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Satan Spoke on the Tongue of the Messenger in the Quran

Picture this: The so-called Prophet Muhammad, the self-proclaimed final messenger of God, stands before the idol-worshipping Quraysh in Mecca, reciting what he claims is the infallible word of Allah straight from the Quran. But in a shocking twist admitted by Islam’s own classical scholars, Satan spoke on the tongue of the Messenger, slipping blasphemous praise for pagan goddesses right into Surah An-Najm (The Star), verses 19-20. This isn’t some Orientalist fairy tale—it’s documented in revered tafsirs like Tafsir al-Nasafi and Tafsir al-Jalalayn. Far from proving divine protection, this Satanic Verses incident exposes Islam as a satanic fraud, a deceptive mimicry of true faith riddled with demonic interference. How could the perfect Quran allow Satan to hijack its delivery? Dive in, and see why this event shreds any pretense of Muhammad’s prophethood and the Quran’s divinity.

The Deceptive Context: Surah An-Najm and the Desperate Prophet

Surah An-Najm, the 53rd chapter of the Quran, dropped during Muhammad’s early Meccan days when his message of monotheism was bombing hard against Quraysh resistance. It kicks off with oaths by stars and visions of the angel Jibril (Gabriel), supposedly vouching for Muhammad: Your companion has not strayed, nor has he erred (53:2). The surah mocks the polytheists’ idols—al-Lat, al-Uzza, and Manat—calling them mere names you have named with no divine authority (53:23).

These weren’t nobodies; al-Lat ruled Ta’if, al-Uzza loomed near Mecca, Manat at Qudayd. The Quraysh saw them as Allah’s daughters, prime for intercession. Muhammad’s rhetoric was alienating everyone, leaving Muslims persecuted and his movement on life support. Enter desperation—or was it demonic invitation? During a public recital at the Kaaba, as he hit verses 19-20—Have you considered al-Lat and al-Uzza, and Manat, the third, the other?—Satan spoke on the tongue of the Messenger. He blurted out: These are the exalted cranes (tilka al-gharaniq al-ula), and indeed, their intercession is to be hoped for.

Gharaniq? Lofty cranes symbolizing the goddesses’ sky-high status in pagan myths. The Quraysh went wild: Muhammad finally gets it! He won’t trash our gods! Muslims and pagans prostrated together in fake unity. If this isn’t Satan puppeteering the prophet, what is? Islam’s apologists spin it as a test, but it screams fraud: A true prophet doesn’t channel demons.

Scholarly Confessions: When Satan Spoke on the Tongue of the Messenger

Islam’s top scholars didn’t bury this embarrassment—they chronicled it, unwittingly handing critics a smoking gun. These aren’t fringe reports; they’re mutawatir (mass-transmitted), cited by giants like Ibn Abbas, the Prophet’s cousin.

Imam al-Nasafi’s Brutal Revelation in Tafsir al-Nasafi

Imam Abdullah ibn Ahmad al-Nasafi (d. 710 AH), a heavyweight Hanafi exegete, lays it bare in Tafsir al-Nasafi (Vol. 3, p. 161). Muhammad recites before the Kaaba crowd, hits the idol verses, and boom—Satan hijacks: These are the exalted cranes, and verily their intercession can be hoped for. Quraysh cheers erupt. Jibril swoops in, furious: What did you recite? That’s not from me! The satanic lines get axed, replaced by condemnation. Al-Nasafi blames Satan outright: He cast upon his tongue what he cast. Protected prophet? More like satanic ventriloquist dummy. Al-Nasafi admits even prophets need Allah’s guardrail—implying Muhammad lacked it here, proving the Quran’s infallibility (15:9) is a lie.

