WHO IS THE PROPHET OF
DEUTERONOMY 18:18?
by Silas
INTRODUCTION
Muhammad claimed that the Bible
foretold his prophethood. Today many
Muslim apologists claim that the term "brethren"
in Deuteronomy 18:15 and 18:18, could include anyone who is a descendant of
Abraham. They believe that since
Muhammad was an assumed descendant of Ishmael, Abraham's first son, then
Muhammad qualifies as a 'brother' to the Israelites, and is indeed the prophet
who Moses foretold in Deuteronomy 18:18.
The New Testament tells us that
Jesus is the prophet Moses foretold (Acts 3:22). Let's examine the biblical evidence and see if Muhammad has a
claim to be the prophet foretold by Moses.
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CONTEXT
OF “BRETHREN”
To begin with, the term used for 'brethren' is used in a variety of ways in the Old
Testament, (Taurat, Zabur). What must
be addressed is the context for the term 'brethren'. If the context of how it is used means anyone loosely related to
the Israelites, then perhaps it is possible that Muhammad could be the
prophet. If the context means that the future prophet is to be an Israelite, then
Muhammad could not be that prophet.
In one sense, since Muslims and
Christians believe that all humans are descendants of Adam and Eve, then all of
us are brothers and sisters. But
Muslims insist that the meaning of "brethren" in the Deuteronomy
18:18 verse is one who is a descendant of Abraham, not Adam. Is their definition valid? What is the context for the use of the term
"brethren" in the Old Testament, and specifically, Deuteronomy?
Here are
three different ways the term 'brethren' is used in Deuteronomy:
1) used for
relating the 12 tribes together,
2) used to
relate the Levites amongst themselves as brothers, as in 18:7
3) used to
relate the Israelites to the Edomites, as in 2:4.
I did research into the way the term
'brethren' is used throughout the Old Testament. I found that the Hebrew word is 'awkh'. It generally means 'a brother' used in the widest sense of
literal relationships, and metaphorically, having an affinity or
resemblance. 'awkh' is also translated
(in the King James Version - I'm using a Strong's King James Version concordance)
'another' as in 1 Chr 26:12, ('relatives' in New International Version), as
'like' in Ezekiel: 18.10, and as 'other' in Genesis 13:11.
Brown's Hebrew lexicon also
reinforced Strong's definition. It
states that the word can be translated in various ways: 1) as brother, meaning born of the same
mother, 2) indefinite relative, a
kinship in a wider sense, as in Lot being a 'brother' of Abraham in Genesis
13:8... Lot was Abram's nephew, not literal brother, or the Israelite tribes
being brothers, or as in Israel and Edom being brothers, and likewise for
Israel and Judah.
It is also used to denote close
friendships like 2 Samuel 1:26 - the relationship between David and Jonathan,
or used for allies - as in Amos 1:9.
Brown's also states that it is used
as a figure of resemblance as in Job 30:29... Job was not the literal brother
to a jackal, Job was identifying with being abandoned. And, it is used to denote the cherubim
facing each other in Exodus 25:20, and as 'the sight' of a crocodile in Job
41:9!
Another verse I found is in Proverbs
18:9 "One who is slack in his work is brother to him who
destroys". Again, the use is
metaphorical.
All of the above shows that the term
'awkh' can be used in various ways; part of its specific meaning being defined
by the context in which it is used.
So, digging deeper into the contexts
of how "brethren" is used start with the book of Deuteronomy. The first clue to the context of
"brethren" is from the purpose of the book of Deuteronomy itself. The name Deuteronomy means 'copy of the
law'; the law for who? - the
Israelites, no one else. This book was
given specifically to the Israelites, it was Moses' farewell address to
them. A large part of it was a review
of the laws between God and the Israelites, and its reading was to prepare them
to enter into the promised land.
Next, I took a look at how the term
'brethren' (King James Version) is used throughout Deuteronomy. I found that it is used about 20 times, at
least 14 times it means 'fellow Israelites' - members of the 12 tribes. Twice it is used to ref. the Edomites, and
once for Levitical brothers, once for literal brothers (25:5), and twice for
the verses in question: 18:15,18.
