Christian DESTROYS Muslim Preacher & Hebrew Israelites In 1 Go
In this post, we’re going to witness a fascinating debate between Muslim preacher Shaykh Uthman Ibn Farooq and a group of Hebrew Israelites.
Both groups have spent years attacking Christianity, but this time, they turn their arguments against each other — exposing how unstable their foundations really are when Scripture is used out of context.
When Two False Beliefs Collide
The discussion begins with Shaykh Uthman questioning the Hebrew Israelites about their belief in the Bible. They affirm that they believe it to be the perfect Word of God.
But almost immediately, he tries to prove otherwise. He turns to a supposed contradiction between two passages describing the same king.
In 2 Chronicles 22:2, the Bible says:
“Forty and two years old was Ahaziah when he began to reign, and he reigned one year in Jerusalem.” – 2 Chronicles 22:2
But in 2 Kings 8:26, it says:
“Two and twenty years old was Ahaziah when he began to reign; and he reigned one year in Jerusalem.” – 2 Kings 8:26
At first glance, the difference between 22 and 42 years might look like an error. Shaykh Uthman quickly jumps on this and claims that the Bible contradicts itself.
The Hebrew Israelites, caught off guard, try to come up with explanations involving timelines and calendars, but their arguments only make things worse.
The Truth About Scribal Errors
What Uthman points out is what scholars call a scribal error. It’s a small copying mistake that occurs when scribes handwrite manuscripts.
Ancient scribes preserved Scripture by carefully copying every word. Occasionally, they wrote a number or small detail differently in one copy than in another.
These differences do not weaken the Bible’s credibility—they strengthen it. Thousands of manuscripts from many regions and time periods allow scholars to compare and confirm the original text.
This process, known as textual criticism, shows that the message of Scripture has been accurately preserved through history.
A Muslim preacher may call a number difference a contradiction. Yet by that same logic, the Qur’an would also fail, since it has its own scribal variations.
Christians don’t claim every copy is perfect. We claim the message is divinely preserved—and history proves that to be true.
At one point, one of the Hebrew Israelites quotes Malachi 3:6, saying:
“For I am the Lord, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed.” – Malachi 3:6
The intention behind this verse was to argue that God cannot “change,” and therefore the two numbers (22 and 42) can somehow both be correct. But this completely misunderstands what Malachi was saying.
In context, God was declaring His unchanging faithfulness and mercy toward Israel — not talking about textual numbers or timelines.
The verse reminds Israel that because God’s character doesn’t change, His covenant promises remain sure.
It has nothing to do with scribal transmission or copyist accuracy.
Why This Debate Matters
What we see in this debate is not a clash between faith and reason — it’s a clash between two systems that both reject the full authority of Scripture.
The Muslim preacher attacks the Bible’s reliability, while the Hebrew Israelites twist verses to defend their cultural ideology.
Both fail because they approach Scripture without submission to its Author.
When people point to a scribal difference to question the Bible’s inspiration, ask this: Does it change any truth or doctrine? The answer is no.
Every key teaching of Scripture—from creation to salvation—remains the same. Share on X
Small copy variations don’t change the message or the meaning of God’s Word.
“Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” — Matthew 24:35
The Word of God Stands Alone
Even as the debate grows heated, one thing becomes clear: neither the Muslim preacher nor the Hebrew Israelites can provide a consistent foundation for truth.
Both appeal to Scripture when convenient and reject it when it exposes their errors.
Yet through all the confusion, the Word of God remains unmoved. It doesn’t need to be defended with shouting or pride — it defends itself through its accuracy, prophecy, and power to change lives.
This discussion perfectly illustrates how false religions crumble when tested by Scripture. The Bible doesn’t fall apart under pressure; instead, it exposes every system built on human pride and tradition.
God’s Word has stood the test of time, and no debate or error can shake its authority. Share on XIf you want to watch another powerful moment unfold and see exactly how these arguments fell apart, you can watch it here: Muslim Thinks Attacking the Bible Will Help But Gets Destroyed.
This is a reminder that while others argue and twist words, truth doesn’t need to shout — it simply stands.
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