Islam teaches that a Muslim is rewarded for every
single hardship he endures patiently during his lifetime and that
each hardship endured patiently is used by God Almighty to erase
a previous sin by this individual. Even something so simple as
a pin prick is counted to this end. How much greater the reward
for a man who endured paralysis. His reward may very likely be
the forgiveness of all of his sins. If
Christianity believes that forgiving sins is a sign of divinity
then what are we to say about the many millions of people in the
Christian clergy who over the last 2000 years have publicly accepted
people's "confessions" and "forgiven" their
sins? Are they all the offspring of God and part of the Trinity?
Do they call God on the telephone and ask His permission to forgive
each individual or do they have "the power to forgive sins"?
In "The Five Gospels,"
written by 24 Christian scholars from some of the most prominent
US and Canadian Universities around today, we read on page 44:
"Stories of Jesus curing a paralytic are
found in all four narrative gospels, The Johannine version (John
5:1-9) differs substantially...The controversy interrupts the
story of the cure- which reads smoothly if one omits vv. 5b-10
(Mark 2)- and it is absent in the parallel of John...Scholars
usually conclude, on the basis of this evidence, that Mark has
inserted the dispute into what was originally a simple healing
story...If the words are to be attributed to Jesus, v. 10 may
represent a bold new claim on Jesus' part that gives the authority
to forgive sins to all human beings...The early church was in
the process of claiming for itself the right to forgive sins and
so would have been inclined to claim that it's authorization came
directly from Jesus."
However, even if we were for a moment to disregard
all of the evidence, then we will find that to insist on following
Mark 2:1-12 blindly shall result in utter and complete nullification
of one of the founding beliefs of Christianity. For the proof
of this, please read section 5.16.
We have already spoken in section 1.2.3.2 about the
term "Son of God" and it's true meaning as understood
by the people of that time. What we want is a claim by Jesus himself
where he says "Worship me" just as God Almighty says
for instance in Isaiah 66:23
"And it shall come to pass, that from one
new moon to another, and from one Sabbath to another, shall all
flesh come to worship before me, saith the LORD."
I simply want to know where Jesus (pbuh) does the
same.