If Muslims have a relatively clear and accurate idea of how many Christians view their religion-a critical view that can be summarized like this: If Muslims have a relatively clear and accurate idea of how many Christians view their religion-a critical view that can be summarized thus: Muhammad is a false prophet who wrote the Qur'an with his own hand and invented a mortifying and misogynistic religion-Christians have a very vague idea of how Muslims view their religion.
Who knows that Muslims believe in the Bible, the Torah and the Gospels, as books revealed by God to mankind? Who knows that Muslims believe in the mission of most of the Old Testament prophets, Abraham, David, Solomon or Moses, and in the messianism of Jesus?
But if Muslims believe in the Bible, they are also convinced that it has been altered, and if they believe in the messianism of Jesus, they do not elevate him to the level of a deity, convinced instead that he is only a Semitic prophet sent to the Jews and not to all mankind.
Another difference between Christians and Muslims is the nature of God: absolutely unique, according to Muslims, and "one God in three persons," according to Christians. A God who became incarnate in Jesus, according to the latter, but a God so perfect and so absolute that he could not have become incarnate and taken on human form, according to Muslims.