Study the Qur’an?

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John revealed a book based on a prophetic vision conveyed to him by God, which is what many prophets in the Old Testament did such as Ezekiel and Daniel.
Oh, so that’s why you say John was a prophet. It is understandable then.

Christians do not see him as a prophet along that line. He was an apostle of Jesus basically. If Jesus said there was no more prophet after him, then John was not one.

John wrote many books of the New Testaments of the Bible. The Book of Revelation was one of them and it was in an apocalyptic genre, symbolism. Today a Christian who do this is what we generally understand as having a gift of vision. Yes, he can be a prophet in that sense; however not as in Ezekiel or Daniel. John was a disciple (of Jesus) and there is no new revelation that could be revealed by him.
 
For those interested I would suggest a good way to study Qur’an would be to peruse the translation and detailed commentary by Muhammad Asad…

The Message of the Quran, translated and explained by Muhammad Asad

There are free downloads on line for this book…

Another translation that I’ve found of value is

tanzil.net/#trans/en.wahiduddin/1:1

a free online edition… His commentary can be found at

amazon.com/QURAN-DR-FARIDA-KHANAM-ebook/dp/B003M0OXAS/ref=sr_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1429499255&sr=1-9
 
John revealed a book based on a prophetic vision conveyed to him by God, which is what many prophets in the Old Testament did such as Ezekiel and Daniel.
Everybody can take inspiration but that is not the revelation which come to prophet. I think that is the reason why you assume Baha’i as an other religion. But indeed Baha’i can be sect of a religion but not to be a religion by itself.
 
Oh, so that’s why you say John was a prophet. It is understandable then.

Christians do not see him as a prophet along that line. He was an apostle of Jesus basically. If Jesus said there was no more prophet after him, then John was not one.

John wrote many books of the New Testaments of the Bible. The Book of Revelation was one of them and it was in an apocalyptic genre, symbolism. Today a Christian who do this is what we generally understand as having a gift of vision. Yes, he can be a prophet in that sense; however not as in Ezekiel or Daniel. John was a disciple (of Jesus) and there is no new revelation that could be revealed by him.
1 The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him, to shew unto his servants things which must shortly come to pass; and he sent and signified it by his angel unto his servant John: Revelation1:1

The revelation is belong to Jesus and God gave it to Jesus. I think God sent it by His angel to Jesus but not to John. But if you assume Jesus as God then Jesus would send angel to John and John is to be prophet(If we assume Jesus as God!)

Islamic view : Jesus was a prophet and God gave revelation to Jesus by angel. Later Jesus conveyed that revelation to John. John was the disciple of Jesus. That is all.
 
I’m replying to several posts of the last few days.

First, Surah 4:34 about beating your wives. There is a long convoluted explanation (“proof” they call it) in www.answering-christianity.com on the subject, and perhaps that’s where Matthew Light is getting his information. There are several problems, but one is certainly that earlier commentators had no hesitation in saying the word “daraba” meant “beat.” I checked Lane’s Lexicon, and can’t find the meaning “leave” for “daraba.” And of course there are numerous hadith about beating your wives–with Muhammad condoning the practice. There are all the “rules” about beating them lightly, with a branch no thicker than x, etc. etc. which indicates that all these commentators took the meaning as “beat.” There are no hadiths I am aware of that talk about “leave.” And “leave” doesn’t make much sense in context, because step 2 of dealing with a disobedient wife was, in fact, “leaving” them in the sense of not sleeping with them. So for step 3 to be “leave them more” doesn’t have logic behind it. To make the case for “leave” I think you would have to go back to the early commentators and show that’s how some of them interpreted it, and then you would have to find some hadith to contradict the hadith that clearly talk about “beating.”

