The Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement
presenting Islam as peaceful, tolerant, rational, inspiring
Home
1. Islam
2. Publications
3. Activities
4. Ahmadiyya Movement

Ahmadiyya Movement contrasted with the Bahais
5. Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
6. Non-English material

Utilities:
Discussion forums
Site Statistics
Contact us
Search the website

 

Ahmadiyya Movement contrasted with the Bahai religion



The claims of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad to be Messiah and Mahdi were of an entirely different, and indeed opposite, nature from the Bahai claims.

Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad said that the Holy Prophet Muhammad had brought the final, everlasting religion, law and scripture. So any truthful claimant sent by God could ONLY appear within the Islamic religion. And the work of any such claimant could ONLY be the defence and propagation of Islam (as taught in the Quran and by the Prophet Muhammad). Therefore Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad is a Messiah and Mahdi within Islam carrying forward the mission of the Prophet Muhammad, and being entirely subject to the authority of the Quran and Prophet Muhammad like any other Muslim.

Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's claim to be the Messiah is based on the prophecies within Islam speaking of the return to this world of Jesus, who is then expected to fight the "Antichrist" and lead Muslims to victory over him. He is supposed to have ascended to heaven and would return from there to earth. God opened the mind of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad to the fact that, according to the Quran, Jesus died like all other mortals die (though not on the cross); moreover, no person can go up to heaven in bodily form, live there and return; and furthermore, the return of Jesus violates the Islamic belief that no prophet can come after the Prophet Muhammad.

Pointing to a religious principle that the second advent of a person never means his personal return, but the coming of one resembling him, Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad interpreted this prophecy of the return of Jesus as meaning the coming of someone like him, and he applied it to himself on the grounds of the similarity of his circumstances with those of Jesus (e.g., Muslims of his time were beset with similar evils to those characteristic of the Jews at the time of Jesus, as can be read in the Gospels, their worldly and political condition was also like that of the Jews of Jesus' time).

Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad explained in detail who the "Antichrist" was that he was to fight (i.e. the materialism of modern Western civilization), in what manner he was to fight this Antichrist (i.e. purely spiritually and intellectually), etc. A key sign of the coming Messiah was that he would "break the cross". Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad interpreted it as refuting the false doctrines of Christianity of atonement, Divine sonship of Jesus, etc. Therefore Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's mission became to fight both the materialistic side and the religious side of Western civilization, with arguments.

For Muslims, his claim to be the Messiah means that he will lead them to victory over their opponents, especially the Christian world (victory here means victory in argument and proof). And for Christians, his claim to be Messiah (or the second coming of Jesus) has the significance that he, as a come-again Jesus, is correcting their wrong beliefs about Jesus, and teaching them that Jesus was a mortal prophet of God who lived and died (though not on the cross) like other mortal prophets, and was not the son of God or a part of Godhead. These were of course the teachings of Islam which Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad is putting forward to Christians.

The following important differences between the Ahmadiyya claims and the Bahai claims must also be pointed out:

1. One of Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's basic aims was to teach the world the Islamic doctrine of the absolute oneness of God, which strongly rejects the concept that any human being can ever be a manifestation of God. The Bahai teachings are that there have been various manifestations of God on earth (Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, Baha-ullah). Therefore Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was teaching the opposite of the Bahai beliefs.

2. As noted above, Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad proclaimed that the Islamic scripture, teachings and law are valid forever, and will never be abrogated or replaced. Again this is exactly the opposite of Bahai beliefs which teach that Baha-ullah's scripture and law have abrogated and replaced the Holy Quran and the Shari'ah of Islam.

3. The Prophet Muhammad taught that prophets before him had been sent by God to all nations, and he required his followers (Muslims) to believe in all of them. Moreover, he taught, as stated in the Quran, that these prophets had prophesied to their nations of the appearance of the Prophet Muhammad and had instructed their followers to believe in that Promised Prophet when he came. So the Prophet Muhammad became the converging point of the previous prophets and religions. He addressed the whole of humanity, while the previous prophets addressed only their individual nations. He was thus the Last and Final Prophet through whom all humanity is to be united.

To preach the oneness of humanity and to seek to unite religions on fundamentals in the seventh century, as the Prophet Muhammad did, at a time when no one even knew what the whole world consisted of, is a clear proof of the Prophet Muhammad getting revelation and knowledge from God. But for someone in the nineteenth century like Bahaullah to repeat similar ideas (i.e. unity of humanity) cannot be called new revelation coming from God, particularly when he himself originally arose from within the religion of Islam.

 
Top
Website created and published by: Ahmadiyya Anjuman Isha`at Islam Lahore Inc. U.S.A.
Contact us.