The Origin of the Quran’s Name for Jesus

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @reezekun2999
    @reezekun2999 Год назад +1013

    In the Quran, Jesus is mostly called "'Isa-bnu-Maryaam" to make it clear that it's Jesus son of Mary it referring to.

    • @LeavesRGreen
      @LeavesRGreen Год назад +66

      Isn't it isa ibn maryam

    • @soranaziz8348
      @soranaziz8348 Год назад +99

      ​@@LeavesRGreenif u say each word one by one, yes. But when read together it sounds out to be Isabnu Maryam. Both are the same

    • @ahmedyaseen3836
      @ahmedyaseen3836 Год назад

      @@soranaziz8348?

    • @HT-md7go
      @HT-md7go Год назад +41

      Correct it to “ibnu”. Bnu means the sons of someone. Like for example, “ bnu israel”.

    • @redhakiim789
      @redhakiim789 Год назад +21

      ​@@HT-md7goBanu or Bani does sound similar to ibn or bin. Which means "son of". Reason why they were called bani israel is because Prophet Yaqub or Jacob another name is israel. Some say israel means man of God or servant of God. Much like Abdullah but in Arabic.
      So if we were to put them together it means children of Yaqub or in other word children of Israel/children of "servant of God"
      This is very fascinating finding.

  • @lorcansnow2111
    @lorcansnow2111 Год назад +1337

    In Irish the word for Jesus is "Íosa", pronounced Isa.

    • @elismith5236
      @elismith5236 Год назад +53

      Waow I never knew that

    • @ThereisnogodbutAllah-
      @ThereisnogodbutAllah- Год назад +142

      Jesus is not dead
      The Bible is not preserved brother
      they made you worship Jesus and the spirit
      That is why God sent Islam
      so that people would worship him alone.

    • @Danumurti18
      @Danumurti18 Год назад +1

      Awesome

    • @kky.x
      @kky.x Год назад

      @@ThereisnogodbutAllah- Satan sent Islam

    • @elmajraz6019
      @elmajraz6019 Год назад +11

      @@ThereisnogodbutAllah- i want you to read again your comment, and edit any errors you didn't mean to say.

  • @0xBiscuit
    @0xBiscuit Год назад +871

    Hey I’m Arab and I just wanted to say that your pronunciation of Isa is so good.

    • @geebee1
      @geebee1 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/0x1SXqDpOPM/видео.html

    • @mohammeda4872
      @mohammeda4872 Год назад +6

      i know right!

    • @rhetoric5173
      @rhetoric5173 Год назад +16

      Also wrong. The Arabic name is the oldest name . Yeshua us a conjecture from Greek. Greek doesn’t the letter Ayin. Both iraq and iran sound similar in English became iraq has the letter ayin in it, they sound abs look nothing alike in Arabic. The -sus part is a Greek suffix added to names (herodotus Plotinus, etc). It’s originally iesus in Greek, exactly how it would be if someone tried to say 3’isa without having the letter ayin (3)

    • @anexis05
      @anexis05 Год назад

      ​@@rhetoric5173interesting answer! thanks for sharing

    • @hadialsayed129
      @hadialsayed129 Год назад +3

      ​@@rhetoric5173 you might be right because there is no evidence or manuscript in Aramaic that date to the time of jesus with the name yeshua , the only evidence we have is the Greek scripture
      But also good to mention that jesus is also called yeshua ( اليسوع) in quran

  • @pix-1235
    @pix-1235 Год назад +1442

    I find the Qur'an the most reliable book that we can rely on because it has been memorized very carefully

    • @c.w_
      @c.w_ Год назад +137

      Yeh. But which version. The Warsh, the Hats or another and where are the pre-Uthmanic Qurans burnt by Uthman?

    • @salahgh3081
      @salahgh3081 Год назад +382

      @@c.w_ there is only one version of Quran .

    • @junaidnoman5522
      @junaidnoman5522 Год назад +304

      @@c.w_ those are dialects, meaning stays same in arabic, like american and british english. and its HAFS not HATS

    • @menta3001
      @menta3001 Год назад +86

      i dont think reliable is a correct word, you should use preserved.

    • @elmajraz6019
      @elmajraz6019 Год назад +66

      @@c.w_ all of us are firm, due to the chains of narration called Isnad, that all these 20 recitations are indeed from God.
      You want to compare these authentic ways of recitations of the Glorious Quran to your Biblical versions? Incomparable hahahaha

  • @isamohammed150
    @isamohammed150 Год назад +1806

    As one of the many Arab Isa(s) myself, this video was wonderfully informative.

    • @xanatax1844
      @xanatax1844 Год назад +19

      sweet! 💜 how did he do on the pronounciation?

    • @isamohammed150
      @isamohammed150 Год назад +102

      @@xanatax1844 Pretty impressive, tbh

    • @scottdoesntmatter4409
      @scottdoesntmatter4409 Год назад +25

      Let us pray that you have left Islam as well.

    • @ImAbdullah123
      @ImAbdullah123 Год назад +5

      interesting

    • @renato7184
      @renato7184 Год назад +299

      @@scottdoesntmatter4409 Just pray to respect peoples believes.

  • @scottodhonnchu5034
    @scottodhonnchu5034 Год назад +1579

    I've always found it interesting that in Irish and Scottish it's Íosa, which is closer to the Arabic than any other languages surrounding us. I'm more surprised that even over the centuries the anglicisation didn't even change the word like it did with many other words.

    • @yousuf6382
      @yousuf6382 Год назад +326

      There is no evidence that Jesus' name was Yeshua .. the oldest name for Jesus in Christianity is the Greek form "Isous"
      Since Jesus spoke Aramaic, and the dominant language was Aramaic, and the Greeks translated the Bible and the names, so it seems that "Isous" is the Greek pronunciation of the original name of Jesus (Isa\ عيسى) without "ayin" and with Greek suffixes.
      P.S
      The letter ayin in Arabic can be several letters in Latin based on the Arabic diacritics .. for example :
      The letter ayin in Isa, in Latin letters as (i or e) because the diacritic in ayin is (kasrah)
      The letter ayin in name "Ali" in Latin letters as (A) because the diacritic in ayin is (fathah)
      The letter ayin in Oman in Latin letters as (O) because the diacritic in ayin is (dammah)
      In the Islamic world (non-Arabs) they pronounce the name of Jesus as (isa) without ayin
      The question is why the Greek name for Jesus "iesous" is identical to the Islamic\Arabic name "isa" ?
      The answer is quite simple: the Greeks translated the name from the Aramaic, which identical in form to the name and the Arabic pronunciation (isa =عيسى) with Greek suffixes and without the Semitic consonant "Ayin".

    • @manuvarghese9915
      @manuvarghese9915 Год назад +63

      In Kerala, India we call Jesus as Isow.

    • @retf8977
      @retf8977 Год назад +92

      ​@@yousuf6382 You have got a very strong point... these people like to overcomplicate things especially in that matter... beating around the bush as they say

    • @frankly.speaking
      @frankly.speaking Год назад +67

      @@yousuf6382 your absolutely right...the 1st century jewish name in greek "iesous" which was actually derived from the 6th century quran name "isa".
      On the other hand, the ancient Biblical hebrew name "Yehoshua" (meaning Yah saves) and the truncated form of it, "Yeshua" (meaning Yah saves) which was a common name amongst the 1st century were actually fabricated by jews and historians.
      But an interesting question arises: Is the meaning of "Iesous" in Greek similiar to that of "isa" in arabic?

    • @whynot07
      @whynot07 Год назад +21

      @@yousuf6382 but the thing is it wasn’t ‘Isa in Arabic before Quran. Greek is way more ancient than Islam, so they took the name from the original users of it. But where did the Quran took the original one from? This is the real question here imo. Phonısemantic matching doesn’t explain the probability to choose the exact same one, does it?

  • @thecynicpyro
    @thecynicpyro Год назад +415

    Reminds me of how the oldest song with notation in English was discovered because someone had used the paper with the song and notes on it as a bookmark. Absolutely mind-blowing how the tiniest things today may lead to groundbreaking findings in the future

    • @Salsmachev
      @Salsmachev Год назад +24

      Sadly we have largely moved away from the formats that persist. Stone and clay tablets, papyri and manuscripts all survived to some degree. But digital information only lasts as long as it is saved somewhere that we can access. There's technology that was invented in my lifetime that is already becoming difficult to access.

    • @soujashane
      @soujashane Год назад +13

      @@Salsmachev Technology survives through redundancy, which I would believe to be way better than a physical characteristic, nothing beats time but redundancy comes close.

    • @GreenMonkeyToaster
      @GreenMonkeyToaster Год назад +2

      @@soujashane hi! Do you mind explaining what "survives through redundancy" mean?

    • @TOBAPNW_
      @TOBAPNW_ Год назад +17

      @@GreenMonkeyToaster redundancy is having multiple backups or spare components, more than you would realistically need in day-to-day operations. In computing, any single point of failure could cause unwanted or unacceptable down-time, so most commercial systems (mainly servers) have multiple redundancies built in, to fall back on.
      So, our information survives through redundancy, in the sense that we have far more copies of texts, images, footage, etc. floating around; both on magnetic hard disks/SSDs, and on external devices, than was ever possible in the pre-digital age.

    • @GreenMonkeyToaster
      @GreenMonkeyToaster Год назад +5

      @@TOBAPNW_ oh cool! Thanks for explaining it to me. I have been curious about how information today would survive "archaeology-wise" and so I had to ask when I didn't quite understand the answer 😅 10/10 thorough and comprehensible explanation

  • @gohnjohn737
    @gohnjohn737 Год назад +269

    I am Christian Arab, we say Yasuah but I also have an uncle named Isa, also your pronunciation is great btw

    • @saad-ds1hk
      @saad-ds1hk Год назад +10

      You are not Arab

    • @aligrosa2039
      @aligrosa2039 11 месяцев назад +16

      ​@@saad-ds1hk
      Peki nedir? Arami mi? Süryani mi?

    • @oodango3961
      @oodango3961 9 месяцев назад

      @@saad-ds1hkfym

    • @jaif7327
      @jaif7327 7 месяцев назад +21

      @@saad-ds1hk larp harder

    • @Ub3rSk1llz
      @Ub3rSk1llz 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@saad-ds1hk deus vult

  • @panqueque445
    @panqueque445 Год назад +2187

    It blows my mind how, literally just "some guy" writing a prayer on a random rock he found in the desert became something this important. Not a legal document, or a holy book, or a historian. Just some guy.

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +826

      The complete and utter randomness of archaeological evidence.

    • @ReformedR
      @ReformedR Год назад +182

      @@ReligionForBreakfast it doesn't help Islam's validity in any way for islam teaches singular monotheism and invocatingJesus wasn't something they would do. Even if we accept this random inscription islam is still plagiarised nonesense

    • @willbass2869
      @willbass2869 Год назад +20

      Kismet.