A parenthetical note: when I was in college, one of my Arabic professor was Mukhtar Ani, a Syrian, and an anthropologist. He repeated over and over how you heard a lot of yelling, but you never saw any actual violence in Egypt. Well. Mukhtar needed to take his blinders off–I saw traffic accidents where the drivers beat each other to bloody pulps. Our apartment overlooked an elementary school, where every morning at PE class the teachers would smack 7-8 year olds with thick canes. They would also kick them until they fell over, then kick them some more as they were on the ground (7-8 year olds, remember). Once some guy jumped on my back during a festival and started screaming stuff about Viet-Nam. A mounted policeman dragged him off me and trampled him. In al-Azhar Square, some guy waiting with us for the light to change glanced at my wife (glanced, not touched). A policeman standing there smacked him a few times with his baton. I saw a lot more… So what I’m saying is that this is a culture of violence (sorry, M. Light, but it is). So we shouldn’t be surprised if the Qur’an suggests beating your disobedient wife.

Matthew 10:34: “I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.” Yes. But read the story–what he is saying is that people will disagree whether to follow him or not: “father against son, mother against daughter…” etc. It’s not about killing people, it’s about disagreements, and Jesus is simply saying that by announcing his mission, he will causes disagreements.

As for the story about the king telling his servants to go out and bring people from the streets into a feast, first, it’s a story! If I tell the story of Jack and the Beanstalk, I’m not advocating cannibalism, I’m telling you what the giant did. In the story, Jesus is telling you what the king did. And second, there’s nothing violent even in the story–he simply getting them to come to a feast. A lot of criticisms of the Gospels are phrased the same way–they criticize a story Jesus is telling. But the details of the stories don’t matter anyway–it’s the message.

As for Robert the Monk and his strory about Urban II preaching the Crusade, yes, Urban is urging his audience to take up arms and recover the Holy Land. But there’s no Gospel quotations justifying killing etc. He simply uses the Gospels to talk about loving God more than your mother and father, etc.–in other words, very general quotations; nothing about violence.

Abrogation: This, for me, it one of the most telling arguments against Islam. Some Muslims argue that the Qur’an does NOT have any abrogated verses, and certainly you can quote the Qur’an where it talks about it being complete, it should have nothing added to it, etc. etc. On the other hand, a number of Muslim scholars say there are abrogated verses. There are three problems here: 1) the number of abrogated verses increases over time (al-Zuhri mentions 42;, al-Nahhas 138, and Ibn Salama, 238, at which point an upper limit seems to have been reached. Ibn ‘Ata’iqi identifies 231 abrogated verses, and al-Farsi, 248). So that’s pretty suspicious. 2) Next, there is obviously no agreement among scholars about which verses are abrogated. Some later scholars reduce the number (al-Suyuti, d. 1505 only found 20). 3) logically, the whole idea of God contradicting or correcting himself–despite the verse that say “God can do anything” is pretty iffy. I wouldn’t buy it. Maybe God can do anything, but why would he fool those who believe in him? Why would he tell them something that years later he would contradict? Doesn’t make any sense.

As for the famous 9:29 and violence, keep in mind that Bin Ladin himself quoted it in an early al-Qaeda video. I’m not saying Bin Ladin is the world’s authority on the Qur’an, but what I have said in various places over and over and over is that Islam CAN BE USED to justify terrorism. And it is.

As for the armyofgod.com/ link about abortion, there’s nothing in there that quotes the Gospel as justifying violence. Nothing.

Someone else talked about Catholics and Protestants criticizing each others “beliefs and practices.” Of course–but again, that’s not my point. My point is that neither side thought the other was somehow “outside” of Christianity. Catholics always recognized the Protestants as Christians, and vice versa. Maybe they didn’t have nice things to say about the Pope, but that’s a different matter.
 
And the issue of who is a “real” Muslim and/or Christian: I think I understand the points that have been made. But I would still go back to the fact that before the Reformation brought about other groups that had some claim to legitimacy, the Catholic Church was the supreme authority–if they said you were a heretic, you were. You could argue that it’s historical accident that Ehrman’s “proto-orthodox” group won in the end, but they DID win. In Islam, just go to the various Sunni websites today and see how they characterize Shi’is–they’re at the bottom of pile beneath Christians and Jews. The Fatimids certainly thought they were God’s chosen ones; the Saljuks thought the same. You can go on and on. So I would agree about the various philosophical discussions among the murji’ites, mu’tazilites, etc. about who is a Muslim, but in practical terms, you had vast empires trying to settle the issue with war. This even comes down to the 17th c. in Iran, where the majority of the population was Sunni and the Safavids had to whip them into shape and make them Shi’is.

