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Jesus (Pbuh) In The Hadith
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facts that Jesus (pbuh) is alive in God's presence
and that he will return to Earth in the End Times
appears in some detail in the hadith collections,
among them al-Shaybani's Taysir al-Usul ila
Jami' al-Usul; Imam Maliki's Al-Muwatta';
the Sahihs of Ibn Khuzayma and Ibn Hibban; and
the Musnads of Ibn Hanbal and al-Tayalisi, regarded
as the greatest sources of the most reliable hadith.
Furthermore, many Islamic scholars have carried
out research and studies on these facts and have
written books and treatises on them. These are
also invaluable sources.
Heading the list of these great
Islamic scholars is Abu Hanifa, the founder of
the Hanafi legal school. Some of the other Islamic
scholars who hold these views are listed below:
- Imam Abu
Mansur Muhammad al-Maturidi, who, while studying
the hadith regarding Jesus (pbuh), stated that
Jesus (pbuh) would return to Earth and slay
the Antichrist.80
- Al-Ajuri,
regarded as one of the first experts on the
Qur'an, stated that Jesus (pbuh) will return
to Earth in the End Times, for which reason
the report must be believed.81
- Ibn Hazm
stated that the report that Jesus (pbuh) would
return is reliable.82
- Al-Pazdavi
drew attention to the fact that reports of Jesus'
(pbuh) second coming are openly revealed in
many verses and hadith.83
- An-Nasafi
stated that this event was one of the major
signs of the Day of Judgment.84
- Saduddin
al-Taftazani stated that the hadith about this
event are completely trustworthy.85
- Ibn al-'Arabi
reported that even though more than a thousand
years has passed since Jesus' (pbuh) birth,
he is alive in body and soul in God's presence.86
- Al-Qurtubi
wrote that he believes in the second coming
of Jesus (pbuh) and indicated many trustworthy
hadith to back up this belief.87
- Imam Rabbani
wrote: "Jesus (pbuh) will descend from the sky
and will be a member of Prophet Muhammad's (may
God bless him and grant him peace) community.
In other words, he will be one of his people
and will abide by the Divine law."88
- Imam Abu
Ja'far al-Tahawi, regarded as one of the most
important Egyptian Hanafi scholars of his time,
opined that the return of Jesus (pbuh) is a
major sign of the End Times and stated the need
to believe in this truth.89
- 'Ali al-Qari
said that Jesus' (pbuh) second coming is a sign
of the Day of Judgment and that when he returns,
he will slay the Antichrist. According to al-Qari,
belief in this report is obligatory, for the
subject is fixed by a number of reports from
the Prophet (may God bless him and grant him
peace) and his followers.90
- In his book
Maqalat al-Islamiyyin wa Ikhtilfa' al-Musallin
(The Discourses of the Proponents of Islam and
the Differences among the Worshippers), Abu
al-Hasan al-Ash'ari said: "It is a requirement
to believe in these elements on which the people
of the hadith and the people of the Sunnah are
agreed: in God, angels, the books, the prophets,
the revelations received from God, and in the
words of the Prophet (may God bless him and
grant him peace) … that the Antichrist will
appear and that Jesus (pbuh) will slay him."91
- Al-Bayadi
draws attention to the fact that the second
coming is one of the signs that the Day of Judgment
is approaching, and that reliable hadith fully
support this information.92
- Al-Suyuti
reported that Jesus (pbuh) will come and rule
with the law of Prophet Muhammad (may God bless
him and grant him peace).93
- Al-Alusi
said that when Jesus (pbuh) returns, he will
rule with the law of Prophet Muhammad (may God
bless him and grant him peace) and the Muslims
will be his helpers.94
- Abu Munteha,
an Islamic scholar from the Ottoman period,
said it was right to believe in the return of
Jesus (pbuh).95
- Al-Shinqiti,
a modern commentator, wrote: "Both the Qur'an
and the generally accepted Sunnah are proofs
that Jesus (pbuh) is at this moment alive, that
he will descend in the End Times, and that his
coming is regarded as one of the signs of the
Day of Judgment."96

O People of the Book! Do not go to excess
in your religion. Say nothing but the
truth about God. The Messiah, ‘Jesus
son of Mary, was only the messenger of
God and His Word, which He cast into Mary,
and a Spirit from Him. So believe in God
and His messengers. Do not say, ‘Three.’