Therefore, the overwhelming majority
of times the context is used for referring to 'fellow Israelites'.
So let's carefully examine the
verses in question, and see if we can find any clues to the context in
question. Let's start with verse
14. The New International Version uses 'brothers'
usually in place of the King James Version 'brethren'. Words in ( ) parenthesis are mine. From Deut. 18:
14: "The nations you (i.e. the Israelites)
will dispossess listen to those who practice sorcery or divination. But as for you (the Israelites), the Lord
your (the Israelites) God has not permitted you (the Israelites) to do so.
15: The Lord your God will raise up for you (the
Israelites) a prophet like me from among your (the Israelites) own
"brothers". You (the
Israelites) must listen to him.
16: For this is what you (the Israelites) asked
of the Lord your God at Horeb on the day of the assembly when you (the
Israelites) said, "Let us (the Israelites) not hear the voice of the Lord
our God nor see this great fire anymore, or we (the Israelites) will die."
17: The Lord said to me "What they (the
Israelites) say is good.
18: I will raise up for them (the Israelites) a
prophet like you from among their (the Israelites) brothers; I will put my
words in his mouth, and he will tell them (the Israelites) everything I command
him.
19: If anyone (the Israelites) does not listen
to my words that the prophet speaks in my name, I myself will call him (an
Israelite) to account.
It's very clear here that the
context for 'brethren' is from amongst the fellow Israelites. Not an Edomite, or other non-Israelite, who
were not given the law, not part of the group Moses was addressing. Moses meant that
the prophet would come out of the 12 Israelite tribes.
We should also try to cross
reference to other verses in Deuteronomy to see if we can get additional
understanding of the context. In
Deuteronomy 2:4, 8, 'brethren' was used in conjunction with the Edomites, who
were basically their cousins. Moses
plainly described who the brothers were... what the context of them being
brethren was (i.e. Edomites being the descendants of Esau). By understanding the context here we would
not confuse the Edomite 'brethren' with the Levitical 'brethren' found in 18:7,
or the Israelite 'brethren' found in 1:16 or 33:24. Edomite 'brethren' would clearly not fit the context for 18:7,
1:16, or 33:24.
In Deut
17:15 a very strong statement is given regarding who "brothers" means
in the verses in chapter 18:
"Be
sure to appoint over you the King the Lord your God chooses. He must be "FROM AMONG YOUR OWN
BROTHERS". Do not place a
foreigner over you, one who is not a "BROTHER ISRAELITE".
Compare
these terms with 18:15 -
"The
Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me FROM AMONG YOUR OWN BROTHERS. You must listen to him."
Clearly, this verse has much in
common with 17:15. Moses did not add
'brother Israelite', because they understood what he was talking about based
upon what he had said just a few moments earlier in Chapter 17. The context is the same for both. The future prophet had to be a fellow
Israelite.
Therefore,
the weight of the evidence for understanding the context - and who actually the
"brethren" were, shows clearly that the future prophet had to be from
the 12 tribes. Jesus fulfills that
requirement, Muhammad does not.
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We should be thorough in our search
for the context of how "brethren" is used. Lets go back and see if we can find any context that calls the
descendants of Ishmael, or the descendants of the Abraham's other sons
"brethren" to the Israelites.
Genesis 25:1-4 lists some of
Abraham's sons. Note in verse 5 that
Isaac was the main inheritor. His sons
listed here are from his concubine Keturah, they are: Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah. Some of these brothers descendants were the
Asshurites, the Letushites, and the Leummites.
[Note in
verses 25:5,6 that Abraham left everything he owned to Isaac, but while he was
still living, he gave gifts to the sons of his concubines, and sent them away from
his son Isaac, to the land of the east.]
Lets examine these sons, and their
descendants, and see if there is any reference to them being
"brethren" to the Israelites.
