The Khatim an-Nabiyyin (the Seal of the Prophets) and its inclusive Abrahamic perspective: Muhammad and ‘Isa ibn Maryam in dialogue
Keywords: 
Khatim an-Nabiyyin (the Seal of the Prophets/Prophecy)
Islamic–Christian dialogue
Prophecy
Islamic eschatology
Muhammad
‘Isa ibn Maryam
Issue Date: 
2021
Publisher: 
MDPI
ISSN: 
2077-1444
Editorial note: 
This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
Citation: 
Demichelis, M. (2020). The Khatim an-Nabiyyin (the Seal of the Prophets) and its inclusive Abrahamic perspective: Muhammad and ‘Isa ibn Maryam in dialogue. Religions, 12(1), 4.
Abstract
“Muhammad is not the father of any one of your men; he is God’s messenger and the Seal of the Prophets: God knows everything.” (33:40). The deconstruction of the concept of “the Seal of the Prophets” through identifying its different spiritual-historical meanings is particularly important and partially analyzed through an inter-religious methodological approach. If indeed the Prophet Muhammad is undoubtedly the last of the prophets in order of time in the Abrahamic tradition, and thus in a literal sense “the Seal of the Prophets”, the background of the 7th-century pre-urban Hijaz reflects a different cultural-economic and historical development in comparison with the Mediterranean-Mesopotamian basin. This article aims to reflect on the meanings that “the Seal of the Prophets” assumed in the Qur’anic verse 33:40, as the adoption of different narratives to establish an Abrahamic prophetic continuity with a clear emphasis on Islamic–Christian dialogue; the significance of these meanings reflects the opportunity for reciprocal understanding between the two most important global religions and their awareness of prophets and prophecy, i.e., on relations with God, the pact with human beings and eschatological predictions.

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