It is better that you stop. God is only
One God. He is too Glorious to have a
son! Everything in the heavens and in
the Earth belongs to Him. God suffices
as a Guardian. (Qur’an, 4:171)
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Taken all together, these and
many other hadith clearly show the full agreement
among all Islamic scholars that Jesus (pbuh) will
come again. For example, in his Lawami, Muhammad
ibn Ahmad al-Saffarini states that Islamic scholars
are in agreement on the issue:
The community
of the faithful agrees that Jesus (pbuh), the
son of Mary, will return. No member of the people
of the Divine law has opposed this element.97
In his commentary,
Ruh al-Ma'ani fi Tafsir al-Qur'an, the great
Islamic scholar Sayyid al-Alusi cited examples
of the views of other Islamic scholars and said
that the community is agreed on the return of
Jesus (pbuh), and that these statements were
so well known as to attain the level of consensus.
He also stated that belief in the coming of
Jesus (pbuh) was obligatory.98
The Hadith on Jesus (pbuh) Are "Tawatur"
The hadith relating Jesus' (pbuh)
second coming are tawatur, a specialized term
defined as "a tradition that has been handed down
by a number of different channels of transmitters
or authorities, hence supposedly ruling out the
possibility of its having been forged."99 Generally
reliable hadith are those which are reported by
so many hadith experts that there is no room left
for error. The Islamic scholar Sayyid al-Jurjani
expounded on this concept as follows:
Generally
reliable reports are those that attain such
a level [of agreement] among the majority of
narrators that, according to custom, it is [considered]
impossible for so many reporters to agree on
a falsehood. In that event, if the report's
words and meaning are consistent, then this
is known as the "reliability of the word." If
there is agreement among all of them in both
sense and meaning, but a conflict in words,
then this is known as "conceptual reliability."100
In his Al-Tasrih fi ma Tawatara
fi Nuzul al-Masih, the great hadith scholar Muhammad
Anwar Shah Kashmiri wrote that the hadith about
Jesus' (pbuh) second coming are all reliable,
and quotes 75 hadith and 25 works by the Prophet's
(may God bless him and grant him peace) Companions
and their disciples (Tabi'un).
The following explanation appears
in 'Awn al-Ma`bud, one of the important texts
in Sunan Abu Dawud:
The hadith
reported from the Prophet (may God bless him
and grant him peace) that Jesus (pbuh) will
return from the sky in body and soul are trustworthy…
This is the doctrine of the people of the Sunnah.101
Imam Muhammad Zahid al-Kawthari
stated that the hadith about Jesus' (pbuh) descent
are trustworthy:
The hadith
regarding Jesus' (pbuh) descent are "conceptually
reliable." Each sound and beautiful hadith indicates
a different meaning, yet all agree that Jesus
(pbuh) will return. Nobody who has scented
the odor of the knowledge contained within the
hadith can possibly deny this truth… The hadith
dealing with the appearance of the Mahdi and
the Antichrist, as well as with the second coming,
have achieved such a high degree of trustworthiness
that their truth is beyond all doubt.
The fact that some scholastic theologians deem
it obligatory to believe in hadith about the
signs of the Day of Judgment, while they still
have doubts as to whether a part of these hadith
are reliable or not, stems from their insufficient
knowledge of the hadith.102
We saw earlier that the great
Islamic scholar Imam al-Suyuti stated that Jesus
(pbuh) is alive in God's presence and will return
in the End Times, at which time religious moral
values will prevail over Earth. In his book
Al-Hawi li al-Fatawa and the collection
Nuzul 'Isa ibn Maryam Akhir al-Zaman,
he considered all of the relevant hadith, after
which he stated that these were trustworthy:
It cannot
remain concealed from those who have studied
the hadith at great length that all of the relevant
hadith have achieved the level of trustworthiness.
Therefore, just as the hadith about the awaited
Mahdi are trustworthy and those concerning the
Antichrist have attained the level of trustworthiness,
the hadith about the coming of Jesus (pbuh)
are also trustworthy.103
After analyzing and explaining
these hadith, the scholar Ibn Kathir outlined
his thoughts:
The prophetic
hadith reliably report when and where Jesus
(pbuh) will return … The reliable and
trustworthy hadith about when Jesus (pbuh) will
return to Earth in his physical body
cannot be interpreted in any other manner. Therefore,
everyone who has the slightest faith and conscience
must believe that Jesus (pbuh) will return to
Earth…104
Furthermore, many great Islamic
commentators and scholars share the view that
the hadith dealing with Jesus (pbuh) being alive
in God's presence and his return, as well as those
dealing with the Antichrist and the Mahdi, are
trustworthy. Among them are Ibn 'Atiyya, author
of Al-Bahr al-Muhit; Imam al-Hafiz ibn
Hajar, author of Fath al-Bari; Imam Ibn
Rushd, author of Sharh Sahih al-Bukhari;
Sheikh al-Ghumari, author of 'Aqidat Ahl al-Islam
fi Nuzul 'Isa 'alayhi al-Salam; and Ja'far
al-Kattani, author of Nazm al-Mutanathir fi
al-Hadith al-Mutawatir.