    • @mrcellophane226
      @mrcellophane226 Год назад +72

      some japanese guy draw a raccoon with huge balls and it became really huge, it's just funny

    • @mrcellophane226
      @mrcellophane226 Год назад +155

      @@ReformedR i dont think he claimed it helps Islam's validity in any way. it actually the other way around cause muslims claims that isa is the real name of jesus that god gave him and not a made up name or something it's funny cause when u see a muslim having a conversation with a christian he will call jesus by isa and most likely refuse to use "jesus" at all even that he knows the christian calls him jesus cause he thinks the christian got the wrong/made up name and him the muslim got the real name which is "isa" but this vid says that arab christians just used a pre-existing name in other words the people gave him that name not god like muslims claim

  • @tomsuiteriii9742
    @tomsuiteriii9742 Год назад +454

    I read Dr. Al-Jallad’s article on this topic in BAR not long ago. Very cool to see you covering it! Pre-Islamic Arab Christianity is an an esoteric topic that absolutely deserves more scholarly attention.

    • @africanhistory
      @africanhistory Год назад +7

      let us talk religion does a very good job on some of those topics.

    • @strider_hiryu850
      @strider_hiryu850 Год назад +3

      i agree that the topic deserves more attention. i believe the only reason it hasn't received much yet is because there wasn't any first hand evidence such a phenomena was even occurring: until now. perhaps this first hand account corroborates some - maybe all - of the second hand accounts! this one find may have opened up a door of evidence to a room full of great treasures! i can't wait to learn more!

    • @jonson856
      @jonson856 Год назад +37

      @@yousuf6382 Your argument makes little sense because it would imply that the Hebrew language didnt exist at the time anymore.
      Aramaic may have been the predominant language in Israel in the year 0. But that doesnt mean Hebrew was gone.
      They still used Hebrew in their synagogues. Spoken and written Hebrew.
      I have seen your argument very often on the internet. Its a common argument from islamic revisionists.

    • @tomsuiteriii9742
      @tomsuiteriii9742 Год назад +6

      @@strider_hiryu850 Check out _Christianity among the Arabs in Pre-Islamic Times_ by J. Spencer Trimingham. It's tough to come by, but if you can grab a copy it's the only book in print on the topic that I'm aware of. Definitely a worthwhile read.

    • @strider_hiryu850
      @strider_hiryu850 Год назад +3

      @@tomsuiteriii9742 goin' on my reading list

  • @thelegando4281
    @thelegando4281 Год назад +1076

    Actually, as an arab linguist the word yeshua describes something in a past like "the one who will be saved" while Isa describes someone in present tense like "The saved one"

    • @umairusman
      @umairusman Год назад +67

      Perfect

    • @LRRPFco52
      @LRRPFco52 Год назад +58

      Isä means father in Finnish (Suomi). Nobody seems to know where Suomi came from, as it isn't Indo-European.

    • @faizafaiza6524
      @faizafaiza6524 Год назад +22

      Jesus is prophet of God :
      Malachi 3:1 Jesus is a messenger
      Jesus came to this earth as a Messenger from God the Father: "'Behold, I send My messenger, and he will prepare the way before Me. And the Lord, whom you seek, will suddenly come to His temple, even the Messenger of the covenant, in whom you delight. Behold, He is coming,' says the LORD of hosts" (Malachi 3:1). Two messengers are mentioned in this verse. The first is John the Baptist, who prepared the way for the second Messenger, "the Messenger of the covenant," Jesus Christ.
      Jesus Christ : a Prophet and Messenger of God in the Bible
      here verses from the Bible mentions Jesus Christ Peace Be Upon Him as Prophet of God :
      The crowds answered, “This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth in Galilee.”
      ◄ Matthew 21:11 ►
      “A great prophet has arisen among us!”
      ◄ Luke 7:16 ►
      The woman said to Him, “Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet.
      ◄ John 4:19 ►
      When they sought to seize Him, they feared the people, because they considered Him to be a prophet.
      ◄ Matthew 21:46 ►
      Therefore when the people saw the sign which He had performed, they said, “This is truly the Prophet who is to come into the world.”
      ◄ John 6:14 ►
      Some of the people therefore, when they heard these words, were saying, “This certainly is the Prophet.”
      ◄ John 7:40 ►
      So they said to the blind man again, “What do you say about Him, since He opened your eyes?” And he said, “He is a prophet.”
      ◄ John 9:17 ►
      Jesus the Nazarene, who was a prophet
      ◄ Luke 24:19 ►
      others were saying, “He is a prophet, like one of the prophets of old.”
      ◄ Mark 6:15 ►
      They answered him, “You are not also from Galilee, are you? Search, and see that no prophet arises out of Galilee.”
      ◄ John 7:52 ►

    • @kingmosesix432
      @kingmosesix432 Год назад +233

      Interesting.
      Coz muslims do believe he was saved.

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

  • @shavezkhan3442
    @shavezkhan3442 Год назад +178

    You apologise for the way you say Isa and then immediately say his name according to the Quran perfectly. Its things like that which mean a lot. Thank you for doing what most wouldnt even bother doing

    • @mznxbcv12345
      @mznxbcv12345 9 месяцев назад +3

      He's also wrong. The Aramaic word for God is "Alaha". It's the word Isa PBUH used. Sounds familiar?
      Written without the confusing vowels it is written A-L-H ܐ ܠܗܐ (alap-lamed-he) as found in Targum or in Tanakh (Daniel, Ezra), Syriac Aramaic (Peshitta), reduced from the Arabic original (of which Aramaic is a dialect continuum as will be explained) it is written in the Arabic script 'A-L-L-H' (Aleph-Lam-Lam-Ha) add an A before the last H for vocalization.
      The word God in another rendition in Hebrew ʾĕlōah is derived from a base ʾilāh, an Arabic word, written without confusing vowel it is A-L-H in the Arabic script, pronounced ilah not eloah. Hebrew dropped the glottal stop and mumbled it, aramic mumbled a little less and it became elaha. Infact both are written written A-L-H in Arabic, it is pronounced i in Arabic and not A because it is an Alef with hamza below (إ أ ) They are two different forms of Alef. And it mean "a god", it is the non definitive form of A-L-L-H, in which the Alef is without a glottal stop/hamza,(ا), but this kind of nuance is lost in the dialect continua.
      infact "YHWH" itself is an Arabic word as discussed by Professor. Israel Knohl (Professor of Biblical studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem) in the paper" YHWH: The Original Arabic Meaning of the Name."
      jesus as his name is often misspelled due to the lack of the ayin sound in Greek, which was rendered to Iesous, coupling the nearest sound to ayin, same letter found in 'Iraq', which sounds entirely different in Arabic form 'Iran' in Arabic, with the -ous Greek suffix that Greeks typically add to their names 'HerodotOS', 'PlotinUS', 'AchelOUS' and later mumbled into a J. The yeshua rendition of Isa (his name in the Qur'an) PBUH which is purported to be the name of Jesus is KNOWN to had been taken from greek. Western Syriac also use "Isho". Western Aramaic (separate from Syriac which is a dialect of Eastern Aramaic) use "Yeshu". Western Syriac has been separate from Western Aramaic for about 1000 years. And sounds don't even match up. Syriac is a Christian liturgical language yet the four letters of the name of Jesus «ܝܫܘܥ» [ = Judeo-Babylonian Aramaic: «ישוע» ] sounds totally different in West vs East Syriac, viz. vocalized akin to Christian Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic «ܝܶܫܽܘܥ» (Yēšūʿ) in West Syriac, but pronounced more akin to Muslim Arabic Quran character name Isa in East Syriac «ܝܑܼܫܘܿܥ» (ʾĪšōʿ). The reason for this confusion is their dropping of phonemes. Only someone that has no idea what the letters are or how they sound would have a name ending in a pharyngeal fricative like the ayin, if it were to be used in a name it would have had to be in the beginning, thus the Arabic rendition is the correct one. An example in English is how the appended -d is a common error amongst the English pronouncing Gaelic names. The name Donald arose from a common English mispronunciation of the Gaelic name Donal. Just how it is with donal becoming donald and the two becoming distinct and the original being regarded as something seperate so too did Isa PBUH turn to Iesous turn to jesus and when they tried going back to the original they confused it for yeshua ( ysu is how it is actually written) for Isa PBUH ( 3'eysah )
      Schlözer in his preparation for the Arabia expedition in 1781 coined the term Semitic language:
      "From the Mediterranean to the Euphrates, from Mesopotamia to Arabia ruled one language, as is well known. Thus Syrians, Babylonians, Hebrews, and Arabs were one people (ein Volk). Phoenicians (Hamites) also spoke this language, which I would like to call the Semitic (die Semitische)." -Before Boas: The Genesis of Ethnography and Ethnology in the German By Han F. Vermeulen.
      He was only half right though, Arabic is the only corollary to "proto-semitic", infact the whole semitic classification is nonsensical as will be shown.
      "protosemetic" Alphabet (28), Arabic Alphabet (28), Latin transliteration, hebrew (22)
      𐩠 𐩡 𐩢 𐩣 𐩤 𐩥 𐩦 𐩧 𐩨 𐩩 𐩪 𐩫 𐩬 𐩭 𐩮 𐩰 𐩱 𐩲 𐩳 𐩴 𐩵 𐩶 𐩷 𐩸 𐩹 𐩺 𐩻 𐩼
      ا ب ت ث ج ح خ د ذ ر ز س ش ص ض ط ظ ع غ ف ق ك ل م ن ه و ي
      A b t ṯ j h kh d ḏ r z s sh ṣ ḍ ṭ ẓ ʿ ġ f q k l m n h w y
      א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כ ל מ נ ס ע פ צ ק ר ש ת
      Merged phonemes in hebrew and aramaic:
      ح, خ (h, kh) merged into only kh consonant remain
      س, ش (s, sh) merged into only Shin consonant remaining
      ط, ظ (ṭ/teth, ẓ) merged into only ṭ/teth consonant remaining
      ص, ض (ṣ, ḍ/Tsad ) merged into only ḍ/Tsad consonant remaining
      ع, غ (3'ayn, Ghayn) merged into a reducted ayin consonant remaining
      ت, ث (t/taw, th) merged into only t/taw consonant remaining
      The reason why the protoS alphabet here is 28 and not 29, is because the supposed extra letter is simply a س written in a different position, but it was shoehorned to obfuscated. In Arabic letter shapes are different depending on whether they are in the beginning , middle or end of a word.
      As a matter of fact, all of the knowledge needed for deciphering ancient texts and their complexity was derived from the Qur'an. It was by analyzing the syntactic structure of the Qur'an that the Arabic root system was developed. This system was first attested to in Kitab Al-Ayin, the first intralanguage dictionary of its kind, which preceded the Oxford English dictionary by 800 years. It was through this development that the concept of Arabic roots was established and later co-opted into the term 'semitic root,' allowing the decipherment of ancient scripts. In essence, they quite literally copied and pasted the entirety of the Arabic root. Hebrew had been dead, as well as all the other dialects of Arabic, until being 'revived' in a Frankensteinian fashion in the 18th and 19th centuries.
      The entire region spoke basically the same language, with mumbled dialect continuums spread about, and Arabic is the oldest form from which all these dialects branched off. As time passed, the language gradually became more degenerate,
      Language; When one looks at the actual linguistics, one will find that many were puzzled by the opposite, that is, how the other "semetic" languages were more "evolved" than Arabic, while Arabic had archaic features, not only archaic compared to bibilical Hebrew, Ethiopic, "Aramaic" contemporary "semetic" languages, but even archaic compared to languages from ancient antiquity; Ugaritic, Akkadain. What is meant here by Archaic is not what most readers think, it is Archaic not in the sense that it is simple, but rather that it is complex (think Latin to pig Latin or Italian or Old English, which had genders and case endings to modern English), not only grammatically, but also phonetically; All the so called semitic languages are supposed to have evolved from protosemetic, the Alphabet for protosemitic is that of the so called Ancient South Arabian (which interestingly corresponds with the traditional Arabic origins account) and has 28 Phonemes. Arabic has 28 phonemes. Hebrew has 22, same as Aramaic, and other "semitic" languages. Now pause for a second and think about it, how come Arabic, a language that is supposed to have come so late has the same number of letters as a language that supposedly predates it by over a millennium (Musnad script ~1300 BCE). Not only is the glossary of phonemes more diverse than any other semitic language, but the grammar is more complex, containing more cases and retains what's linguists noted for its antiquity, broken plurals. Indeed, a linguist has once noted that if one were to take everything we know about languages and how they develop, Arabic is older than Akkadian (~2500 BCE).
      And then the Qur'an appeared with the oldest possible form of the language thousands of years later. This is why the Arabs of that time were challenged to produce 10 similar verses, and they couldn't. People think it's a miracle because they couldn't do it, but I think the miracle is the language itself. They had never spoken Arabic, nor has any other language before or since had this mathematical precision. And when I say mathematical, I quite literally mean mathematical.
      Now how is it that the Qur'an came thousands of years later in an alphabet that had never been recorded before, and in the highest form the language had ever taken?
      The creator is neither bound by time nor space, therefore the names are uttered as they truly were, in a language that is lexically, syntactically, phonemically, and semantically older than the oldest recorded writing. In fact, that writing appears to have been a simplified version of it. Not only that, but it would be the equivalent of the greatest works of any particular language all appearing in one book, in a perfect script and in the highest form the language could ever take. It is so high in fact, that it had yet to be surpassed despite the fact that over the last millennium the collection of Arabic manuscripts when compared on word-per-word basis in Western Museums alone, when they are compared with the collected Greek and Latin manuscripts combined, the latter does not constitute 1 percent of the former as per German professor Frank Griffel, in addition all in a script that had never been recorded before. Thus, the enlightenment of mankind from barbarism and savagery began, and the age of reason and rationality was born from its study.
      God did bring down the Qur’an, Mohamed is his Messenger.

