Islam and the Last Day!!  
 

This exposé is under construction
 
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When Muhammad was writing the Koran he made a lot of references to the LAST DAY. Of course he could have easily consulted the Holy Bible and that would have told him everything he needed to know about preparing for that Day:

There are some who declare 'We believe in Allah and the Last Day; yet they are no true believers.(Sura 2:8).

Fight against such of those to whom the Scriptures were given as believe neither in Allah nor the Last Day, who do not forbid what Allah and His apostle have forbidden, and do not embrace the true Faith, until they pay tribute out of hand and are utterly subdued.(Sura 9:29).

And unto Midian We sent Shu'eyb, their brother. He said: O my people! Serve Allah, and look forward to the Last Day, and do not evil, making mischief, in the earth.(Sura 29:36).

Verily in the messenger of Allah ye have a good example for him who looketh unto Allah and the Last Day, and remembereth Allah much.(Sura 33:21).

The Islamic Mahdi or Guided One

The Muslims are looking for a MAHDI or Guided One who will conquer the world for Islam and rule for 7 years before the Last Day.

Mahdi fever grips Islam at the beginning of every century. The year 1879 saw the rise of a Mahdi in the Sudan.

Mahdi fever was rampant as 1879 approached—the beginning of the Islamic 14th century:

Abdulláhi al-Taíshi was not the only man in Sudan looking for the Mahdi. For Muslims, the year 1297 was drawing to a close and, with a new century approaching, talk of a Mahdi arising was swirling excitedly. Waves of 'Faláta', Sudanese of West African origin who were among Muhammad Ahmed's earliest admirers, had come to Sudan precisely because they had been warned to expect a Mahdi to arise in the east. Nor were the people of Obeid immune to a prevailing obsessive speculation about an imminent Mahdi. Rival gangs of children from different neighbourhoods of the town fought each other under home-made banners, representing 'Turks' and followers of the Mahdi. When their elders discovered this rather bloody game (which the 'Mahdists' always won), they took the boys to task but muttered among themselves the proverb akhdhú fálkum min awládkum —'Draw your omens from what your children say and do', in other words, 'From the mouths of babes ...'(Fergus, The Sword of the Prophet. The Mahdi of Sudan and the Death of General Gordon, p. 559).

Muhammad Ahmed Al-Mahdi (1833-1885).

Muhammad Ahmed Al-Mahdi (1833-1885).

 

At the beginning of every century, Mahdi FEVER takes over Islam.

In 1879, a Mahdi appeared in the Sudan named Muhammad Ahmed.

His goal was to conquer the world for Islam, but he died soon after the beheading of his antagonist, general Charles Gordon, at Khartoum.

 

 

General Charles Gordon (1833-1885) was beheaded at Khartoum by the Mahdi.

General Charles Gordon (1833-1885) was beheaded at Khartoum by the Mahdi.

BEHEADING is the preferred Muslim method of killing. Muhammad said:

When you meet the unbelievers on the battlefield strike off their heads and, when you have laid them low, bind their captives firmly. Then grant them their freedom or take a ransom from them, until War shall lay down her burdens. (Sura 47:3).

By a remarkable coincidence, 1979 was the beginning of the 15th century of Islam.

In 1979, the Shah of Iran was overthrown by the Iranian Revolution. Before the Revolution, Iran and Iraq experienced cordial relations. That ended when a fanatical clerical regime, led by the Ayatollah Khomeini, ousted the Shah and took control of the country.

Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (1919-1980).

Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (1919-1980).
Shah from 1941 to 1979.

 

The pro-Iraq Shah of Iran was overthrown in 1979.

With Pentagon help, an Islamic regime, disguised as a "Republic" was installed in Iran.

In Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini was hailed as the Mahdi or 12th Imam.

 

Ayatollah Khomeini (1902-1989).

Ayatollah Khomeini (1902-1989).
Ruler of Iran from 1979 to 1989.