Zimran -
only mentioned in Genesis 25:2 and 1 Chron 1:32
Jokshan - He
is only mentioned in Genesis 25:2 and 1 Chron 1:32, but his descendants are
named - Sheba and Dedan.
Medan - only
mentioned in Genesis 25:2 and 1 Chron 1:32
Midian - His
descendants are mentioned with regards to the Israelites. They will be addressed in a few paragraphs.
Ishbak -
only mentioned in Genesis 25:2 and 1 Chron 1:32
Shuah - only
mentioned in Genesis 25:2.
Let's see if
Sheba or Dedan are called "brethren" to the Israelites.
Dedan - is
mentioned several times, often with Sheba.
In no place are Dedan or his descendants called "brethren" to
the Israelites.
Sheba - same
as with Dedan. When Sheba's descendants
are mentioned, they are never referred to as "Kin" or
"brethren" in any way. Ref.
the story of the Queen of Sheba visiting Solomon. Note her comment to Solomon in 1 Chron 9:8. She acknowledges how God has blessed Solomon
and chosen Israel. In Isaiah 60:6,
Sheba, Midian, and Ephah are mentioned as being distinct peoples apart from the
Israelites.
Now, the sons of Dedan are mentioned
in 25:3. "Asshurim, Letushim, and
Leummim. Are these peoples ever
referred to as "brethren"?
No, not even mentioned beyond 25:3.
So far, not one reference to the
other sons of Abraham, or their descendants being 'brethren' to the Israelites.
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Let's examine Midian
The Midianites are mentioned in
Numbers chapters 25, 31, 10, 22. Not
once are they called "brethren", or anything closely related to
that. If anything, they were mortal
enemies to the Israelites. Refer to Num.
25:16, 17. These people are Abraham's
descendants, yet God ordered the Israelites to destroy them. Since Ishmael was Midian's brother, wouldn't
it follow that Ishmael's descendants would not be considered
"brethren" in the way the Midianites were not considered
"brethren"?
What about Midian's sons, and any
specific ref. to any of their particular descendants as being
"brethren" to the Israelites?
Going throughout the OT, I found
that Ephah, Epher, Hanoch, Abida, Eldaah are never mentioned as being
"brethren" to the Israelites.
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Finally, we come to Ishmael and his
descendants, and for good measure, we'll throw in the "Hagarites".
Ishmael's sons are mentioned in
Genesis 25:13-18. Never are they or
their descendants referred to as "brethren" to the Israelites.
The Ishmaelites are mentioned in
Genesis 37. Not once are they referred
to as brethren of the sons of Jacob.
They were not considered brethren.
The Hagarites are mentioned in Psalm
83:6, along with the Ishmaelites. They
are portrayed as the enemies of God.
Likewise they are mentioned in 1 Chron 5:10. Again, they are the enemies of God's people - the
Israelites. They are never mentioned as
"brethren" to the Israelites.
There are two interesting references to
Ishmael and his sons. One is found in
Genesis 16:12. The other is in Genesis
25:18. 25:18 says:
"His descendants settled in the
area from Havilah to Shur, near the border of Egypt, as you go toward
Asshur. And they lived in hostility
toward all their brothers." Here
is the only implication that Ishmael's sons were called "brethren" to
possibly the Israelites. But if this
verse is taken in context with Genesis 16:12 it is shown that
"brother" were immediate relatives.
So, 25:18 looks like Ishmael's sons were hostile towards each other.
The context of this passage, taken with the references
concerning the Ishmaelite, Hagarites, Midianites, etc. show that these people
were not considered "brethren" to the Israelites. Therefore by judging from the references it
would not be correct to consider the descendants of Ishmael to be "brethren"
of the Israelites. There is no support
for the Muslim’s assertion that the descendants of Ishmael were considered "brethren" to the Israelites. In several cases, these descendants are
considered enemies of Israel and God.
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The only non-Israelite people to be
called brethren, that I'm aware of, are the Edomites. Esau was Jacob's brother.
Jacob was the father of the Israelites.