    • @hetenabben2004
      @hetenabben2004 9 месяцев назад

      ​@mznxbcv12345
      Ever heard about the phoenician script? Arabic can trace its root from there, the arabic script is known to arrive from the aramaic or the nabatean script which is also known to arrive from the P.E script.
      Ever heard of language evolving? No they do not degenerate, language never stays the same.
      The hebrew language has been dead but is revived, and the many dialect of arabic exist, they are not created but is evolved from the arabic language of that time.
      Ever heard of dialect? Dialect is a how people speak the same language differetly especially vocaburary. Dialect eventually became a new language after a lot of changes. The way a dialect is preserved is by isolation and more.
      The arabic language etc. Is grouped in the semitic language or afro-asiatic language. I don't know why you really hate the grouping despite it being true.
      The way you idolize arabic is scary, no one would say hebrew create arabic or the other way around, because its just so untrue, the reason that arabic and hebrew and aramaic is similar is not because hebrew and aramaic derives from arabic but because they have a common heritage that is their ancestor (Proto-Semitic) proto means old.
      And how come Isa (PBUH) be the origin of the name when the name Isa itself came from the greek translation which came from the aramaic (canaan) name Yeshua (versions of the name Joshua).
      Arabic evolve since the time of Prophet Muhammad but why didn't it evolve before the time of Prophet Muhammad? Why did you make arabic seems frozen in time before the time of Muhammad knowing that the arabic people is a travelling people?

    • @Abcdefg47363
      @Abcdefg47363 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@mznxbcv12345bro what 😭 the original commenter didn't say anything wrong?

    • @dragonmaster3207
      @dragonmaster3207 4 месяца назад

      @DODOPLAYZ013honestly impressive.

  • @gravy7861_
    @gravy7861_ Год назад +676

    The first video on Jesus real name was fantastic and I actually brought 2 new fans to the channel with it.

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +194

      Awesome! I'm currently obsessed with linguistics and religious studies, so expect more vids in this vein.

    • @TheWorldTeacher
      @TheWorldTeacher Год назад +2

      @@ReligionForBreakfast
      🐟 02. A BRIEF SYNOPSIS OF “LIFE”:
      Everything, both perceptible and imperceptible - that is, any gross or subtle OBJECT within the material universe that can possibly be perceived with the cognitive faculties, plus the SUBJECT (the observer of all phenomena) - is unknowingly to what most persons generally refer when they use the term “God”, since they usually conceive of Ultimate Reality as being the Perfect Person, and “God” is a personal epithet of the Impersonal Absolute. However, this anthropomorphized conception of The Monad is a fictional character of divers mythologies.
      According to most every fully-enlightened sage in the history of this planet, Ultimate Reality is, far more logically, consubstantially and simultaneously, Absolutely NOTHING and Absolutely EVERYTHING - otherwise called “The Tao”, “The Great Spirit”, “(Param) Brahman”, “Cosmic Consciousness”, “Eternal Awareness”, “Independent Existence”, “Unconditioned Truth”, “Uncaused Nature”, “The Universal Self”, “The Ground of All Being”, “The Undifferentiated Substratum of Reality”, “The Unified Field”, et cetera - yet, as alluded to above, inaccurately referred to as a personal deity by the masses (e.g. “God”, “Allah”, “Yahweh”, “Bhagavan”, etc.). Subsequent chapters expand on this axiom.
      In other words, rather than the Supreme Truth being a separate, Blissful, Supra-Conscious Being (The Godhead Himself, or The Goddess), Ultimate Reality is Eternal-Existence Limitless-Awareness Unconditional-Peace ITSELF. That which can be perceived, can not be perceiving!
      This understanding can be factually-realized by studying a systematic method of introspection, called “gnosticism” (“jñāna yoga”, in Sanskrit).
      Because the Unmanifested Absolute (i.e. NO-THING) is infinite creative potentiality, “It” perpetually actualizes as the phenomenal creation (i.e. EVERY-THING), in the form of ephemeral, cyclical universes/multiverses. In the case of our particular universe, we reside in a cosmos consisting of space-time, matter and energy, without, of course, neglecting the most fundamental dimension of existence (i.e. Conscious Awareness).
      Just as a knife cannot cut itself, nor the mind comprehend itself, nor the eyes see themselves, The Absolute cannot know Itself (or at least objectively EXPERIENCE Itself), and so, has manifested this phenomenal universe within Itself for the purpose of experiencing Itself, particularly through the lives of self-aware beings, such as we sophisticated humans. Therefore, this world of duality is really just a play of consciousness within Consciousness, in the same way that a dream is a person’s sleeping narrative set within the life-story of an “awakened” individual.
      APPARENTLY, this universe, composed of “mind and matter”, was created from the initial event (the so-called “Big Bang”), which started, supposedly, as a minute, slightly uneven ball of immeasurably-dense light, which in turn, was ultimately instigated by Extra-Temporal Supra-Conscious Bliss. From that primal event, every motion or action that has ever occurred, has been a direct or indirect result of that expansion.
      Just as all the extant energy in the universe was once contained within the inchoate singularity, Infinite Consciousness was NECESSARILY present at the beginning of the universe, and is in no way an epiphenomenon of a neural network. Discrete consciousness, on the other hand, is entirely dependent on the neurological faculty of individual animals (the more highly-evolved the species, the greater its cognitive abilities).
      “Sarvam khalvidam brahma” (a Sanskrit maxim from the “Chandogya Upanishad”, meaning “all this is indeed Brahman” or “everything is the Universal Self alone”). There is NAUGHT but Eternal Being, Conscious Awareness, Causeless Peace - and you are, quintessentially, that!
      This “Theory of Everything” can be more succinctly expressed by the mathematical equation: E=A͚ (Everything equates to Infinite Awareness).
      HUMANS are, essentially, this Eternally-Aware-Bliss, acting through an extraordinarily-complex biological organism, comprised of the eight rudimentary elements - pseudo-ego (the assumed sense of self), intellect, mind, solids, liquids, gases, heat (fire), and ether (three-dimensional space). When one peers into a mirror, one doesn’t normally mistake the reflected image to be one’s real self, yet that is how we humans conventionally view our ever-mutating forms. We are, rather, in a fundamental sense, that which witnesses all transitory appearances.
      Everything that can presently be perceived, both tangible and immaterial, including we human beings, is a culmination of the primary manifestation. That is the most accurate and rational explanation for “karma” - everything was preordained from the initial spark, and every subsequent action has unfolded as it was predestined in ETERNITY, via an ever-forward-moving trajectory. The notion of retributive (“tit-for-tat”) karma is just that - an unverified notion. Likewise, the idea of a distinct, reincarnating “soul” or “spirit”, is largely a fallacious belief.
      As a consequence of residing within this dualistic universe, we experience a lifelong series of fluctuating, transient pleasures and pains, which can take the form of physical, emotional, and/or financial pleasure or pain. Surprisingly to most, suffering and pain are NOT synonymous.
      Suffering is due to a false sense of personal agency - the belief that one is a separate, independent author of one’s thoughts, emotions, and deeds, and that, likewise, other persons are autonomous agents, with complete volition to act, think, and feel as they desire. Another way of stating the same concept is as follows: suffering is due to the intellect being unwilling to accept life as it manifests moment by moment.
      Whatever state in which we currently find ourselves, is the result of two factors - our genetic make-up at conception and our present-life conditioning (which may include mutating genetic sequence). Every choice ever made by every human and non-human animal was determined by those two factors ALONE. Therefore, free-will is purely illusory, despite what most believe. Chapter 11 insightfully demonstrates this truism.
      There are five SYMPTOMS of suffering, all of which are psychological in nature:
      1. Guilt
      2. Blame
      3. Pride
      4. Anxiety
      5. Regrets about the past and expectations for the future
      These types of suffering are the result of not properly understanding what was explained above - that life is merely happenstance and NOT caused by any particular person. No living creature, including Homo sapiens, has individual free-will. There is only the Universal, Divine Will at play, acting through every body, to which William Shakespeare famously alluded when he scribed “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.” This illusion of liberty of volition is excruciatingly difficult, if not utterly impossible, for most humans to surmount.
      The human organism is essentially a biopsychological machine, comprised of the five gross material elements (which can be perceived with the five senses) and the three subtle material elements (the three levels of cognition, which consist of abstract thought objects), listed above.
      The ANTIDOTE to all mental anguish is to firstly discern pain from suffering, then to achieve complete relief from that miserable state of existence, by abandoning the erroneous belief in personal authorship, and abiding in the primordial sense of being (the unqualified “I am”, which is one’s core identity). This is the very same peace that is experienced each night during the dreamless phase of the sleep cycle. This “resting imperturbably as Flawless Awareness” can be practiced on a regular basis, until it is fully assimilated and integrated into one’s life.
      Every person, from time immemorial, has been either intentionally or unwittingly seeking such causeless peace, most commonly by practicing one of the four systems of YOGA (a Sanskrit term meaning “religion”, or “union”) delineated in the sixteenth chapter of this work, or in creating wealth and the acquisition of material possessions, or else in psycho-physical pleasures. That peace of mind is also referred to as “happiness”, “joy”, or “love”, and often presumed to be a temporal state, since many assume, incorrectly, that continuous peace is unavailable in this life. Fortunately, that is not the case - it is eminently possible to live one’s life acquainted with unbroken peace of mind, if destined.
      Following DHARMA (frameworks of authentic religion and societal duties) is not guaranteed to achieve that desired tranquillity of mind, but even so, it is beneficial for individuals, since it establishes a structure that enables one to more easily elevate oneself beyond the mundane, animalistic platform (i.e. the base pursuits of eating, sleeping and mating). Intrinsic to dharma is the division of the adult male population into the four classes of society, and the inherent role of girls and women in society, as fully elucidated in latter chapters of this Holy Scripture.

