Examine Islam carefully. Answer its claims with truth and grace.
A Christian academy for understanding Islamic teaching, evaluating Muslim arguments, and preparing for real conversations with Muslims — chat-first, source-backed, and gospel-centered.
Same evidence engine as TrueDawah.com — Christian-facing structure, training, and discipleship-oriented flow.
Three ways Christians use ExamineIslam
Learn Islam's claims
Curriculum-style topic hubs on the Qurʼān, Muhammad, the Bible and Injīl, Jesus in Islam, the Trinity, the cross, salvation, and common Muslim objections — with primary sources at every step.
Browse topics →Ask deeper questions
A research assistant trained on the same source library used on TrueDawah. Quotes the Qurʼān, ḥadīth, sīra, and Bible in their own words with clickable citations.
Open the chat →Practice real conversations
Train with Muslim-perspective roleplays — a curious friend, a confident dawah speaker, a respectful neighbor, an academic apologist — and get feedback on your evidence, clarity, and tone.
Open the trainer →Honest tensions worth a careful look
Each dilemma states the tension plainly, presents the strongest Muslim claim, and walks the sources on both sides. Use them to study, to ask in chat, or to practice a real conversation.
- The Islamic Dilemma
If the Bible was corrupted, why does the Qurʼān keep appealing to it? The classic Christian-Muslim dilemma in its simplest form.
Read the dilemma →
- What does the Qurʼān say Christians should judge by?
Q 5:47 commands the people of the Gospel to judge by what Allah has revealed in it. Read carefully, that command is hard to square with the claim that their Gospel had been corrupted.
Read the dilemma →
- Can Allah's word be changed?
The Qurʼān says no one can alter the words of Allah. If the Bible was corrupted, that statement becomes hard to defend on its own terms.
Read the dilemma →
Browse by topic
Topic hubs organize the same evidence around the questions Christians actually face: Qurʼān, Muhammad, the Bible and Injīl, Jesus in Islam, the Trinity, the cross, and more.
The Qurʼān
What the Qurʼān actually teaches, how Muslims understand its preservation and authority, and how a Christian can read its claims about the Bible, Jesus, and salvation honestly.
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Muhammad
Muhammad's life, character, and example as Muslims describe it from the Qurʼān, ḥadīth, and sīra — and the questions Christians should think through carefully.
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Ḥadīth and tradition
How the ḥadīth collections were formed, how Muslim scholars grade reports, and which classical sources matter most for Christian-Muslim dialogue.
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The Bible and the Injīl
What the Qurʼān says about previous scripture, what classical Muslim scholars wrote about taḥrīf, and what manuscript and historical evidence shows about the Bible Muslims read in Muhammad's time.
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Jesus in Islam
Who ʿĪsā is in the Qurʼān, the unique titles he carries, what classical tafsīr says about him, and how the Qurʼān frames the cross — read first through Islamic sources, then through the New Testament.
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The Trinity
The Christian doctrine of the Trinity in plain terms, the version of the Trinity the Qurʼān engages, and how to answer common Muslim objections without compromising the gospel.
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The crucifixion
What the Qurʼān says about Jesus and the cross (Q 4:157), how classical and modern Muslims have read those verses, and what the historical and biblical evidence shows about the death and resurrection of Jesus.
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Salvation and forgiveness
How Islam and Christianity each frame sin, judgment, repentance, and forgiveness — and why the gospel lands as good news in a Muslim heart that knows the weight of those questions.
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Sharia and society
Apostasy, blasphemy, women, slavery, and the rules of war in classical fiqh and the Qurʼān — read carefully, with charity, and with awareness of where modern Muslim scholars themselves disagree.
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Christian formation
Pray for Muslim friends, draft a personal testimony, run a heart check after a hard conversation, and shore up your own knowledge of the Trinity, the atonement, and Scripture before you defend them.
Open the formation hub →Our method
Christian-facing methodology: how we present Muslim arguments fairly, how sources on both sides are vetted, the lineage we draw on, and the editorial pledge — gospel-centered, charitable, never strawman.
Read how we answer →Or open a guided learning path.
For the Muslim and seeker-facing version of the same evidence engine, visit TrueDawah.com.