Peace with Muslims? Absolutely. But they have to renounce the parts of Islam that lead groups to violence, and they have to renounce the idea that world conquest is their agenda. And they have to agree that if they choose to live in a non-Shari’a country, that country’s laws are supreme, and they have no intention of replacing them with Islamic law. That shouldn’t be too hard, since that the way almost all of them were living before 2001.
 
but one is certainly that earlier commentators had no hesitation in saying the word “daraba” meant “beat.”
I said I think the word was a transcription error.

The original Qur’anic script did not write out vowels. So it is entirely possible that the verb “to leave” was meant, as in “separate households”, which is a very sensible next step after leaving her bed.
I saw traffic accidents where the drivers beat each other to bloody pulps. Our apartment overlooked an elementary school, where every morning at PE class the teachers would smack 7-8 year olds with thick canes. They would also kick them until they fell over, then kick them some more as they were on the ground (7-8 year olds, remember). Once some guy jumped on my back during a festival and started screaming stuff about Viet-Nam. A mounted policeman dragged him off me and trampled him. In al-Azhar Square, some guy waiting with us for the light to change glanced at my wife (glanced, not touched). A policeman standing there smacked him a few times with his baton. I saw a lot more… So what I’m saying is that this is a culture of violence (sorry, M. Light, but it is). So we shouldn’t be surprised if the Qur’an suggests beating your disobedient wife.
Yes, there are far too many “cultures of violence” in the world. Here in America where I live the police in many cities will beat up people of the wrong color for driving in the wrong part of town. May God reach every heart with the message of eschewing violence and hatred.
 
In Islam, just go to the various Sunni websites today and see how they characterize Shi’is–they’re at the bottom of pile beneath Christians and Jews.
We see the same thing in any religious schism - for example, in Northern Ireland the Catholics and Protestants hated one another with a passion, but didn’t care very much about Hindus, Buddhists, and Muslims.

Religious fanaticism and hatred are indeed a world-devouring fire.
 
But if it were “leave” instead of “beat” wouldn’t you expect that early commentators or hadith would reflect that??? This is just one of several subjects that Muslims have suddenly become sensitive to in the last few years and have “found” new interpretations. It’s sort of like if Catholics decided divorce was OK, and ignoring 2,000 years of tradition they changed certain Bible verses.

As for the violence in Egypt, what I described was what I personally saw with my own eyes. A lot may go on in the US, but I personally haven’t seen it. In Egypt I saw it on a weekly basis, if not more often.
 
But if it were “leave” instead of “beat” wouldn’t you expect that early commentators or hadith would reflect that?
Unfortunately, we don’t have access to the writings of the early Qur’an commentators, as they have all been lost. The earliest surviving commentaries date from centuries after Muhammad.

And the Hadith are, as usual, contradictory about this matter.
 
If Muslims had seen bad examples from Muhammed they would never follow Him.
There is something applicable to believers of all religions. If their leader does something wrong, many believers cease to believe it is wrong. Some believe it is not wrong. They believe it is alright in certain contexts, or that it is not wrong for them since they are a special class of people (“true believers”). Others believe the leader alone is an exception to the general rule which makes it wrong for everyone else. So if Muslims had seen bad examples from someone whom they believed was a prophet, some definitely would have continued to follow him. The “escape clause” is to say, “Well, they weren’t *really *Muslims (or Mormons or Catholics or whoever is involved).” This is the case, for some Muslims, with Mirza Ghulam Ahmad. Some Muslims followed him; some Muslims rejected him. Some Christians accepted Joseph Smith as a prophet (despite his doing things that were wrong); some Christians rejected him. Some Mormons followed James Strang as their prophet; others rejected him. Some Christians followed a Pope; others rejected the Pope in favor of an Anti-Pope.