    • @edurado1996
      @edurado1996 Год назад +4

      Same man. Showed my Bible study group and they were amazed.

    • @luciferlucero
      @luciferlucero Год назад +1

      He's coming back literally any day. Literally. Be ready. 🔥🔥🔥🔥

    • @TOBAPNW_
      @TOBAPNW_ Год назад +10

      @@luciferlucero people have been saying that for close to 2000 years. Any day now 🙄

  • @naomilee9866
    @naomilee9866 Год назад +65

    I love how most of the displayed examples of Safaitic script also had drawings and pictures. Animals, a person using a bow and arrow… I want to call them doodles, but the fact that they’re carved into stone seems to convey a greater level of intention then mindless doodling

  • @AnkerPeet
    @AnkerPeet Год назад +56

    Whats cool to me about people inscribing things onto those rocks is that we can see into a part of the past that seems more "informal". We are so used to getting ancient writings from monuments and scrolls, its nice to also see things written by some random person in the middle of nowhere. It would be cool to see what other inscriptions are out there on all those rocks.

    • @rvanhees89
      @rvanhees89 Год назад +4

      Check out all the medieval graffiti in churches, it is hilarioua

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

  • @privatesocialhandle
    @privatesocialhandle Год назад +14

    This makes sense. Because as Arabic is my first language, when you asked about the resemblance between Yasu and Isa, my very first thought (although may not be obvious to non-arabic speakers) is that Yasu sorta sounds like 'ysa reversed. Although this is not necessarily the case, but just to give an example of a possible attempt on photosemantic matching of my own. Very interesting stuff indeed.

  • @achristiananarchist2509
    @achristiananarchist2509 Год назад +294

    One good example of phonsemantic matching that a lot of people in the US are familiar with, even if they don't know it, is the adaptation of Native American words into one or more english words that they kind of sound like. So wuchak becomes woodchuck, Wisakedjak becomes Whiskey Jack, musquash becomes muskrat, huskemaw becomes husky, and so on.

    • @J1WE
      @J1WE Год назад +3

      Iza in Hebrew means Gods Oath/Abundance/Gift

    • @rvanhees89
      @rvanhees89 Год назад

      Muskrat aka Muskusrat is a European germanic word....

    • @ttenf3ct1ons86
      @ttenf3ct1ons86 Год назад

      @@J1WE So Jesus was Gods gift? Also didn’t he say Isa (Essa) was written to compare a diety of their god to him?

    • @riffitmasint4207
      @riffitmasint4207 Год назад +2

      عيسى رسول الله عليه السلام مثله مثل جميع الرسل أتى برسالة لهداية الناس بعدما أظلوا الطريق

    • @faizafaiza6524
      @faizafaiza6524 Год назад

      Jesus is prophet of God :
      Malachi 3:1 Jesus is a messenger
      Jesus came to this earth as a Messenger from God the Father: "'Behold, I send My messenger, and he will prepare the way before Me. And the Lord, whom you seek, will suddenly come to His temple, even the Messenger of the covenant, in whom you delight. Behold, He is coming,' says the LORD of hosts" (Malachi 3:1). Two messengers are mentioned in this verse. The first is John the Baptist, who prepared the way for the second Messenger, "the Messenger of the covenant," Jesus Christ.
      Jesus Christ : a Prophet and Messenger of God in the Bible
      here verses from the Bible mentions Jesus Christ Peace Be Upon Him as Prophet of God :
      The crowds answered, “This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth in Galilee.”
      ◄ Matthew 21:11 ►
      “A great prophet has arisen among us!”
      ◄ Luke 7:16 ►
      The woman said to Him, “Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet.
      ◄ John 4:19 ►
      When they sought to seize Him, they feared the people, because they considered Him to be a prophet.
      ◄ Matthew 21:46 ►
      Therefore when the people saw the sign which He had performed, they said, “This is truly the Prophet who is to come into the world.”
      ◄ John 6:14 ►
      Some of the people therefore, when they heard these words, were saying, “This certainly is the Prophet.”
      ◄ John 7:40 ►
      So they said to the blind man again, “What do you say about Him, since He opened your eyes?” And he said, “He is a prophet.”
      ◄ John 9:17 ►
      Jesus the Nazarene, who was a prophet
      ◄ Luke 24:19 ►
      others were saying, “He is a prophet, like one of the prophets of old.”
      ◄ Mark 6:15 ►
      They answered him, “You are not also from Galilee, are you? Search, and see that no prophet arises out of Galilee.”
      ◄ John 7:52 ►

  • @ReligionForBreakfast
    @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +20

    Go to athleticgreens.com/religionforbreakfast to get started on your first purchase and receive a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 and 5 travel packs. Thanks to Athletic Greens for sponsoring today's video!

    • @yetigriff
      @yetigriff Год назад +1

      Athletic greens for all the history and religion needs 😂

    • @mung107
      @mung107 Год назад +1

      I get a page not found error when clicking on the link to athletic greens...

    • @crisoliveira2644
      @crisoliveira2644 Год назад

      You know that nutritional supplements shouldn't be taken without professional supervision, right? And polyvitaminics are overkill. Hypervitaminosis is no joke.

    • @emilgilels
      @emilgilels Год назад

      A sponsor that is definitely leaning into the 'breakfast' part of the Religion for Breakfast brand name. ;-)

    • @KannibalKoala
      @KannibalKoala Год назад

      Yeah, the link does not go anywhere productive

  • @paddydiskin3645
    @paddydiskin3645 Год назад +238

    As an interesting side-note, the name of Jesus in Gaelic (Irish language) is Íosa, the letter "o" being a reminder that the following "s" is pronounced as "s" and not as "sh". It is not totally surprising that there is a correspondence with Arabic. The Gaelic language is said generally to be an Indo-European language, based on its vocabulary but it has one strange anomaly. Its syntax agrees closely with classical Arabic and Biblical Hebrew.
    Just another strange item. It would appear the the god Bel was worshiped in Ireland in pre-Christian times. His name is found in the Gaelic name for the month of May, Bealtaine, meaning fire of Bel.

    • @jamilecharkie1131
      @jamilecharkie1131 Год назад +15

      It is interesting that you mention The god Bel or Bal because in parts of Lebanon they used to worship an idol named Ba’l (with a ayn). That was ancient history but the Lebanese village still today is called Ba’l-bak, or “Baalbek” basically translating to ‘Baal’s valley.” The Phoenicians brought Baal into Lebanon

    • @mebadiheidar
      @mebadiheidar Год назад +12

      Indo-Eoropean and Semetic are lies. I realized this when I started to learn Ancient Persian. while learning this thousands years language I went for Russian and Arabic and Suddenly I realized their Grammers are so familiar. I am working on the Sanskrit and ancient Greece but by times I understand these languages are too familiar too. We all came from one language one country one culture. just we forgot it.

    • @mebadiheidar
      @mebadiheidar Год назад +2

      @Car Lover we have Iso too in Iran

    • @mebadiheidar
      @mebadiheidar Год назад +1

      @@abdoo3301 not just celts. all people in the world. Humanity stared from Iraq Syria turkey and Iran. Humans like to travel. So by time Celts did not traveled from Middle East to Europe west. They say probably they came from East of Turkey which Arabs came from North of Iraq. So close right?

    • @TS-zd2ud
      @TS-zd2ud Год назад

      *Who explains to us why the Koran says Christians believe God has a biological son!*
      To all Muslims! Son of God means NOT SON! What is called the son of God is the word of God = god himself! Which has nothing to do with a child (son)! Thus, the Son of God is incarnated as the human Jesus and the human Jesus is therefore referred to as a son, which does not mean a son!

  • @MatthewMcknight
    @MatthewMcknight Месяц назад +2

    Best condensed and concise explanation I’ve heard on this topic! Thank you for such a wonderful channel!

  • @kellydalstok8900
    @kellydalstok8900 Год назад +23

    So it’s like the Native American word “(h)amack” (hammock) evolved to “hangmat” in Dutch, because it sounded similar and also described what it basically was.

  • @briannacluck5494
    @briannacluck5494 Год назад +56

    This is really interesting!
    It reminds me of when someone anglicizes their name, in a way. I used to know a guy whose first name was Urim (after the Urim and Thummim stones). He was named that because his parents moved to the US and figured it was still an important name while still being easier to pronounce to your average American than an equally important Korean name. This feels similar.

  • @rustomkanishka
    @rustomkanishka Год назад +423

    I had a Zoroastrian boss at one point. My name sounds Zoroastrian but I'm not.
    One of my smoking buddies at the job was the token Muslim named Moosa. My boss was always curious about strange things, like how i got a Buddhist first name. I pointed out that the the guy sitting across was a devout Muslim but with a Jewish name. The boss didn't get it. It didn't surprise me.
    He said he has two brothers, named Isa and Mohammed. I couldn't stop laughing.
    What is so surprising in that, my boss asked.
    So basically the lady named her sons Moosa, Isa, and Mohammed, i.e. Moses, Jesus, and Mohammed.

    • @mabrurhrivu4998
      @mabrurhrivu4998 Год назад +92

      Islam has this concept where there are four prophets who got the "main" books out of the 104 books of divinations. Moses, Jesus and Muhammad are among them. Maybe that's the pattern the lady was going for.

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Год назад +10

      @@mabrurhrivu4998 who is the fourth? I only know the three mentioned above.

    • @rustomkanishka
      @rustomkanishka Год назад +29

      @@aliballout4602 oh yeah, of course. My mistake.
      "God of Abraham" is the name of the monotheist sky daddy.

    • @merlinx8703
      @merlinx8703 Год назад +1

      ''token muslim'' let me guess, you are one of those hindutva nutjobs

    • @mirandak3273
      @mirandak3273 Год назад +3

      Why is Joshua son of Nun called in the Quoran Yusha ibn Nun?

  • @Thiago_Alves_Souza
    @Thiago_Alves_Souza Год назад +18

    And let's not forget that Hebrew/Aramaic and Arabic are sibling languages where there are a lot of similarities and easy assimilation of already existing names and terms.
    My last name is Souza and my Middle comes from Alvarez, but Spanish is Sosa or Soza. When I talk with Spanish speakers they pronounce my name exactly as the Spanish version, and It doesn't bother me nor do I feel the need to correct.

