GodLogic

5 Surprising Realities of Sahih Sources: Faith, Facts, and Truth for Seekers

5 Surprising Realities of Sahih Sources: Faith, Facts, and Truth for Seekers

The journey of faith often begins with an attraction to discipline. For many “reverts”—those who come to Islam from secular or military backgrounds—the structured life of prayer (salah), the clear moral boundaries, and the sense of absolute devotion provide a sanctuary in a chaotic world. Yet, for some, this honeymoon period is met with a “wall of silence.” Consider the experience of a Hispanic veteran who recently shared his struggle on the GodLogic platform. Despite his military-honed discipline and passion for his new faith, he found himself “shunned” by a community that viewed his non-Middle Eastern background with suspicion. Isolated, he was forced to learn the basic requirements of salah on his own, using only the most basic standards available. This isolation becomes a crucible when a seeker’s drive for truth leads them to investigate historical documentation and the Sahih sources that religious leadership frequently labels as “anti-Islamic propaganda.” 1….    read more 

The Injil Trap: 5 Surprising Reasons the Quran Validates the Gospels

The Injil Trap: 5 Surprising Reasons the Quran Validates the Gospels

Introduction: The Relatable Objection 5 Surprising Reasons the Quran Validates the Gospels. If you have ever shared your faith with a Muslim, you have likely encountered the “Standard Narrative”: the Bible is corrupted (tahrif), the Apostle Paul subverted the message of Jesus, and the Gospels we possess are unreliable because they are “anonymous.” This framework is designed to dismiss the New Testament out of hand, replacing the historical record with a “phantom Injil”—a lost revelation that supposedly looked exactly like modern Islam. Both “Injil” and “Injeel” refer to the same concept: the Gospel revealed to Jesus in Islamic belief; the difference is just spelling in English. When faced with this, most Christians default to a defensive posture, citing manuscript variants or early Church Fathers. However, the “GodLogic” approach advocates for a proactive tactical shift. Instead of immediately defending the Bible, we subject the Islamic position to its own criteria. This…    read more