet, and Jesus ends up pointing toward Islamic teaching.
You see the same thing with the idea of Jesus returning at the end times. It can sound like something we share. But in the hadith, when he comes back, he breaks the cross, kills the swine, and abolishes the jizya.
Those actions all fit inside the Islamic view of how things end. That’s why the phrase “Muslims love Jesus” feels a bit incomplete to me. It pulls out the parts we seem to have in common… the name, the miracles, the virgin birth, the return… but the deeper differences about who Jesus actually is and what he came to do stay in the background.
The next day, April 15, Tucker doubled down. He said there’s this big overlap between Christianity and Islam that most Americans don’t realize. He talked about how the Quran honors the Christian savior as a prophet and messenger, and how understanding that closeness could push back against what he called “anti-Muslim propaganda.”
But the tension we see doesn’t come from propaganda. It comes straight from the teachings in the Quran and hadith when people take them seriously. For example, one verse tells believers:
“O you who have believed, do not take the Jews and the Christians as allies. They are in fact allies of one another. And whoever is an ally to them among you, then indeed, he is one of them.”
There’s also the well-known Sword Verse that says:
“But once the sacred months have passed, kill the polytheists wherever you find them and capture them and besiege them and sit in wait for them at every place of ambush. But if they should repent, establish prayer, and give zakah, let them go on their way.”
Tucker figured that if Americans really saw how close the roots are to the Bible, it would change how we look at Islam.
But if we want real understanding, we need to look at the whole picture… what each tradition actually says about Jesus and how those beliefs fit together in the larger system.
Islam has a Jesus who is honored and respected. Christianity is built around Jesus as God in the flesh, crucified for our sins, and risen from the dead. They’re two complete, distinct stories that just happen to use the same name.
A lot of people today like to reach for common ground because it feels warmer and easier. I get that. But clearer conversations happen when we look honestly at everything each faith teaches, not just the parts that overlap nicely.
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Addison Bachman
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Do Muslims love Jesus?
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