Do we really need to go on? Okay….…this final quote is taken from Reformed
Judaism.org:
‘In its broadest sense, Torah is sometimes used to refer to the vast library of Jewish text. More specifically Torah usually refers to the Pentateuch, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible – Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. These books make up the story of the Jewish people.
‘These ancient stories touch upon science, history, philosophy, ritual and ethics. Included are stories of individuals, families, wars, slavery and more. Virtually no subject was taboo for Torah. Running through these stories is the unique lens through which the Jewish people would come to view their world and their God.
‘We cannot talk about Torah without saying something about revelation. By revelation, we mean ways in which God is revealed to people. The basic underlying difference between the Orthodox and non-orthodox approaches to Judaism hinges on this very issue. The Orthodox view is that everything in the Torah (both the material in the Five Books of Moses and the ancient rabbis’ interpretations of that material) was revealed directly by God. The non-Orthodox view is that the Torah contains the understanding of many people about God. It evolved over a long period and was written by numerous individuals. Some like to say that these individuals were divinely inspired. Some rabbinic scholars speak in terms of “progressive revelation” (the idea that God is revealed differently in every age); other scholars teach that Torah contains the words of God rather than is the word of God.’
If the Jews cannot agree who wrote the current Taurat, and over what period, who can blame the Muslims for saying that it cannot be the Original; that it cannot be the one referred to in the Qur’an?
There
would be a problem if the Muslims were saying that the Taurat of today is wholly corrupt; wrong from front to back; utterly false. But that is not what the Muslims are saying. What we are saying is that it contains genuine revelations; but that these are hidden in a mass of writings that are entirely man-made.
‘Do not kill’; ‘do not steal’; ‘do not bear false witness against others’, and so on; these are genuine revelations; and not to observe them would be a sin. But are we to believe that the Exalted wanted the Caananites exterminated - every man, woman and child; or that stubborn and rebellious children should be stoned to death? Are we to believe that the Exalted could be that vile? Are we to believe that He was so incompetent a Revealer as to include in His Taurat two interwoven accounts of the Flood; two accounts of His covenant with Abraham; two interwoven accounts of Joseph and his brothers; two accounts of the calling of Moses; and many other inconsistencies and anachronisms? They are there…in the Bible; and we can read them for ourselves.
I repeat: If the Jews cannot agree who wrote the current Taurat, and over what period, who can blame the Muslims for saying that it cannot be the Original; that it cannot be the one referred to in the Qur’an?