In Islam, “abrogation” refers to the idea that a later revelation supercedes/revokes/replaces an earlier one. The earlier revelation was valid and binding at the time, but the later revelation has since been revealed abrogating it.
Now, my question is, does the Islamic concept of “abrogation” accurately describe what Jesus does in Matthew 19:1-12, Matthew 5:31-32, Mark 10:1-12? i.e. God revealed one rule through Moses, now God is revealing a new rule through Jesus which abrogates the old rule reviewed through Moses?
Or, if it isn’t accurate comparison, what specifically is the difference between the Islamic concept and what Catholics (or Christians more broadly) believe is happening here?
I believe there are several differences between the doctrine of abrogation and what happens in the Bible. Among these differences, one is related to the Catholic distinction between Disciplines and Doctrines.
In Catholicism, disciplines are customs that have symbolic value and can be changed if there are good reasons for it. For example, building churches so that the congregation faces the east used to be a nearly universal custom in Catholic churches, but it has always had some exceptions. I’m not sure if it was ever a requirement of Canon Law, but if it was, that changed by the time the 1983 Code of Canon Law was published. The 1983 Code replaced the previous Code of Canon Law and changed many disciplines in the Catholic Church, but not any doctrines. Doctrines are truths. They cannot change because God is truth, and God cannot change.
When Jesus abolished the ceremonial laws of the Old Covenant, He didn’t change the truth. He only abolished some disciplines. Things like not eating pigs and shellfish, and circumcising children. There’s nothing Wrong with eating pigs or shellfish, or circumcising children, but these were symbolic customs that emphasized the Israelites’s separation from the gentiles and their ways. They did not imply that pig meat was evil or that circumcision was an essential part of being holy. In the New Covenant these disciplines were abolished because their symbolism was finished, the gentiles were welcomed into the covenant as long as they agreed to lead holy lives and believe in the messiah.
In Islam, I don’t think they make the same distinction between disciplines and doctrines as we do. The doctrine of abrogation seems to say that Allah can change anything in their revelation. If my understanding is accurate (which is always questionable), the truth can change in Islam, and a doctrine that used to be true can become false, or a false doctrine can become a true one.
I hope that helps. I’d love to hear some clarification from our muslim brothers and sisters.