Accounts in the Hadith about Jesus (pbuh)
Our Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace) received news of the
Unseen directly from God:
He [God] is
the Knower of the Unseen and does not divulge
His secrets to anyone - except a messenger with
whom He is well pleased, and then He posts sentinels
before him and behind him. (Qur'an, 72:26-27)
Our Lord reveals that He sent
knowledge to Prophet Muhammad (may God bless him
and grant him peace) in his dreams:
God has confirmed
His messenger's vision with truth: "You will
enter the Sacred Mosque [Masjid al-Haram] in
safety, God willing, shaving your heads and
cutting your hair without any fear." He knew
what you did not know and ordained, in place
of this, an imminent victory. (Qur'an, 48:27)
As can be seen, our Lord imparted
pieces of concealed knowledge to our Prophet (may
God bless him and grant him peace) in order to
provide him and his Companions with His support
and help. Some of his Companions witnessed some
of these concealed things. They reported how he
conveyed these concealed things to them. Sahih
al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim, reported
from 'Umar ibn al-Khattab and Hudhayfa, and Imam
Ahmad and Imam Muslim reported from Ibn Zayd al-Ansari,
that:
The
Prophet (may God bless him and grant him peace)
… gave us news of all the past and future events
in this address, taught them to us, and had
us learn them by heart.105
Hudhayfa al-Yamani said:
I swear to
God that the Prophet (may God bless him and
grant him peace) gave us news of the wickedness
that would come until the end of the world,
as well as the names of more than three hundred
leaders who would produce that wickedness, with
their fathers' names and those of their tribes.106

You are the best nation ever to be produced
before humanity. You enjoin the right,
forbid the wrong, and believe in God...(Qur’an,
3:110)
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A large part of our Prophet's
(may God bless him and grant him peace) reports
about the future contains information about the
second coming. When these hadith about Jesus (pbuh)
are examined, we notice that despite their large
numbers, all of them agree with each other. When
their information is examined, we see that they
all contain similar reports that Jesus (pbuh)
will return to Earth, rule the people with the
Qur'an, fight and overcome the Antichrist, cause
true religious moral values to prevail on Earth,
and usher in an era of peace and abundance for
the whole world. Another noteworthy feature of
these hadith is that they have been reported by
a large number of witnesses. Indeed, this is why
they are considered mutawatir, for so many people
have reported them that they cannot possibly be
false. The number of witnesses relating hadith
regarding Jesus (pbuh) is greater than fifty.
These include:
Anas Ibn Malik, Qatada, 'A'isha,
Abu Hurayra, 'Imran ibn Husayn, Nafi' ibn 'Utba,
Abu Barza, Abu Dharr al-Ghifari, Qaysan, 'Uthman
ibn al-'As, Jabir ibn 'Abdullah, Abu Umama, Ibn
Mas'ud, 'Abdulla ibn Amr, Samura ibn Jundub, Nawwas
ibn Sam'an, Abd al-Rahman ibn 'Awf, Hudhayfa ibn
al-Yamani, Abu al-Asas as-Sanani, Abu Umama al
Bahili, Abu al-Darda', Abu Rafi', Abu Sa'id al-Khudri,
Al-Hakam ibn 'Amr al-Ghifari, Rabi' ibn Anas,
and 'Ammar ibn Yasir, may God be pleased with
all of them.
Statements from the Companions and the Later Generations
The Companions are very valuable
believers who attained the honors of being alongside
and being taught by the Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace). Thus, their statements
regarding the verses about Jesus (pbuh) contain
information of what the Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace) taught them about this
unique prophet. When we examine their statements
about the relevant verses, we notice that all
of them believed that Jesus (pbuh) was not dead
and would return to Earth. Some of these statements
are as follows:
-Referring
to Qur'an 3:46, Ibn Zayd said: "Jesus (pbuh)
spoke to people while he was still in the cradle.