Tafsir al-Jalalayn: Elite Scholars Admit the Demonic Intrusion

Jalaluddin al-Mahalli (d. 864 AH) and Jalaluddin as-Suyuti (d. 911 AH)—titans of Sunni scholarship—confirm in Tafsir al-Jalalayn: When he [Muhammad] reached these verses among Quraysh, Satan cast upon his tongue: ‘These are the exalted cranes…’ Jibril outs it as satanic, abrogates it. As-Suyuti, hadith mastermind, ties it to Al-Itqan fi Ulum al-Quran and Ibn Abbas. Why publicize this if not authentic? Because burying it would collapse their house of cards. These admissions scream: Satan spoke on the tongue of the Messenger, infiltrating Allah’s eternal word. No true divine book tolerates edits—Satan’s or otherwise.

Ibn Kathir and Al-Qurtubi echo this in their tafsirs, even Sahih Muslim and Sunan Abi Dawud reference Satan thwartings. Orientalists like William Muir popularized Satanic Verses, but Muslims own it—then twist it into mercy to soften hearts. Mercy? It’s Muhammad flip-flopping for popularity, egged by the devil.

Theological Trainwreck: Why Satan Spoke on the Tongue of the Messenger Destroys Islam

Apologists claim it shows the Quran’s self-correction, upholding 15:9’s promise. Nonsense! If Satan infiltrated once, what’s stopping repeats? The Bible warns of false prophets with smooth words (2 Peter 2:3); Muhammad fits: Praising idols one minute, bashing them the next. Scholars say he was ma’sum (infallible) only in tabligh (delivery)—but Satan spoke on the tongue of the Messenger during delivery! Humanizing? It’s dehumanizing—reducing prophethood to satanic susceptibility.

Post-incident, Quraysh mocked: See? He worships what we worship! Persecution ramped up, but Muhammad’s crew doubled down. Parallels abound: Satanic whispers in prayer (Sahih Muslim), proving ongoing demonic access. Contrast Christianity: Jesus rebuked Satan outright (Matthew 4). Muhammad? He broadcasts the devil’s lines publicly.

This isn’t isolated. Quran’s abrogation (2:106) admits self-contradictions—140+ times verses swapped. Satanic Verses is exhibit A of Islam’s fraud: A final revelation needing constant patches? Laughable. It mimics Judaism/Christianity superficially but peddles polytheism lite, all under satanic cover.

Modern Warnings: Exposing the Satanic Fraud of Islam Today

In our misinformation era, Satan spoke on the tongue of the Messenger warns against waswasah (demonic whispers) posing as truth. Muslims tout tafsirs as proof of purity—yet they document Satan’s victory lap! Today’s dawah artists dodge it, gaslighting converts: Old story, move on. Don’t. It proves Islam’s idols aren’t buried; they’re rebranded as intercessors (saints, imams).

Intercession? Quran mocks idols’ (53:26), reserving it for Judgment Day elites—but Satanic Verses endorsed pagan ones! Tawhid crumbles: Allah needs daughters? No, Satan needs suckers.

Orientalists nailed it; Islamic mercy spin fails. Compare: Bible’s prophets never spout demon-doctored words. Muhammad did—repeatedly. Lessons? Verify claims against history. Reject satanic surges disguised as scripture. Fortify against dawah: This incident alone indicts Islam as devil’s deceit.

The Ultimate Exposé: Satan Spoke on the Tongue of the Messenger—Islam’s Fatal Flaw

The Satanic Verses catastrophe in Surah An-Najm isn’t wisdom; it’s wreckage. Satan spoke on the tongue of the Messenger in the Quran, as confessed by al-Nasafi, Jalalayn, Ibn Kathir—Islam’s best. No spin saves it: Divine protection? Breached. Infallible prophet? Fooled. Eternal Quran? Edited. This polemic truth unmasks Islam as a satanic fraud, blending monotheism with idolatry, truth with temptation. Recite An-Najm today? Hear echoes of cranes, not conviction. Ditch the deception; embrace real light. Your iman—or lack thereof—hangs in the balance. Turn from this demonic delusion before it’s too late.

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Kevin baxter Operator
Dr. Kevin Baxter, a distinguished Naval veteran with deep expertise in Middle Eastern affairs and advanced degrees in Quantum Physics, Computer Science, and Artificial Intelligence. a veteran of multiple wars, and a fighter for the truth