That seems to be as far back as the term "brethren" goes. And, Esau was a descendant of Issac, not
Ishmael. Since the promise to the
descendants was named thru Isaac, it is understandable for Esau's descendants
to be considered "brethren" to the Israelites.
Read Numbers 20:14-21. It details the conflict between the two
'brethren' nations of Esau and Jacob.
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Some Muslims object to Muhammad
being ruled out as the prophet, and assert the following:
"Jesus
never claimed to be the prophet Moses foretold".
Jesus never said directly "I am
the prophet of Deuteronomy 18:18".
But He said that He was a prophet, and probably meant that He was that
prophet. Other parts of the N.T.
declare Him to be that prophet. Let's
start with Christ's implications then go on:
1)-Luke 7:39
- the Pharisee said to himself, 'if this man were a prophet...Jesus knew his
thoughts and addressed them, proving to the Pharisee that he was a prophet.
2)-John
5:46 - Jesus said "If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he
(Moses) wrote about me." Moses did
write about Jesus; Jesus is the prophet of Deuteronomy 18:18. Jesus claimed to be the prophet Moses
foretold.
3)-In
various places, at various times, various people called Jesus the 'prophet' of
Deuteronomy 18:18, yet Jesus never corrected them, rebuked them, or told them
otherwise. He always accepted those
particular statements. When the
Pharisees called him otherwise, He set them straight. Matt. 21:11, John 1:45, 6:14, 7:40, Luke 7:16, 24:19, etc.
4)-Jesus
did call Himself a prophet - John 4:44
5)-After His
ascension His disciples emphatically said He was that prophet: Acts 3:22, 7:37.
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CONCLUSION
ON "FROM AMONG YOUR BRETHREN"
All of this shows that Muhammad
could not be the prophet Moses foretold.
The only acceptable, logical context for Moses' words is that "the
prophet" must be an Israelite. No
non-Israelite can meet the requirement.
Muhammad was not an Israelite and thus he could not have fulfilled the
conditions Moses set forth. Jesus is
the prophet Moses foretold.
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"LIKE
UNTO ME"
Another point often brought up by
Muslims is that Moses said that the future prophet would be "like unto
me". Muslims then list the similarities
between Moses and Muhammad, and the dis-similarities between Moses and Jesus as
proof that Muhammad is the foretold prophet.
There can be found similarities and
differences between all men. What needs
to be identified are the crucial attributes that the future prophet would have
to possess to be "like unto Moses".
Here is
the Deut. 18 passage again from the NRSV:
"The Lord your God will raise
up for you a prophet like me from among your own people; you shall heed such a
prophet. This is what you requested of
the Lord your God at Horeb on the day of the assembly when you said: "If I hear the voice of the Lord my
God any more, or ever again see this great fire, I will die." Then the Lord replied to me: "They are right in what they have
said. I will raise up for them a
prophet like you from among their own people; I will put my words in the mouth
of the prophet, who shall speak to them everything that I command."
So, the first requirement is
(1) this future prophet is to speak the
words that God puts in his mouth.
Additional implicit requirements to
make this prophet "like unto Moses" can be found in the last verses
in Deuteronomy 34.10-12:
"And there has not arisen a
prophet since in Israel like Moses, (2) whom the Lord knew face to face, none
like him for all the (3) signs and wonders which the Lord sent him to do in the
land of Egypt, to Pharaoh and to all his servants and to all his land, and for
all the mighty power and all the great and terrible deeds which Moses performed
in the sight of all Israel."
The three requirements I find are:
1) this future prophet is to speak the
words that God puts in his mouth.
2) this future prophet would speak with
God face to face
3)
this future prophet would perform
miracles, signs, and wonders.
How do Jesus
and Muhammad compare to these requirements?
#1 the future prophet is to speak the words
that God puts in his mouth.
JESUS
Jesus said that He spoke God's word;
he heard directly from God.
John
7:16, 17 - "My teaching is not mine but his who sent me. Anyone who resolves to do the will of God
will know whether the teaching is from God or whether I am speaking on my
own."