    • @taurus_2004
      @taurus_2004 13 дней назад

      So Álvarez is the Spanish version of Alves

    • @Thiago_Alves_Souza
      @Thiago_Alves_Souza 13 дней назад

      @taurus_2004 I used to be Álvares or Alvares as well, then it got shortened go Alves

  • @saymastein
    @saymastein Год назад +36

    The people who are saying that the islamic name is wrong and historically inaccurate dont know how in Islam prophets are given titles. Prophet Yunus (pbuh) (Jonah) for example was given the name Dhul-Nūn meaning one of the fish. The prophet muhammad (pbuh) has many titles himself.
    'The redeemer' seems to me like it's a title. I mean in Brazil you guys even have a statue called 'Christ the Redeemer.'

    • @yousuf6382
      @yousuf6382 Год назад +14

      There is no evidence that Jesus' name was Yeshua .. the oldest name for Jesus in Christianity is the Greek form "Isous"
      Since Jesus spoke Aramaic, and the dominant language was Aramaic, and the Greeks translated the Bible and the names, so it seems that "Isous" is the Greek pronunciation of the original name of Jesus (Isa\ عيسى) without "ayin" and with Greek suffixes.
      P.S
      The letter ayin in Arabic can be several letters in Latin based on the Arabic diacritics .. for example :
      The letter ayin in Isa, in Latin letters as (i or e) because the diacritic in ayin is (kasrah)
      The letter ayin in name "Ali" in Latin letters as (A) because the diacritic in ayin is (fathah)
      The letter ayin in Oman in Latin letters as (O) because the diacritic in ayin is (dammah)
      In the Islamic world (non-Arabs) they pronounce the name of Jesus as (isa) without ayin
      The question is why the Greek name for Jesus "iesous" is identical to the Islamic\Arabic name "isa" ?
      The answer is quite simple: the Greeks translated the name from the Aramaic, which identical in form to the name and the Arabic pronunciation (isa =عيسى) with Greek suffixes and without the Semitic consonant "Ayin".

    • @JezielProdigalSon
      @JezielProdigalSon Год назад +1

      This is true. Christ means "Redeemer". We call him Jesus Christ.

    • @AbdAllah_54564
      @AbdAllah_54564 Год назад

      Well said. That's true. We refer to people by their actual names and titles in some cases, almost all the time in fact.

    • @geebee1
      @geebee1 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/0x1SXqDpOPM/видео.html

  • @PeninsularArab127
    @PeninsularArab127 Год назад +65

    Thanks, Andrew, for this video. It’s very informative and interesting.
    Hopefully this discovery will put an end for the usual line of some Christian polemics: “Muhammad [pbuh] got Jesus’ name wrong because the Christian monk who taught him didn’t teach him the difference between between Jesus and Esau [Jacob’s brother].”

    • @dianastevenson131
      @dianastevenson131 Год назад +2

      That's interesting - in early Rabbinic literature Christians were always associated with Esau. There could be a link there, which I'd never thought of. Thanks for the connection.

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

    • @ايمان-ض2ح
      @ايمان-ض2ح Год назад +3

      Yes because in arabic his name is Yasu not isa. اسمه يسوع مش عيسى والمسلمين غلط. اقرا الكتاب المقدس بالعربي وهتشوف اسمه الحقيقي بالعربي، يسوع… مش عيسى!

    • @warprincegaming5059
      @warprincegaming5059 Год назад +7

      @@ايمان-ض2ح
      في نفس الفيديو يقول
      East Syriac : Iso
      Arabic (christian): yasu
      و الاول عيسو الذي ليس ببعيد عن عيس(ى) عليه افضل الصلاة و السلام 🥰 رسولنا لا نفرق احد منهم على الاخر

    • @alihimeur7147
      @alihimeur7147 Год назад +3

      @@ايمان-ض2ح أسوأ استنتاج شفتي الفيديو أصلا ؟

  • @donttellnonna
    @donttellnonna Год назад +38

    I love your work, it is always very well produced and sourced. I appreciate that you bring in experts where your own knowledge is lacking. I learn so much from everyone of your videos as you have a knack for making somewhat complex and unfamiliar topics simple and relatable. I never knew that religious studies was such a robust field with so many deep causal relationships, truly fascinating.

  • @Naksu..
    @Naksu.. Год назад +47

    Indeed, the example of Jesus to Allāh1 is like that of Adam. He created him from dust; then He said to him, "Be," and he was.
    (Quran 3:59)

    • @ENG.bishoLIOmessi
      @ENG.bishoLIOmessi 2 месяца назад

      An imaginary character😂😂😂😂

    • @gregthegreatofficial
      @gregthegreatofficial 2 месяца назад

      Jesus was born from Marry not by clay like Adam. or by saying BE.

    • @Naksu..
      @Naksu.. 2 месяца назад +5

      @@gregthegreatofficial Adam was born without a father or a mother and he is not God.

    • @gregthegreatofficial
      @gregthegreatofficial 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Naksu.. Not possible and there is no evidence just in your silly book. His mom Mary and his father unknown, but he requires gene Y to be male.

    • @Naksu..
      @Naksu.. 2 месяца назад +5

      @@gregthegreatofficial for once read the Quran with an open mind, not with prejudice/ hate. We live once in this world. There no easy way to heaven. How can God sacrificed his own Son just to wipe the sins of Man. And How can God have a Son. God does not need a companion, a family. He creates everything, doesnt eat, sleep, rest and has no weakness. God doesnt depend on His own creations... If Jesus is the saviour,, so it means those hundred trillions who came before the birth of Jesus are all going to hell. Is that God's devine plan/justice

  • @jmaraf7741
    @jmaraf7741 Год назад +22

    This is so interesting. Thank you for you diligent research and for sharing the results!

  • @baileyhannah1557
    @baileyhannah1557 Год назад +184

    Your videos have helped me not only understand what I believe in my own faith, but help me just be a better person to my friends that practice Islam. Thank you providing me the opportunity to be a better person and a better friend through your channel!

    • @Ricca_Day
      @Ricca_Day Год назад +19

      Absolutely! It’s so wonderful to have a balanced, scholarly approach that is respectful towards all who are followers of our Creator Above and seek to honor and understand the traditions of our ancestors here below.
      I like to think of this place and several others, as an opportunity to beat our swords into plowshares 🤗

    • @J1WE
      @J1WE Год назад +7

      @@Ricca_Day they deny Isa is God. They deny God. They Deny Prophecy. The turn Isa into a man like unto god with permission to do what god can. A man like god.
      Not like in Christianity, Jesus is God like unto men. Not a man like unto God.
      Im sorry but they do the same things the Jews did to Jesus, they ki77 him off

    • @changer1285
      @changer1285 Год назад +1

      Do you watch any let's talk religion's content? Lots and lots about Islam

    • @baileyhannah1557
      @baileyhannah1557 Год назад +1

      @@changer1285 I do! I found that channel through this one!

    • @kirstencorby8465
      @kirstencorby8465 Год назад

      Congratulation to you to being open to new information and new friends. A ot of people aren't thee days.

  • @NoahSpurrier
    @NoahSpurrier Год назад +35

    Sometimes people bringing a foreign name into a local language just pick a local name that sounds similar. I’ve seen this a lot with kids I grew up with that would just adopt some vaguely similar English name. Like Tien went by Tina. Jay-gum-fa went by Kim.

    • @IL0909
      @IL0909 Год назад +1

      And spurrier became curry

    • @NoahSpurrier
      @NoahSpurrier Год назад

      @@IL0909 I love curry! I like Japanese style curry best.

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

    • @MrBanana2000
      @MrBanana2000 Год назад +2

      No, the Quran says Isa then it must be Isa.
      Aramaic is too similar to classical Arabic

    • @NoahSpurrier
      @NoahSpurrier Год назад

      @@MrBanana2000 But who speaks Classical Arabic?

  • @danielandmariewalter
    @danielandmariewalter Год назад +8

    Really interesting. Thanks for putting this presentation together!

  • @gryaznygreeb
    @gryaznygreeb Год назад +138

    Fascinating video, I love the sound of the Arabic language. To me, Isa and Yeshua sounded similar enough and I never gave it much thought. Phonosemantic matching us exemplified well by the Chinese word for Coca Cola, Kekou kele, which means something like "Delicious happiness" or "Allows the mouth to rejoice." Their first attempt to translate it into Chinese characters meant "Bite the wax tadpole" however, and it was not a natural phonosemantic match,but rather a foreign company deliberately researching the target language for sensible matching characters.

    • @scottdoesntmatter4409
      @scottdoesntmatter4409 Год назад

      @@yousuf6382 Yeah, but the version of Jesus in the Quran is garbage. Has nothing to do with Jesus, the stories are actually random Jewish apocrypha. This is typical of the Quran, it rips off many sources, especially gnosticism that the Quran takes as being Christian.

    • @MAKDavid-1
      @MAKDavid-1 Год назад

      There is a historical narrative where Jesus of Edessa actually had such name as Jesus

    • @MAKDavid-1
      @MAKDavid-1 Год назад +1

      @@yousuf6382 Muslim variation derives from Esau and as Isa

    • @yousuf6382
      @yousuf6382 Год назад

      @@MAKDavid-1 no

    • @MAKDavid-1
      @MAKDavid-1 Год назад +1

      @@yousuf6382 No what? Muslims didn't trace a origins of Jacob who according to Biblical text have got a different blessing then Esau who is supposed to GO UP in to heaven.

  • @ciervo42
    @ciervo42 Год назад +7

    Today I learnt that having named R2-D2 in Spanish as “Arturito” (Little Arthur) is a case of Phonosemantic Matching

  • @sprachenwelt
    @sprachenwelt Год назад +115

    Actually in Arabic, words can be collapsed with a similar meaning. For instance you say SLM which is pronounced SaLaM or SaLiMa and is related to the Hebrew word MeShaLem. All mean to be healed or saved. When you collapse the SLM it becomes MLS and means to touch gently without harm, or LMS to touch and so on. In short, when turning the vowels you have a new root which is in some way related to the other root, but has a slightly different meaning.
    Now to Jashua. The Hebrew SH will always be in Arabic S. Thats why Arabs say Salam and the Hebrews Shalom. So we have in Arabi now Jasu(ua) with this ain at the end which has no equivalent in European languages. Another matter is, that a long U can be changed into a long i. We have this in several word declinations in Arabic. Explaining this here would be to difficult for non-Arabic speakers. So Jasu(ua) can be collapsed to (ua)usaJ. And the u after the (ua) can be changed to an i. So it becomes (ua)isaj and pronounced Isa. Hence Jashura is more or less equivalent to Isa.

    • @علي-ش7ث8ب
      @علي-ش7ث8ب Год назад +2

      *Substituting the sound Y with J is also common in other languages,Spanish people say me jamo instead me llamo Americans do the same instead of saying "what do you mean" they say "wha ju mean". *

    • @marioluigi9599
      @marioluigi9599 Год назад +6

      No. You're talking crap. The question is, how does Yasu' become 'isa? The answer is that it was replaced with a similar arabic name, just like Yahya replacing Yohannan. It's similar, but different and not the original.
      Don't act like you know something that actual linguists don't

    • @علي-ش7ث8ب
      @علي-ش7ث8ب Год назад +15

      @@marioluigi9599
      the ending of Jesus name Iess(o) or Iss(a) is like the difference between Hebrew and Arabic,the word No in Arabic is La,in Hebrew is Lo.