When he kills the Antichrist, he will speak
to people as an adult."107
-'Abdullah
ibn 'Abbas said about Qur'an 4:159: "This verse
is proof that Jesus (pbuh), son of Mary, will
appear … All of the People of the Book will
believe in him before his death."108
-Muhammad
ibn 'Ali Abi Talib (also known as Ibn Hanafiyya),
explained Qur'an 4:159 in these terms: "He will
descend before the Day of Judgment. All Jews
and Christians will believe in him."109
-Qatada
expounded on the same verse, as follows: "When
Jesus (pbuh) descends, all religions will believe
in him and he will bear witness for them on
the Day of Judgment."110
He stated about Qur'an 43:61 thus: "The appearance
of Jesus (pbuh) is an indication of the Day
of Judgment."111
-In explaining
Qur'an 4:159, Abu Muhammad al-Madani said: "When
Jesus (pbuh) descends to Earth, he will slay
the Antichrist, and no Jew who does not believe
in him will be left on Earth."112
-Al-Hakam
ibn 'Amr al-Ghifari explained Qur'an 4:159 in
the following words: "At the moment when Jesus
(pbuh) son of Mary descends, all of the People
of the Book will believe in him."113
-Al-Hasan
al-Basri made the following comment: "I swear
to God that Jesus (pbuh) is at this moment alive
in God's presence, and that everyone will believe
in him when he returns." With regard to Qur'an
4:159, he said: "God raised Jesus (pbuh) to
His presence. He will send him before the Day
of Judgment as a holder of rank. Good and bad,
all will believe in him."114 He also made a
similar comment regarding Qur'an 43:61, saying
that the meaning of the verse was that Jesus
(pbuh) would return to Earth.115
-On the same
subject, Ibn 'Abbas said: "In Qur'an 43:61,
God indicates that Jesus (pbuh) will appear
before the Day of Judgment."116
Islamic Scholars Regard the Coming of Jesus (pbuh)
as an Article of Faith
Almost
all the works that elucidate articles of faith
among the People of the Sunnah agree that Jesus
(pbuh) will return to Earth before the Day of
Judgment, fight and slay the Antichrist, and cause
true religious moral values to prevail on Earth.
In their analysis of the proofs presented in the
Qur'an and the hadith, Islamic scholars inform
us that Jesus' (pbuh) second coming is an important
article of faith. They explain the matter thus:
1. God has revealed that: "They
did not kill him and they did not crucify him,
but it was made to seem so to them" (Qur'an,
4:157). In addition, many other verses reveal
that Jesus (pbuh) is alive in God's presence
and that he will come again. Islamic scholars
agree that it is impossible to maintain any
other position. For instance, Ibn Hazm emphasized
that: "Anyone who says that Jesus (pbuh) was
killed will either be someone who leaves the
just religion or an unbeliever."117
2. The fact that the hadith
on this subject are completely tawatur
(trustworthy) and so clear is important evidence
for Muslims. Furthermore, there is no hadith
that asserts that Jesus (pbuh) will not return.
3. The hadith reported by Jabir
ibn 'Abdullah: "He who denies the appearance
of the Mahdi is inevitably blaspheming against
what was revealed to the Prophet (may God bless
him and grant him peace). He who denies the
appearance of Jesus (pbuh), the son of Mary,
has become an unbeliever. Someone who denies
that the Antichrist will appear is also inevitably
an unbeliever," is another important piece of
evidence. This hadith appears in such important
Islamic sources as Sheikh Muhammad Parisa's
Fusul-i Sitta, Ibn Ishaq's Kitab
al-Ta`aruf li Madhhab Ahl al-Tasawwuf,
Imam Suhayli's al-Rawd al-Unuf, and
Imam Suyuti's Alamat al-Mahdi. Moreover,
Abu Bakr explained the hadith in these terms:
"It was revealed to us from Muhammad ibn Hasan,
to him from Abu 'Abdullah al-Husayn ibn Muhammad,
to him from Ibn Uways, to him from Malik ibn
Abas, to him from Muhammad ibn Munkadir, and
to him from Ibn Jabir."118
4. Another factor is the number
and reliability of the hadith narrators regarding
the second coming. Among these people are Abu
al-Asas al-Sanani, Abu Rafi', Abu al-Aliya,
Abu Umama al Bahili, Abu al-Darda', Abu Hurayra,
Abu Malik al-Khudri, Jabir ibn 'Abdullah, Hudhayfa
ibn Adis, Safina, Qatada, 'Uthman ibn al-'As,
Nafi' ibn Kaysani, Al Walid ibn Muslim, 'Ammar
ibn Yathir, and 'Abdullah ibn 'Abbas, may God
be pleased with all of them.
Given this, Islamic scholars
regard belief in Jesus' (pbuh) second coming and
his causing true religious moral values to prevail
as major articles of faith.
