"Jesus (peace be upon him) will return, as Islam teaches, to set things right and restore Allah's true message. The Qur'an says, ‘And there is none from the People of the Scripture but that he will surely believe in him before his death' (Surah An-Nisa, 4:159), hinting at his return to clarify the truth. In our traditions, Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said Jesus will descend, break the cross, and abolish the distortions Christians made, like worshipping him instead of Allah (Sahih Bukhari). He'll fight the false messiah, the Dajjal, and lead people to worship Allah alone.
This isn't about destroying people but correcting falsehoods—like the cross, a symbol of the claim he died as God, which he never taught. The Qur'an insists, ‘They did not kill him, nor did they crucify him; but it was made to appear so' (Surah An-Nisa, 4:157). Jesus, a prophet, will return as Allah's servant, not God, to bring back the pure monotheism he preached, ending the corruption of his message."
Muslims claim Jesus will return to "correct" Christians and restore Allah's true message. But the Bible tells a very different story.
1. Jesus isn't coming back as a servant or moral teacher; He's returning in glory to judge the world (Matthew 25:31-32) — every knee will bow, every tongue confess that He is Lord (Philippians 2:10-11).
2. Islamic tradition says He returns to undo Christianity — but the Qur'an denies His crucifixion 4:157. So their end-times narrative depends on an event they claim never happened. Irony, anyone?
3. The Qur'an appeared 600 years after the eyewitness accounts of His death and resurrection. Jesus won't return to rebuke His followers — He'll return to reveal Himself to all nations.
4. Only God returns in power and glory. Prophets don't descend centuries later to rule the world; the divine Son of Man does (Daniel 7:13-14,Revelation 19:16).
Jesus won't come to "destroy Christians." He comes to fulfil His work, bearing the scars of the cross not in shame, but as proof of victory. Every knee will bow — not to a servant correcting errors, but to the risen Lord who proved His message true.