None of Us Know the Quran's True Purpose
Not Muslims, not Christians, not Jews — none of us know.
The Quran's verses are arranged in a non-sequential order, constantly jumping between topics. This structure has led 1.2 billion non-Arabic speaking Muslims to recite without understanding — believing it to be an act of devotion. Arabic-speaking Muslims preserve this mixed order as sacred, so religious scholars' knowledge is shaped by non-Quranic sources. Jews and Christians, in turn, mistake this ignorance for Islam itself. Yet the Quran's true purpose was to confirm the previous scriptures — the Torah and the Gospel — and to reconcile Jews and Christians in the monotheistic faith of their common ancestor, Prophet Abraham.
The Root of the Problem
The same ignorance on all three sides, with different excuses
Non-Arabic Speaking Muslims
Turkey · Iran · Pakistan · Afghanistan · 1.2 billion people
They recite in Arabic without understanding, believing it to be respect to God. They think Islam is Muhammad's religion alone. They believe the Quran came because previous scriptures were corrupted. Yet the Quran came to confirm those very scriptures.
Arabic-Speaking Muslims
Saudi Arabia · Egypt · Iraq · Jordan
They consider preserving the Quran's mixed verse order as sacred duty. As a result, religious scholars' knowledge is shaped by non-Quranic sources — hadith, jurisprudence, tradition. The Quran itself is pushed to the background.
Jews and Christians
Worldwide · 2.6 billion people
They mistake this ignorance and tradition-based practices for Islam. Yet the Quran explicitly speaks of Jesus and the table, Abraham's pure monotheism, and that all prophets carried the same message — but they don't know this either.
The Quran's True Message
Al-Imran 3-4 · Al-Ma'idah 44-48 · Al-Baqarah 285
The Quran was revealed as a confirmation of the previous scriptures — the Torah and the Gospel. Its purpose: to reconcile Jews and Christians in the monotheistic faith of their ancestor Abraham. But for 1,400 years, no side has known this.
The Solution Is This Simple
Preserve the Arabic — then read in the people's language
The formula that will change the world: Continue reciting verses in Arabic, then also read them in the local language. As long as Arabic is preserved, no one can object. A single fatwa can spread this to the entire world.
How This Changes the World
Jerusalem
Read in Arabic → Hebrew → English. Peace begins in the Middle East. Jews and Muslims remember they are children of the same ancestor, Abraham.
Iran
Read in Arabic → Persian. 85 million people hear for the first time in their own language: 'The Quran confirms previous scriptures.'
Hagia Sophia · Istanbul
Read in Arabic → Turkish → English. At the meeting point of East and West, the message to the world begins.
Kaaba · Mecca
Announce to the entire world with a fatwa: 'As long as we preserve the Arabic, reading in the people's language afterward is obligatory.' No one can object.
Common Misconceptions & The Quran's Response
You say 'I'm a Muslim, I'll go to heaven anyway.' But what does the Quran say?
What Does the Quran Itself Say?
The verses below, in the Quran's own words, reveal its true purpose — to confirm previous scriptures and establish peace in the religion of Abraham.
“He revealed to you the Book in truth, confirming what came before it, and He revealed the Torah and the Gospel before, as guidance for the people.”
“Indeed, We sent down the Torah, in which was guidance and light. Those who judge not by what God has revealed — they are the disbelievers. Then We sent Jesus, confirming the Torah. Let the people of the Gospel judge by what God has revealed therein. To each of you We prescribed a law and a method.”
“The Messenger has believed in what was revealed to him from his Lord, and so have the believers. Each one believes in God, His angels, His books, and His messengers. 'We make no distinction between any of His messengers.'”