Here is a brief description of the Islamic Mahdi:

Both Sunnis and Shias shared the belief that at the end of days a messiah-figure known as the mahdi, or the 'expected one', would come to the rescue of Islam. He would return to Mecca at the head of all the forces of righteousness to take on the forces of evil in one final, apocalyptic battle, after which he and the lesser prophet Jesus would proceed to Jerusalem to kill the devil. Thereafter the world would submit to his rule until the sounding of the last trumpet, and Judgement Day. There were, however, significant differences between the Sunnis and Shias over the origins of the Mahdi, in that the latter held him to be the twelfth and last of the imams of early Islam. Unlike his predecessors, this twelfth imam had not died and gone to heaven but had disappeared from the sight of man to become the 'Hidden Imam'. He was said to be concealed in a cave in the mountains, waiting for the call from the righteous, when he would reappear as a padshah or 'great king' to lead the faithful to victory. (Allen, God's Terrorists, The Wahhabi Cult and the Hidden Roots of Modern Jihad, p. 73).

Here is the entry on the Mahdi from the Dictionary of Islam by Thomas Patrick Hughes:

AL-MAHDI Lit. "The Directed One," hence, "who is fit to direct others, Guide, Leader." A ruler who shall in the last days appear upon the earth. According to the Shi'ahs, he has already appeared in the person of Muhammad Al-Qasim, the twelfth Imam, who is believed to be concealed in some secret place until the day of his manifestation before the end of the world. But the Sunnis say he has not yet appeared. In the history of Muhammadanism, there are numerous instances of impostors having assumed the character of this mysterious personage, amongst others, Saiyid Ahmad, who fought against the Sikhs on the North-West frontier of the Panjab, A.D. 1826, and still more recently, the Muhammadan who has claimed to be al-Mahdi in the Sudin in Egypt.
The sayings' of the Prophet on the subject, according to al-Bukhari, and other traditionists, are as follows:
"The world will not come to an end until a man of my tribe and of my name shall be master of Arabia."
" When you see black ensigns coming from the direction of Khorosün, then join them, for the Imam of God will be with the standards, whose name is al-Mahd"
"The Mahdi will be descended from me, he will be a man with an open countenance and with a high nose. He will fill the earth with equity and justice, even as it has been filled with tyranny and oppression, and he will reign over the earth seven years." (Hughes, Dictionary of Islam).

Thousands of Sikhs and British were killed (including the Irish Viceroy Lord Mayo) in suppressing this Mahdi uprising in India.

Remarkable coincidence between Jesuit FUTURISM and the Mahdi

There is a remarkable coincidence between Jesuit FUTURISM and the Mahdi. According to Futurism, the Antichrist is a single individual who will rule the world for 7 years before the end of time (or the illusory millennium). According to the Jesuits, the Islamic Mahdi is actually the Christian Antichrist.

Francisco de Ribera, S.J.
(1537-1591).

 

2 Jesuits named Francisco de Ribera and Robert Bellarmine borrowed Futurism from the Muslims.

Futurism places the coming of Antichrist just 7 years before the end of time.

The Christians were hindering his appearance, and they will be raptured out before his appearance.

This fantasy is held by most "Protestants" today.

 

 

Cardinal Robert Bellarmine, S.J. (1542-1621).

In the Futurism system of Ribera and Bellarmine, Antichrist is an evil superman who emerges just 7 years before the end of time and causes all kinds of havoc.

This concept of a superman arriving just before the LAST Day was STOLEN from the Muslims.

This ignoring of the PRESENT Antichrist is a great boon to the Vatican and Islam.



References

Allen, Charles.God's Terrorists, The Wahhabi Cult and the Hidden Roots of Modern Jihad. De Capo Press, Cambridge, MA, 2006.s

Fergus, Nicoll. The Sword of the Prophet. The Mahdi of Sudan and the Death of General Gordon. Sutton Publishing, Gloucestershire, UK, 2004.

Hughes, Thomas Patrick. Dictionary of Islam. Munshiram Manoharlai Publishers, New Delhi, India, 1999. (Originally published in 1886).

Shahid, Samuel, The Last Trumpet. A Comparative Study in Christian-Islamic Eschatology, www.xulonpress.com. 2005.


Copyright © 2010 by Niall Kilkenny


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