    • @1sanitat1
      @1sanitat1 Год назад +6

      @@marioluigi9599 Yahya is seemingly an (mandaic) aramaic name though, rather than arabic

    • @oriangalore
      @oriangalore Год назад +3

      @@marioluigi9599 learn before you critique.

  • @MusikiPenceresi
    @MusikiPenceresi 3 месяца назад +4

    It was a subject I was always curious about. Thank you very much for this wonderful informations. I learned that the pronunciation of the name Isa (Jesus) in Arabic is the same as in Irish and Scottish for the first time. The pieces are falling into place..😀

  • @GenesisDraws
    @GenesisDraws Год назад +11

    Got obsessed with this channel out of YT recommendations! Keep up the good work!

  • @alpha819
    @alpha819 Год назад +37

    Im a muslim and ur videos interest me keep up ur good work

    • @geebee1
      @geebee1 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/0x1SXqDpOPM/видео.html

  • @donnie27brasco
    @donnie27brasco Год назад +11

    Hi, I just wanted to say that Arabs converting to Christianity is way older than the 5th century: it goes back the to the 1th century with the kingdom of Osroene (132 BC-214 AD ), the Ghassanids (220 AD-638 AD), and The Lakhmids (300 AD-602 AD). Thanks.

    • @J1_FGCC4474
      @J1_FGCC4474 Год назад

      What is a kingdom Osroene?

    • @HGAHAMFHAH
      @HGAHAMFHAH 5 месяцев назад

      facts

    • @rajababy2009
      @rajababy2009 3 месяца назад

      yes even Persians were converts but Most of the time they dont believe in divinity of Jesus Christ pbuh , there were many types of Christians before council of nicea force their trinity

    • @KungfuPanda342
      @KungfuPanda342 3 месяца назад

      ​@@rajababy2009 how did they forced trinitarian in council of nicea ?

    • @rajababy2009
      @rajababy2009 3 месяца назад

      @@KungfuPanda342 just read history and listen to Dr Burt Ehrman

  • @celestialknight2339
    @celestialknight2339 Год назад +14

    Great video, but I’m really surprised that you didn’t mention the Syriac pronunciation of ‘Jesus’, which is “Isho”-a very striking resemblance to the Qur’anic ‘Isā. And if this Syriac rendering “Isho” is truly ancient & accurate to the what Christ’s own townspeople or contemporaries might have called him (especially considering that he himself spoke Syriac as a Galilean Jew), then the Qur’an would have effectively gotten it right, perhaps even closer than many others translations. I really wish you addressed this point haha. ‘Isa could just be an Arabized version of the ancient Syriac “Isho” which may in fact be an original & valid pronunciation of Christ’s name.

    • @ايمان-ض2ح
      @ايمان-ض2ح Год назад +2

      His name in Arabic is Yasu’ not Isa.

    • @geebee1
      @geebee1 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/0x1SXqDpOPM/видео.html

    • @trevinowens70
      @trevinowens70 Год назад

      what wrong with you?? They already have a Arabic translation of Jesus name, YASU!!!! Which comes from the Aramaic name Yeshua. Which is 100 times closer. Just dumb asf

    • @ايمان-ض2ح
      @ايمان-ض2ح Год назад +1

      @@trevinowens70 THANK YOU!!!!

    • @Revitalization4241
      @Revitalization4241 Год назад +2

      ​@@ايمان-ض2ح what about Aramaic Isho

  • @stevenv6463
    @stevenv6463 Год назад +20

    Great video, I love Ahmad al Jallad's work. He has been interviewed many times on different yt channels and the idea of finding ancient inscriptions to shed light on the pre-Islamic period is super interesting. It seems to be an up and coming field and more and more discoveries are made and studied all the time. I recommend looking at his other lectures and interviews.
    Also I didn't know that the name Yahya had a pre-Islamic history as well. Very interesting indeed.

    • @reyyrayanemokadime
      @reyyrayanemokadime 3 месяца назад

      jesus name in aramaic is Isho . Yeshua
      i in hebrew idk what this guy talking about u guys go search jesus name in armaic then search it in hebrew

  • @commentaccount49
    @commentaccount49 Год назад +25

    The topics that you WANT to do are always more interesting and entertaining than the topics you feel like you HAVE to do. I enjoyed this. Looking forward to more.

  • @MetaBuddha
    @MetaBuddha Год назад +27

    Ahmad really seems to know his stuff!
    Your video really are perfect for breakfast, btw!

  • @MA-sl5mg
    @MA-sl5mg Год назад +33

    May Allah gather All of us with JESUS in haven❤️

    • @ehannasir8464
      @ehannasir8464 Год назад +5

      im kinda confused why you used arabic word for god but english word for jesus?? shouldn't you say "may allah gather all of us with Isa in heaven" ??

    • @mariorizkallah5383
      @mariorizkallah5383 Год назад

      Muslims worship a demon

    • @cldn2
      @cldn2 Год назад

      It's the same thing. @@ehannasir8464

    • @BixiBrunder
      @BixiBrunder Год назад +2

      Mohammed the one and only greatest. IsA come only after him.
      Prophet Sallallah Alayhe was sallam was the reason why I am and my ancestors were Muslims. IsA didn't contribute towards our Islamization except that he were the prophet for his people and real christians who worship Allah.

    • @syednaquib4835
      @syednaquib4835 Год назад +7

      @@BixiBrunder you mean , you dont have any love for al masih ibn maryam A.S❤ ,
      although ISA A.S was muslim and he will contribute in his second coming , saying that a prophet didn't contribute in islam is a kufr ,
      and comparison between prophet was not liked by muhammad SAW❤ ,
      you can check the hadith about two man fighting about , who is more superior muhammad or musa peace be upon them ,
      in bukhari as well as muslim ,
      brother you should listen hadith of isa A.s ❤ and his contribution what he did , and what will he do
      may allah guide you to right path , as muslim we should not compare prophets , each of them are superior in particular thing and no doubt muhammad saw❤ is the leader but leader does not make superior over other ,
      it is just like ABu bakr R.A among all sahaba

  • @qboger
    @qboger Год назад +11

    Loving these linguistics-related videos!

  • @فهدالسليم-ت9ج
    @فهدالسليم-ت9ج Год назад +11

    Could you please shed some light on the difference between the Qumran manuscripts and between the Masoretic version of the Old Testament and the Septuagint version, it would be an interesting topic and I am addicted to your channel

    • @andrelegeant88
      @andrelegeant88 Год назад +1

      I second this request. It's particularly interesting because the Septuagint was the most commonly used text for early Christians, possibly even the version Jesus was most familiar with, and the one that Orthodox Christians give priority to.

    • @Gadanfer
      @Gadanfer Год назад

      هلا بولد العم

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

  • @AbboyTopan
    @AbboyTopan Год назад +4

    Ishoʿ (īšōʕ), a cognate of the Hebrew term Yeshu, is the Eastern Syriac pronunciation of the Aramaic form of the name of Jesus.
    in hebrew is Isho and in arabic is Isa

  • @fr.hannakaram5840
    @fr.hannakaram5840 Год назад +43

    In the Arabic language, there is a method called "Tas'hif", meaning, giving the foreign word an Arabic name, with which some letters may be inverted to suit the Arabic pronunciation. To give an example of that, the word lawyer in the French language is(ِAvocat) It was transferred to Arabic with the same wording, with some conversion, so it became (Bookatee). Converted (Isous) from Geek into Arabic, they would spell it "Issa" أيسا "I" (ع) in Arabic pronunciation (A).ايسى to عيسى

    • @ibrahimelmasry-z3k
      @ibrahimelmasry-z3k Год назад +5

      المسيح عربي هو شاب فلسطيني تكلم العربيه باحد لهجاتها الاراميه لغه الشعب العربي السوري فالاراميه والعربيه متقاربتنا جدا ويسوع تكلم الاراميه ولم يتكلم بالعبريه لان العبريه لم تكن معروفه او مستخدمه وقت يسوع بل تم صنع العبريه بعد موت يسوع بماءتي سنه يسوع لم يتكلم اليونانيه هو تكلم اراميه وهي احدي لهجات العربيه فالبابلين من قبل تكلموا العربيه ايضا فالمنطقه كلها تكلمت لهجات منبثقه من العربيه فيعقوب هو اسم عربي واسحاق من يسحق هو عربي وكذلك عيسو هو اسم عربي ابن يعقوب اسمه عيسو ونات لعيسي وهو نفس عيسو بابدال الواو لألف وهو أمر معروف بين اللهجات العربيه فاسم المسيح عيسو انتقل لليونانيه ايسو بابدال العين الي ألف عيسو ليكون أيسو وهو ينطق بالعربيه لعيسي

    • @thetutsons7764
      @thetutsons7764 Год назад +2

      هذا ليس التصحيف، التصحيف هو قراءة الكلامات متشابهة الرسوم بلفظ خاطئ ، مثلا تقرأ ثامر تامر بالتاء، ما تقثده أنت هو التعريب، مثل فلس من اللغة الفارسية أو سراج من السنسكريتية
      What you have described isnt tas7eef, but t'3reb,tas7eef is when someone reads a written word wrong because there is another world that looks like it, as i have given an example in arabic between thamer and tamer.

    • @ibrahimelmasry-z3k
      @ibrahimelmasry-z3k Год назад

      العربيه موجوده قبل الفارسيه فالبابلين قبل فارس ولغه بابل الاولي معنا وثاءق ترجع لسنه 2800قبل مولد يسوع اي منذ 4800سنه مكتوبه بلخهجه عربيه فتداخل اللغات وتاثيراتها المتبادله علي بعض نعرفه لكن يسوع المسيح اسمه بالارامي عيسو ايسو وانتقل لليونانيه ايسو وهو بالعربيه عيسي فالعربيه والاراميه لغه واحده تتشاركان في جزور الكلمه وكلمه فلس كلمه عربيه فلس يفلس المفلسون ومثلها شيكل او شيقل عمله اسراءيل فالكلمه عربيه كنعانيه منذ الاف السنين تعبر عن وحده موازين فاقتبستها العبريه ككلمه داله علي العمله ومع الوقت يظن بعض الناس ان شيكل كلمه عبريه مع انها عربيه خاصه ونحن في مصر للان نقول شأله خودلك شأله برسيم او شأله بصل اي خذ وزنه برسيم او وزنه بصل @@thetutsons7764

    • @قبل7سنوات-ف8م
      @قبل7سنوات-ف8م Год назад

      ​​@@thetutsons7764
      فلس تعني مبلغ بخس و هي كلمة عربية لا اعجمية و كذلك سراج كلمة عربية الشيء المضاء
      لا تفتي بإسم المعجم

    • @قبل7سنوات-ف8م
      @قبل7سنوات-ف8م Год назад +2

      في الحقيقة لا أعتقد أن ما تقوله صحيح
      كلمة عيسى أو يسوع هي كلمات عربية إنتقلت إلى الإغريق عن طريق العرب الكنعانيين و الاراميين القدماء ، لا شيء جداد
      لماذا العرب لا يسمون إيطاليات "عيطاليا" ؟ أو إيران عيران ؟ أمريكا عمريكا ؟

  • @StefanTravis
    @StefanTravis Год назад +7

    Very plausible. I have an arabic friend named Rayaan - very common name. But in the UK he's... Ryan.

