In this new series, Abdu Murray and Derek Caldwell tackle your toughest—and sometimes bluntest—questions about Christianity, Islam, theology, philosophy, and culture.
In today’s episode, we address two big viewer questions:
1. “What does it mean when Christians say evil is a ‘negation of the good’? Doesn’t that minimize real evil?” We unpack the classical Christian understanding of evil—not as something trivial or imaginary, but as a profound distortion of the good—and explain why this view actually amplifies the seriousness of evil rather than diminishing it.
2. “You said most Muslims don’t read the Qur’an. That’s wrong! Over 3 million Muslims have memorized it, and its early transmission proves perfect preservation!” We respond to this challenge by clarifying what we meant, examining the difference between recitation and comprehension, and discussing what the historical data about the Qur’an’s compilation and textual variants really shows.
