Koran 42:16-18

42:16 And those who argue concerning Allah after He has been responded to – their argument is invalid with their Lord, and upon them is [His] wrath, and for them is a severe punishment.

17 It is Allah who has sent down the Book in truth and [also] the balance [i.e., justice].

And what will make you perceive?

Perhaps the Hour is near.

18 Those who do not believe in it are impatient for it, but those who believe are fearful of it and know that it is the truth.

Unquestionably, those who dispute concerning the Hour are in extreme error.

Koran 42:16-18

Muhammad spoke about Allah in the third person. This means this passage is not the perfect words of the perfect Qur’an from perfect Allah. Thus, Allah is false, imaginary, and fictional, which means Islamic doctrine and Islam are nonsensical and false.

Muhammad, in his Koran, addresses a sentence, verse, or passage to “Anonymous They”, with “they”, “them”, “he”, “your”, “the people”, and so on, without naming them. For more, read Anonymous They.

Looks like verse 16 has a translation problem. Here’s what the scholars of Tafsir Ibn Kathir, 42:16, have:

And those who dispute concerning Allah, after it has been accepted, of no use is their dispute before their Lord and on them is wrath, and for them will be a severe torment.

Koran 42:16, Tafsir Ibn Kathir, 42:16

In short, this verse is here to stop Muslims from arguing and criticising Muhammad, Allah and Islam. Obviously, this means that Islam is false, as truth will be revealed as truth by evidence, argument and criticism, while lies are revealed. And of course, there’s no wrath or severe punishment, as 1400 years have passed and nothing has happened. Thus, Allah is Muhammad and Muhammad is Allah, and so Islam and the Koran are false.

Muhammad lied: “It is Allah who has sent down the Book in truth” – how quickly Jibril is forgotten by Muhammad. Muhammad continues to lie: “and [also] the balance [i.e., justice].” Obviously, Muhammad didn’t literally have a book or a scale. Notice how the translators have to add in “[i.e., justice]” to explain, and hint that this is supposed to be metaphorical. Instead, Muhammad has now made himself judge over his Muslims, a judge who is not to be criticised – a tyrant.

Consider, if Islamic Fate were true and correct, then there’s no need for Muhammad to be a judge. Instead, the wisdom of Allah’s Fate and the Koran would be obvious to all, including those Muslims who are disputing. Their every question would already be answered. But Muhammad is merely human, and isn’t really driven by a real god, but by his own alternate personalities of Allah and Jibril on his mental shoulders, driven by his demons.

Muhammad asks a rhetorical question, “And what will make you perceive?” followed by another lie as his answer: “Perhaps the Hour is near.” Obviously the “Hour” has either happened with the Moon Splitting or will never happen, 1400 years later.

In the last verse, Muhammad rants about the “Hour” again, which has never happened for 1400 years, showing he was a false prophet, for a false god, Allah, for a false religion, Islam, without even a false book, Koran.

The best replacement for this passage is: “”, the empty sentence.

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