John
8:28 - "So Jesus said, "When you have lifted up the Son of Man, then
you will realize that I am he, and that I do nothing on my own, but I speak
these things as the Father instructed me."
MUHAMMAD
Muhammad heard the Quran from a
spirit he believed to be Gabriel.
Muhammad repeated the words that this spirit spoke.
The
Quran, chapter 53:2-5 - "Your comrade does not err, nor is he deceived,
nor does he speak of his own desire. It
is an inspiration this is inspired, which one (Gabriel) of mighty powers has
taught him."
Muhammad
fails the requirement because he did not hear from God directly. In fact, the Bible contains warnings about
angels teaching false messages:
2
Cor. 11:14 - "And no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades an angel of
light."
Gal.
1:8 - "But even if we or an angel
from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let
him be eternally condemned!"
#2 the future prophet would speak with God
face to face
JESUS
Jesus was with God prior to being
revealed on earth. While he was on
earth, he spoke with God face to face.
John
1:18 - "No one has ever seen God.
It is God the only Son who is close to the Father's heart, who has made
him known."
John
17:5 - "So now, Father, glorify me in your own presence with the glory
that I had in your presence before the world existed."
Matthew
17:5 - "While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed
them, and from the cloud a voice said, "This is my Son, the Beloved; with
him I am well pleased; listen to him!"
MUHAMMAD
As stated before, Muhammad never
spoke with God directly. The entire
Quran was given to him through a medium - a spirit. Was the spirit from God?
If not, then we can conclude that it was an evil spirit that was
deceiving Muhammad.
I'll note that after Moses spoke
with God face to face, his face glowed with the glory of God. Jesus was transfigured when he spoke with
God face to face. (Exodus 34:29,
Matthew 17:2). Muhammad was never
transfigured; he never radiated the glory of God.
3)
the future prophet would perform
miracles, signs, and wonders.
JESUS
Jesus
performed many miracles. Read Luke
chapters 5, 7, and 8 to find some of them.
MUHAMMAD
The Quran shows that Muhammad
performed no miracles. Even the people
who did not believe him pointed it out that Muhammad lacked miracles.
The
Quran, chapter 6:57, 58 - "Say:
"For me, I (work) on a clear sign from my Lord, but you reject
Him. What you would see hastened (a
miracle) is not in my power. The
command (to perform a miracle) rests with none by Allah: He declares the Truth, and He is the best of
judges. Say: if what you would see hastened (a miracle) were in my power, the
matter would be settled at once between you and me...
The
Quran, chapter 28:48 - "...They (the people who did not believe in
Muhammad) say, "Why aren't miracles sent to him like those sent to
Moses?"
It must be noted that the Hadith
records some fanciful miracles, but these are purely mythical, because they
contradict the Quran's statements about Muhammad unable to perform a miracle. Some of those Hadith "miracles"
are simple copycat miracles taken from Bible stories.
A FINAL
COMPARISON / CRITERIA:
One very important similarity
between Moses and Jesus was that they each mediated a covenant. Moses was the mediator of the Old Covenant
(Testament); Christ of the New Covenant, or Testament. (Exodus 19 and 20,
Hebrews 12:24). Muhammad did not bring
a covenant. Muhammad's Islam is but a synthesis
of Jewish, Christian, and Pagan religious themes mixed with Muhammad's own
ideas.
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CONCLUSION ON "LIKE UNTO
ME".
Jesus satisfied the requirements to
be "like unto Moses".
Muhammad did not. Jesus
fulfilled the requirements, Muhammad fails the requirements. Jesus spoke God's direct words, Muhammad did
not speak God's direct words, he spoke a spirit's words. Jesus spoke with God face to face, Muhammad
did not speak with God face to face.
Jesus performed many miracles, Muhammad performed no miracles.
Jesus
is the prophet Moses foretold, Muhammad cannot be the prophet Moses foretold.
deut1818.htm
Rev A - 8 JUNE 1997, Rev B 16 Apr 2000
Articles by Silas
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