    • @mecanuktutorials6476
      @mecanuktutorials6476 Год назад

      I knew a Chinese guy name “Yu Hang”. He went by “Justin”.

  • @stephenmeier4658
    @stephenmeier4658 Год назад +11

    No need for vitamin drinks, man! I get all my nutrition when I have RELIGION for breakfast 💯

  • @douglasfur3808
    @douglasfur3808 Год назад +19

    I find it impressive that this prayer was carved into basalt. To carve this inscription would not be as simple as one and paper or tapping it into a phone. The scope of time to chisel with a metal tool or scratch with a harder stone would be more a matter of hours than minutes. This indicates the supplicant's level of devotion to family and to faith.

    • @manofwar2354
      @manofwar2354 Год назад +7

      People had a lot of time back then

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

    • @debianlasmana8794
      @debianlasmana8794 Год назад

      @@manofwar2354 now lets see people today with "a lot time"
      forget it we got tiktok today...

    • @manofwar2354
      @manofwar2354 Год назад +1

      @@debianlasmana8794 yeah alot of time in tiktok
      It is laughable but when we had war in my country and no phone or games (only me we had some but not advanced )
      We used to carve things on rocks or stones and many wild things

  • @joex2504
    @joex2504 Год назад +2

    I've been impressed by the knowledge of Dr. Ahmad Al-Jallad.

  • @bilalbataineh8367
    @bilalbataineh8367 Год назад +5

    mind blowing !! By the way, I used to live a a few hours from those Safaitic inscriptions in Jordan but had no chance to visit this incredible black desert.

  • @tahir.khan000
    @tahir.khan000 2 месяца назад +35

    Muhammad is the last prophet of Islam and Islam started with the Adam not Muhammad. Muhammad completed the Islam.

  • @drdfunk
    @drdfunk Год назад +14

    I really like the phonosemantic matching, that's a great way of considering it. I always believed that Isa was exactly that, but adapted from the 3 letter root Y-SH-A but then matched to something closer to their native and local Arabic.
    ...still closer than the name Jesus.

    • @unwesen6485
      @unwesen6485 Месяц назад

      Ye - Shu - (A) = Je - Su - (S).
      The greek name Jesus only has one letter different to the orginal. This is because in greek grammar masculine names end by the letter "-S".

  • @شاح
    @شاح 4 месяца назад

    Even as a Muslim i wondered this❤❤
    JazakALLA xêr
    Thank you
    Also your pronunciation was actually AMAZING 🤩

  • @doyouknoworjustbelieve6694
    @doyouknoworjustbelieve6694 3 месяца назад +3

    Esa عيسى could also be a modification of Esau عيسو (The twin brother of Jacob).

  • @joeshmoe8345
    @joeshmoe8345 Год назад +6

    Thanks, I was so curious about this after your last video. Thanks a bunch big dog!

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +4

      One of the most requested topics after that Yeshua video.

    • @olavl8827
      @olavl8827 Год назад +2

      @@ReligionForBreakfast The proper reply to that comment would have been "woof!".
      Just kidding of course.
      Like the other commenter, I really appreciate the insights you provide us with.

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

  • @yusufblessed22
    @yusufblessed22 Год назад +10

    As Arab Muslim isä is the most beautiful name after Yusuf for me it's so deep and beautiful.

    • @holyleague8286
      @holyleague8286 10 месяцев назад +1

      Copy paste

    • @yusufblessed22
      @yusufblessed22 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@holyleague8286 yes we name ourselves after those men and I don't care if I copied their name it's God chosen ppl so we love everything about them.

    • @holyleague8286
      @holyleague8286 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@yusufblessed22 so quran was a man made book

    • @yusufblessed22
      @yusufblessed22 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@holyleague8286 huh ? What are you on about I said we copy the name of the prophets and am proud of that bcuz they are God chosen messengers what dose the Quran has to do with this ?

    • @holyleague8286
      @holyleague8286 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@yusufblessed22 so God copy paste the name Isa from humans.....Bec he doesn't know the truth name of the prophet whom he send....what a pathetic god do you have 😁

  • @AbdulKhader-786
    @AbdulKhader-786 Год назад +3

    in the Quran there doesn’t seem to be consistency in representing names from the Bible. For example Elijah which is Elias in Greek (the Septuagint) is Ilyaas in Quran so it is based on the Greek Septuagint and not the original Hebrew Eliyahu. But the name Zechariah is Zakariya in the Quran and not Zakariyas, so in that instance the Quran Arabicizes the name directly from the original Hebrew and not the Greek Septuagint

  • @muayyadalsadi
    @muayyadalsadi Год назад +5

    8:47 it's the other way around. I bet you that was no one in the entire middle east called John nor any other greek name. C
    Nor there was a person in china having the greek/latin mame of Confucius (his true name was Kong Fu tzu). Nor there was any Arab philosopher called Averroes (his name was Ibn Rushud). It's a western habit.
    On the other hand since Arabic and Aramaic are both sister Semitic languages I believe it's the way Arab pronounce it. Keep in mind this region was continuously inhabited and they keep their traditions naming their kids by the name of their grand parents. It was not a modern reinvention like modern Hebrew.

  • @MythVisionPodcast
    @MythVisionPodcast Год назад +12

    I love this video so much! Thank you for such an educational video my friend.

  • @WordToMomsYo
    @WordToMomsYo Год назад +5

    Wow! I had never really thought about this phenomenon… What an excellent little lesson/video!

  • @hamzakhairi4765
    @hamzakhairi4765 5 месяцев назад +4

    This video has strengthened my faith as a muslim immensely. If the Qur'an was written by Muhammad Sallalahu Alayhi Wasalam then he wouldve called Jesus Yeshua or Yeshu etc but unstead a man who is unlettered and has no education in anything aside from basic trade used a word/name that was essentially extinct at that time in Pagan Mecca or in christian arab hubs. Truly amazing

    • @F10Danny
      @F10Danny 6 дней назад

      did you finish the video? He says that Isa was already used in Arabia at the time

  • @MrWise713
    @MrWise713 Год назад +3

    So happy to see Qur'an reference. I trust Qur'an more coz it's a reserved book and not remodeled

  • @rushdrift
    @rushdrift Год назад +9

    This is extremely well done, really enjoyed watching this

    • @reyyrayanemokadime
      @reyyrayanemokadime 3 месяца назад

      jesus name in aramaic is Isho . Yeshua
      i in hebrew idk what this guy talking about u guys go search jesus name in armaic then search it in hebrew

  • @HumanbyGod
    @HumanbyGod Год назад +7

    Isa ibn maryam, rasool of Allah (may God's mercy and blessing be upon the messengers)

  • @YoussefEissa-b2e
    @YoussefEissa-b2e 10 дней назад

    honestly, it's a very informative video. loved it.

  • @JaleelBeig
    @JaleelBeig Год назад +16

    Can you do an summary episode on Slavic Mythology?

  • @laurenthomas7074
    @laurenthomas7074 Год назад +4

    Very interesting I love bringing in some Arabic linguistics!

  • @aparnadg
    @aparnadg Год назад +14

    It is so fascinating... some parts in India, Jesus is known as Isa Masiha and in bengali, he is known as Jishu Khristo.. there might be other names as well which I am unaware of.

    • @MHCE444
      @MHCE444 Год назад +1

      Did you know in bengali language Egypt is called " Me-shore

    • @aparnadg
      @aparnadg Год назад

      @@MHCE444 yes ofcourse I know lol

    • @Urfavigbo
      @Urfavigbo 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@tifina8563near Saudi Arabia?

    • @JimmyHandtrixx
      @JimmyHandtrixx 8 месяцев назад +2

      he is also called 'Yesu' i think?

    • @Animodeus
      @Animodeus 5 месяцев назад

      It's because of the colonization of arab

  • @feelshowdy
    @feelshowdy Месяц назад

    The part explaining the meaning of Isa and why they might've chosen it for Jesus is really cool!

  • @adnamaster9973
    @adnamaster9973 Год назад +8

    You have enriched my faith and my academic understanding of my journey in uncountable ways. Thank you for all you do Professor.

  • @Shiyam-eh3dj
    @Shiyam-eh3dj Год назад +6

    He has sent down upon you, [O Muhammad], the Book in truth, confirming what was before it. And He revealed the Torah and the injeel (gospel) (3:3)

  • @emmyjannah
    @emmyjannah Год назад +7

    Peace be upon jesus eisa one of our noble prophets ❤

    • @musa6173
      @musa6173 Год назад

      peace be upon him & his mother, the greatest woman to ever exist.

    • @P-kp1gm
      @P-kp1gm 11 месяцев назад

      His mom is not a god or the wife of god

  • @Zaheem02
    @Zaheem02 Год назад

    i actually left a comment on the video about jesus's name regarding this topic! glad to see you cover it.

  • @mopdycke94
    @mopdycke94 Год назад +7

    Wahb'el has the same meaning as Matthew does. Which I find interesting since Matthew is my name.

    • @slaughter2517
      @slaughter2517 Год назад

      Matthew in hebrew spells matiyahu its nowhere close .Friend words in different language can have same meaning but the words are different

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 3 месяца назад

      @@slaughter2517That’s what he said. He didn’t say Wahbel came from Matthew. He said they mean the same thing.

  • @tugbatok9008
    @tugbatok9008 Год назад +24

    MY father's name is Isa. and his brother's names follow Musa (moses), Mustafa (the other name of the prophet Mohammad) Hamza (prophet's uncle), Ismail (you know Ismael, Ismoel...), and the last one is Bekir (the first caliph, prophet's best friend) . It's so funny to me for some reason...:D

    • @marupuccino
      @marupuccino Год назад +6

      i love it ! very beautiful names they were given masha allah

    • @blacksheep6174
      @blacksheep6174 Год назад +3

      Mashallah

    • @islamwithproof20
      @islamwithproof20 Год назад

      Look at my name you'll get Evidence

    • @geebee1
      @geebee1 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/0x1SXqDpOPM/видео.html

  • @ahmedabdulle16
    @ahmedabdulle16 Год назад +6

    Thank you for this video! This was very informative. I wonder if early Arab Christians were using the ‘ysy version, how did the current version of Jesus name in Arabic come to be? Like what happened to facilitate the adoption of the original name instead of the Arabized version?

