Adha In The Injeel (Farsi) (E-Book)

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Muslims around the world annually celebrate the feast of Al-Adha, which is is also known as the "Feast of Sacrifice". At the Al-Adha feast, many Muslims sacrifice a sheep or a ram to commemorate the holy event when God redeemed the son of Abraham by providing a ram caught in the thicket for the sacrifice. This incident is recorded in the Quran in Surat Al-Saffat (37):99-111.

Adha in the Injeel is a booklet written for Muslims explaining salvation through Christ's death and resurrection by using the Islamic story of the Adha as an illustration of how Christ is our Adha.

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Muslims around the world annually celebrate the feast of Al-Adha, which is is also known as the "Feast of Sacrifice". At the Al-Adha feast, many Muslims sacrifice a sheep or a ram to commemorate the holy event when God redeemed the son of Abraham by providing a ram caught in the thicket for the sacrifice. This incident is recorded in the Quran in Surat Al-Saffat (37):99-111.

Adha in the Injeel is a booklet written for Muslims explaining salvation through Christ's death and resurrection by using the Islamic story of the Adha as an illustration of how Christ is our Adha.

Muslims around the world annually celebrate the feast of Al-Adha, which is is also known as the "Feast of Sacrifice". At the Al-Adha feast, many Muslims sacrifice a sheep or a ram to commemorate the holy event when God redeemed the son of Abraham by providing a ram caught in the thicket for the sacrifice. This incident is recorded in the Quran in Surat Al-Saffat (37):99-111.

Adha in the Injeel is a booklet written for Muslims explaining salvation through Christ's death and resurrection by using the Islamic story of the Adha as an illustration of how Christ is our Adha.