D
De_Maria
Guest
Since the original Quran was burnt, how can Muslims prove that the current version contains Mohammed’s words?
So you believe that because people memorize it, it’s the word of God???There is no ‘original’. The Qur’an is an oral recitation, not a book, it was only written down for documentary purposes.
And we know it’s the word of God (not Muhammad) because dozens of people memorised it completely by the time Muhammad (pbuh) died, and there are now somewhere in the region of 10 million people who know it all by heart. Muslims recite Suras from it at least 10 times a day and the whole thing is recited at least once every Ramadan; also whenever someone (say, an Imam) is reciting the Qur’an and makes a mistake or gets stuck, the people behind will correct him.
So the chances of it being forgotten are next to none.
I think we know human memories can be flawed.There is no ‘original’. The Qur’an is an oral recitation, not a book, it was only written down for documentary purposes.
And we know it’s the word of God (not Muhammad) because dozens of people memorised it completely by the time Muhammad (pbuh) died, and there are now somewhere in the region of 10 million people who know it all by heart. Muslims recite Suras from it at least 10 times a day and the whole thing is recited at least once every Ramadan; also whenever someone (say, an Imam) is reciting the Qur’an and makes a mistake or gets stuck, the people behind will correct him.
So the chances of it being forgotten are next to none.
Then is the Iliad and Odessey of Homer the word of God? That was originally orally transmitted and then only later written down as well?There is no ‘original’. The Qur’an is an oral recitation, not a book, it was only written down for documentary purposes.
And we know it’s the word of God (not Muhammad) because dozens of people memorised it completely by the time Muhammad (pbuh) died, and there are now somewhere in the region of 10 million people who know it all by heart. Muslims recite Suras from it at least 10 times a day and the whole thing is recited at least once every Ramadan; also whenever someone (say, an Imam) is reciting the Qur’an and makes a mistake or gets stuck, the people behind will correct him.
So the chances of it being forgotten are next to none.
Exactly! Human memory being what it is, they cannot be sure that nothing has been changed.I think we know human memories can be flawed.
So how do they know they are 100% right?
I know you said ‘dozens’, but im sure people in those dozens would have forgotten, therefore that leaves a chance for corruption doesnt it?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_manSo you believe that because people memorize it, it’s the word of God???
Well firstly, they were all consistent. It’s one thing to claim that some of them might have forgotten parts, but it’s something else altogether to claim that they all forgot it in the exact same way, which is what would have to have happened for nobody to have disagreed over it.I think we know human memories can be flawed.
So how do they know they are 100% right?
I know you said ‘dozens’, but im sure people in those dozens would have forgotten, therefore that leaves a chance for corruption doesnt it?
What really happened is that the verses were memorized by many people and some written down while Muhammed was alive. But no one person had the whole thing (at least the same version) memorized or written down. Once Muhammed died several versions were floating around because it was orally transmitted and errors were introduced…remeber the game telephone when you were a kid? Same thing happened.There is no ‘original’. The Qur’an is an oral recitation, not a book, it was only written down for documentary purposes.
And we know it’s the word of God (not Muhammad) because dozens of people memorised it completely by the time Muhammad (pbuh) died, and there are now somewhere in the region of 10 million people who know it all by heart. Muslims recite Suras from it at least 10 times a day and the whole thing is recited at least once every Ramadan; also whenever someone (say, an Imam) is reciting the Qur’an and makes a mistake or gets stuck, the people behind will correct him.
So the chances of it being forgotten are next to none.
You can never separate the Quran from Muhammad since he’s the one who brought it to you and claimed that it’s the word of God! The problem you have is figuring out whether he told the truth or not!There is no ‘original’. The Qur’an is an oral recitation, not a book, it was only written down for documentary purposes.
And we know it’s the word of God (not Muhammad) because dozens of people memorised it completely by the time Muhammad (pbuh) died, and there are now somewhere in the region of 10 million people who know it all by heart. Muslims recite Suras from it at least 10 times a day and the whole thing is recited at least once every Ramadan; also whenever someone (say, an Imam) is reciting the Qur’an and makes a mistake or gets stuck, the people behind will correct him.
So the chances of it being forgotten are next to none.
I don’t if it’s far smaller, and the largest part of the New Testament are the four different accounts of the Gospels which repeate much of the same information. So I don’t think that is a good defense.Except that the Quran is far smaller than the NT, and highly repetitive.
With the bible we have multiple copies from differnet times so we can see the changes in the text (or lack thereof) as time went on. Hand copying was a pretty reliable method. People would pay big money for a copy of a book back then so the scibes would have to get it right. Most errors in the copies are transcription errors like reversing letters. There was no large change in the content of the bible and this can be shown via the copies and early fragments we still have today.I gottta hand it to Islam the memororization of the Qu’ran is very impressive. It may not be word for word what Muhammed said but it is much more reliable than the Bible copies we have, which are copies of the copies of the copies of the originals at best.
No sense in trashing the Qu’ran’s reliability when it’s obviously in better standing than the Bible and/or Torah translations.
Imagine people memorizing the entire New Testament word for word by heart? That would be impressive.
There’s an entire science built around this called textual criticism, I have read many books on the matter and I can assure the leading experts in the field completely disagree with you. Read misquoting Jesus for starters, Bart Ehrman is one of the most knowledgable experts in the field, and he completely disagrees with you.With the bible we have multiple copies from differnet times so we can see the changes in the text (or lack thereof) as time went on. Hand copying was a pretty reliable method. People would pay big money for a copy of a book back then so the scibes would have to get it right. Most errors in the copies are transcription errors like reversing letters. There was no large change in the content of the bible and this can be shown via the copies and early fragments we still have today.
We only have one koran so it is a snap shoot in time. We have no way to know if this version of the koran is the same as what muhammed created because we have no earlier copies to compare it against. It is like me burning all the bibles in the world accept one that I have altered and doctored. 100 years from now you could not prove that my version of the bible is not the original.