The information considered thus
far shows that the relevant hadith are sahih
(reliable) and mutawatur (trustworthy).
The information that they contain, as well as
the accounts narrated by the Companions and analyses
of Islamic scholars, leave no doubt that Jesus
(pbuh) will return to Earth. By God's will, this
great miracle will occur and all people will,
as a direct result, experience a most miraculous
and beautiful period. (God knows best.)
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80. Maturidi,
Te'vilatü'l Kuran, vr. 239; Sami Baybal, İbrahimi
Dinlerde Mesih'in Dönüşü, Yediveren Kitap, July
2002, s. 238-240
81. Accuri, eş-Şeria, s. 380-382;Sami Baybal,
İbrahimi Dinlerde Mesih'in Dönüşü, Yediveren Kitap,
July 2002, s. 238-240
82. İbn Hazm, İlmü'l Kelam, s. 30-32; Sami Baybal,
İbrahimi Dinlerde Mesih'in Dönüşü, Yediveren Kitap,
July 2002, s. 238-240
83. Al-Pazdavi, Ehl-i Sunnet Akaidi (The Doctrine
of the People of the Sunnah), trans. by Serafettin
Golcuk (Istanbul: 1998), 352; Baybal, Ibrahimi
Dinlerde, 238-40. 
84. An-Nasafi, Aqaid (Istanbul: 1310/1892), 193-94;
Baybal, Ibrahimi Dinlerde, 238-40.
85. Saduddin Taftazani, al-Aqaid al-Nasafiyya
(Istanbul: 1310/1892), 193-4; Baybal, Ibrahimi
Dinlerde, 238-40.
86. Ibn al-‘Arabi, Fusus al-Hikam (Istanbul:
1287), 63; Baybal, Ibrahimi Dinlerde, 238-40.
87. Al-Qurtubi, Mukhtasar Tazkirah Qurtubi, trans.
byAhmad Hijazi al-Shaqqa, (Beirut: 1986), 2:402-14.
88. Imam Rabbani, Letters of Rabbani (Istanbul:
1977), 1:436, 545, 722, 820, 846.
89. Baybal, Ibrahimi Dinlerde, 238-40.
90. Ibid.
91. Abu al-Hasan al-Ash‘ari, Maqalat al-Islamiyyin
wa Ikhtilfa al-Musallin, 295.
92. Al-Bayadi, Isharat al-Maram min ‘Ibarat
al-Imam, 67.
93. Al-Suyuti, Nuzul ‘Isa ibn Maryam Akhir
al-Zaman (Suleymaniye Library), no. 1446/9.
94. Baybal, Ibrahimi Dinlerde, 238-40.
95. Ibid.
96. Al-Shinqiti, Adwa’ Al Bayan fi Idah
Al Qur’an bi Al Qur’an, 7:273; Baybal,
Ibrahimi Dinlerde, 238-40.
97. Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Saffarini, Lawami, 2:94-95.

98. Al-Alusi, Ruh al-Ma‘ani, 7:60.
99. Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood, A Basic Dictionary
of Islam (New Delhi: Goodword Books, 2000), 153.
100. Al-Sayyid al-Sharif, Zafar al-Amani fi Sharh
Mukhtasar al-Sayyid al-Sharif al-Jurjani fi Mustalah
al-Hadith, 46 
101. Sunan Abu Dawud, ‘Awn al-Ma‘bud,
163. 
102. Al-Kawthari, Nazra ‘Abira fi Maza‘im,
44.
103. Al-Suyuti, Al-Hawi li al-Fatawa, 2:277.
104. Ibn Kathir, Tafsir Ibn Kathir, 1:578-82.
105. Sahih Bukhari and Sahih Muslim hadiths.
106. Sunan Abu Dawud.
107. Al-Tabari, Jami‘ al-Bayan, 3:188.
108. Al-Hakim, Al-Mustadrak, 2:309.
109. Al-Suyuti, Durr al-Manthur, 2 :241. 
110. Al-Tabari, Jami‘ al-Bayan, 6:19.
111. Al-Suyuti, Durr al-Manthur, 2 :20.
112. Al-Tabari, Jami‘ al-Bayan, 6:19.
113. Ibid., 6:19.
114. Al-Suyuti, Durr al-Manthur, 2 :284.
115. Ibid., 2 :20.
116. Khasmiri, al-Tasrih, 289-90.
117. Ibn Hazm, ‘Ilm al-Qalam, 56-57.
118. Al-Suyuti, Al-Hawi li al-Fatawa, 2:161.
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