    • @yousuf6382
      @yousuf6382 Год назад +6

      There is no evidence that Jesus' name was Yeshua .. the oldest name for Jesus in Christianity is the Greek form "Isous"
      Since Jesus spoke Aramaic, and the dominant language was Aramaic, and the Greeks translated the Bible and the names, so it seems that "Isous" is the Greek pronunciation of the original name of Jesus (Isa\ عيسى) without "ayin" and with Greek suffixes.
      P.S
      The letter ayin in Arabic can be several letters in Latin based on the Arabic diacritics .. for example :
      The letter ayin in Isa, in Latin letters as (i or e) because the diacritic in ayin is (kasrah)
      The letter ayin in name "Ali" in Latin letters as (A) because the diacritic in ayin is (fathah)
      The letter ayin in Oman in Latin letters as (O) because the diacritic in ayin is (dammah)
      In the Islamic world (non-Arabs) they pronounce the name of Jesus as (isa) without ayin
      The question is why the Greek name for Jesus "iesous" is identical to the Islamic\Arabic name "isa" ?
      The answer is quite simple: the Greeks translated the name from the Aramaic, which identical in form to the name and the Arabic pronunciation (isa =عيسى) with Greek suffixes and without the Semitic consonant "Ayin".

    • @kylejacobson9587
      @kylejacobson9587 Год назад +5

      Because Christians were speaking Greek, or Syriac, or Coptic, or etc upon the conquest, and they slowly adopted Arabic. Their religious liturgies, including their variant of the name of Jesus would probably change more slowly that the adoption of Arabic by non-arabic speakers.

    • @samroma837
      @samroma837 Год назад

      The main point is that Dr. Al-Jallad's early Isa inscription "ysy" tells us that it's a DIETY = God.
      God bless Dr. Al-Jallad.

    • @slaughter2517
      @slaughter2517 Год назад +2

      @@yousuf6382 well i think u have done no research at all nothing for u to spout such ignorance jesus name is short for hebrew name joshua which in hebrew spells yahoshua and jesus in hebrew spells yeshua what does greek has to do anything with it jesus was a jew not greek and he was named an hebrew name yeshua.languages dont change name

    • @yousuf6382
      @yousuf6382 Год назад +1

      ​@@slaughter2517 Yehoshua in the Hebrew Bible is Yehoshua bin Nun
      The oldest known name for Jesus in Christianity is the Greek form (Iesous).

  • @anonymouspeople1542
    @anonymouspeople1542 Год назад +2

    thank's man, this explain a lot about why Jesus called Isa,
    i thought bcuz Arabic heard Iesous & they can't said it, instead they called Isa (Yi & Sa) or Yesus in my country

  • @charafjakoub4945
    @charafjakoub4945 Год назад +5

    عيسى ISA
    Jesus is named 25 times in the Quran

    • @Fouilla
      @Fouilla 4 месяца назад

      25jesus and 25 Adam

  • @mehdioktaputrahabsyi3096
    @mehdioktaputrahabsyi3096 Год назад +3

    Jesus (English), Iesous (Greek), Isa (Arabic), Yasu'a (Hebrew to Arabic), Isho (Aramaic), Yeshu'a (Hebrew). Jesus while alive spoke Aramaic, whatever the variation of his name he is still the same person.

    • @John-vr5yc
      @John-vr5yc 6 месяцев назад

      Some people just want to think that a more ancient language is more holy somehow.. when Revelation 19 says no man knows his name and then says his name is the word of God... His sonship is more important than his earthly given name.. Jesus asked disciples who do men say that I am and Peter answered thou art the Christ the son of the living God...

  • @Ali-su5so
    @Ali-su5so Год назад +29

    لا إله إلا الله محمد رسول الله

    • @AnudeepKristy
      @AnudeepKristy Год назад +1

      JESUS 🛐✝️

    • @Neetdanu
      @Neetdanu Год назад +2

      ​@@AnudeepKristyprophet Jesus
      We love him more than you

    • @AnudeepKristy
      @AnudeepKristy Год назад +1

      @@Neetdanu Don't love him ...Pray to him and follow his teachings 🤗🤗🤗 LORD JESUS CHRIST bless you.

    • @Ali-su5so
      @Ali-su5so Год назад +1

      @@AnudeepKristy Jesus PEACE BE UPON HIM is a man not a GOD !!!

    • @AnudeepKristy
      @AnudeepKristy Год назад +2

      @@Ali-su5so and was also a Muslim right ?? 😂

  • @zakewalkthroughz5082
    @zakewalkthroughz5082 Год назад

    This is a question iv had for so long thank you addressing it

  • @stephanpopp6210
    @stephanpopp6210 Год назад +8

    Thanks for giving a solution to this puzzle that has intrigued me since I've begun Islamic Studies in 1990! It is very important to understand the ground on which the Qur'an fell, and the common public, and even students like me, still knows almost nothing.

    • @ALGfunk
      @ALGfunk Год назад

      Your studies are done by second hand orientalist with bias views, the academic way is to get the information correct from first hand source. Ie the heavy weight Islamic scholars.
      Islam(submission message) did not start with Mohamed but with Adam and finished by Mohamed. And in-between people corrupted the message.

    • @stephanpopp6210
      @stephanpopp6210 Год назад

      @@ALGfunk This was long ago. Did you see the video? I suppose not.

    • @wbhtrb3008
      @wbhtrb3008 Год назад

      تدرس الإسلام؟ ههههه

    • @33abdulhakeem
      @33abdulhakeem Год назад

      الله لايحب المتكبر
      ruclips.net/video/wHQTJVw_Q-g/видео.html

    • @stephanpopp6210
      @stephanpopp6210 Год назад

      @@33abdulhakeem فتفكر أنني متبكر؟ لماذا ؟ قلت فقط انظر هذا الفلم لآنه دليل الإسلم.

  • @cozerian
    @cozerian Год назад +3

    'Isa is like a reversed version of the word Yasua if you think about it
    'Isa means the saved one and Yashua means the one who will be saved
    Matches with what the Quran says

    • @J1WE
      @J1WE Год назад

      More like Redeemer/Purchase/Ransom

    • @F10Danny
      @F10Danny 6 дней назад

      but he says Isa meant redeemer, in Christianity Jesus redeems us of our sin

  • @TYD20
    @TYD20 Год назад +7

    Thank you for your videos ❤️ Peace to all religions

  • @georginashanti4605
    @georginashanti4605 Год назад +1

    This is fascinating and so interesting and comprehensive. I like the linguistic background and historical information. Even the story of the rock inscription is fascinating, it's like going back in time.

  • @thetruth3170
    @thetruth3170 Год назад +3

    In east syriac its iso? Can someone explain how that was bypassed completely in the video?

    • @nocapstreet8291
      @nocapstreet8291 5 месяцев назад

      That’s actually the ARAMAIC pronunciation and yeshua is Hebrew. This guy is spreading misinformation, sheikh Ahmed deedat has a nice video on the origins of Isa (as)

    • @ebonymaw8457
      @ebonymaw8457 3 месяца назад

      @@nocapstreet8291no way you just referenced Ahmed deedat 💀please this is an academic channel not madrassa rambles.

    • @nocapstreet8291
      @nocapstreet8291 3 месяца назад

      @@ebonymaw8457 this channel is far from academic or the level of the honorable Ahmed deedat.

  • @kamalabrahman6925
    @kamalabrahman6925 Год назад +7

    Proof that Quranic name is the correct name for Jesus.
    Islam is the true religion from God.
    Indeed, the religion in the sight of Allah is Islam. And those who were given the Scripture did not differ except after knowledge had come to them - out of jealous animosity between themselves. And whoever disbelieves in the verses of Allah, then indeed, Allah is swift in [taking] account.
    Quran 3:19.

    • @johnrichardson7629
      @johnrichardson7629 2 месяца назад

      Cool story, bro

    • @iqywgi
      @iqywgi 2 месяца назад

      @@johnrichardson7629 this "story" gets cooler, search up quranic miracles, you'll be forced to accept islam is the truth, that is if you are smart enough to follow through

  • @alaromukhtar2127
    @alaromukhtar2127 Год назад +8

    First of all, the Quran aka the Furqan(the Criterion) is the most reliable book to reference from, in Surah Imran or is it Surah Maryam, Allah said Yahya (John) is given to him and it is the first of its kind

  • @luizmanar6025
    @luizmanar6025 11 месяцев назад +1

    Subhanallah I was looking at you and noticed you look like that guy from "smile to jannah" but in a white version 😊 Don't mean anything with it but it caught my eye.great video by the way , Peace cousin. ✌️

  • @sophisticated_patter
    @sophisticated_patter Год назад +4

    There are strange diminutive forms of names in the Talmud, like Dosa, Assai, Yochai. I always figured that was the source of the "new testament" names in the Quran. Similar shortened forms of Jacob exist both in Judaism and Islam as Akiba and Ka'b respectively so I just assumed it was phonetic transmission.

  • @Omdano
    @Omdano Год назад +21

    Thank you, this video reaffirmed my faith as a Muslim.

    • @cooleregg5577
      @cooleregg5577 Год назад +3

      How so?

    • @ahabhames
      @ahabhames Год назад +1

      may i ask how

    • @venox7106
      @venox7106 23 дня назад +1

      same

    • @F10Danny
      @F10Danny 6 дней назад +1

      @@venox7106 i dont get how this has much to do with restoring faith in islam? The pre islam Arabs used Isa because the name was similar to a God in arab pagan religion, so now Jesus is their God they call him Isa, and the name was common so Muslims use Isa. Whats special about that?

  • @jestermoon
    @jestermoon Год назад +8

    Take A Moment
    I am here for a short time I will live a good life.
    As do you my brother 🙏
    Stay Safe
    Stay Free 🌐

  • @falkenvir
    @falkenvir Год назад

    Thank you for shining light on this which is very interesting

  • @oblivion476
    @oblivion476 Год назад +4

    Truly fascinating. Excellent work as always.

  • @JaleelBeig
    @JaleelBeig Год назад +10

    We're talking names so: Idris is a prophet is the Qur'an, often matched with Enoch. But i feel his name sounds closer to Esdras, another name version of Ezra in the Bible. Could there be actually something to this? I wish I was a researcher.

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  Год назад +7

      As a non-expert in this field, I'd need to do the research first on this to provide an answer. But it definitely is a good idea for a video topic. I'll look into it!

    • @PseudoSpaceMarine
      @PseudoSpaceMarine Год назад +1

      I thought Uzair was the Arabic name for Ezra.

    • @abdulmunim318
      @abdulmunim318 Год назад +3

      Uzair (Arabic: عزير, ʿUzayr) is a figure who is mentioned in the Quran, Surah At-Tawba, verse 9:30, which states that he was revered by the Jews as "the son of God". Uzair is most often identified with the biblical Ezra.
      We already have Uzair as Ezra, so your point makes no sense brother Jaleel. Hence why Idris pbuh is Enoch.

    • @JaleelBeig
      @JaleelBeig Год назад +1

      @ReligionForBreakfast I'll just add that there's no canonical identification of Idris in Islam, only two derived opinions, the less popular opinion states he's an Israelite Prophet.
      Also the use of Uzayr does not negate the possibility that Idris is Esdras/Ezra, with Idris being potentially the preferred by Qur'an and the former by Jewish Arabs; in same the manner as Isa & Yasu by Christians respectively.

    • @JaleelBeig
      @JaleelBeig Год назад

      @@PseudoSpaceMarine never said he wasn't

  • @thecynicpyro
    @thecynicpyro Год назад +4

    If this is true it's a groundbreaking discovery

  • @markward3981
    @markward3981 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is interesting. I regard I as one piece of information but still credible and interesting.
    Thanks for posting.