The chief factor for a person to determine whether or not he is following a “real” prophet is . . . his own opinion. People tend to believe what they believe (!), and tend to believe that those who believe differently are wrong in equal proportion to the difference in their beliefs. The more confident that people become in their beliefs, the more justified they feel in subjugating those who believe differently.

In answer to the question,
Studying the Qur’an informs Christians of the view Muslims have of Jesus, as well as of certain other figures in the Old and New Testaments. **Surat Maryam **is especially beautiful/informative/relative (pick one or more). Perhaps looking at these persons through Muhammad’s eyes, Christians will revive their devotion to and deepen their understanding of Jesus.
 
Unfortunately, we don’t have access to the writings of the early Qur’an commentators, as they have all been lost. The earliest surviving commentaries date from centuries after Muhammad.
You are missing my point. My point is that this idea that “beat” is really “leave” or “separate” is a MODERN idea. I’m not looking for something from the 7th c.–the 13th, 14th, or 15th c. will do just fine. Give me some specific references.

Also I just read M. Light’s comment about Exodus, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy. We have all been asking you for GOSPEL passages that justify violence (there aren’t any). Citing the Old Testament–which is filled with violence–misses the point completely. Sorry.

And as I said before, the fact that Bin Ladin cites Qur’an 9:29 as a justification for terrorism speaks for itself. All the Internet posters in the world can claim that “that is not Islam” or whatever, but Bin Ladin used it to justify his actions.
 
My point is that this idea that “beat” is really “leave” or “separate” is a MODERN idea.
The truth or falsehood of an idea does not depend on how old or how new it is.

Of course, regarding what the verse originally said, we do not know, as the original Arabic script did not include vowels, nor do we have contemporaneous written documentation from Muhammad nor his companions.

As an aside, I greatly prefer including the (name removed by moderator)ut of modern methods of scientific and historical analysis in helping to understand all the sacred scriptures of the past.
 
Where did Muhammad do this?
There are many ‘sword verses’/strongly hostile texts in the Qur’an and elsewhere, including the Sira and Hadiths, just go look. There are also many fatwas that appear to affirm these often very controversial [to non-Muslims at least], verses.

Taken as a collective and in chronology and context it is obvious that unless people, including those of ‘The Book’ submit to Islam, then they should be persecuted - according to Muhammad/‘Allah’/whatever.
 
There are many ‘sword verses’/strongly hostile texts in the Qur’an and elsewhere, including the Sira and Hadiths, just go look. There are also many fatwas that appear to affirm these often very controversial [to non-Muslims at least], verses.

Taken as a collective and in chronology and context it is obvious that unless people, including those of ‘The Book’ submit to Islam, then they should be persecuted - according to Muhammad/‘Allah’/whatever.
Fatwas are pronouncements by the Muslim clergy. Muhammad is not more responsible for them than Jesus is responsible for the official pronouncements of Christian religious leaders written centuries or millenia later.

The Hadiths are things Muhammad supposedly said, as passed on through oral accounts for generations before being written down. Only many of them contradict one another, as you might expect. So they are obviously unreliable, and many of them probably invented out of whole cloth.

The Sirah are like the Hadith, only referencing Muhammad’s actions. So they have all the same problems as the Hadith.

That leaves the Qur’an, which is largely accurate, but must be understood in the context of when each verse was revealed, and the cultural background of the society in which Muhammad lived. For example, some of the Quranic Surih that people feel upset about were in the context of a defensive war against particular Christian soldiers or Jewish tribes who were trying to destroy the Muslim Ummah (community). So, yes, those people who had sought to extirpate the followers of Muhammad were to be subdued and pacified. Not a surprise.
 
Fatwas are pronouncements by the Muslim clergy. Muhammad is not more responsible for them than Jesus is responsible for the official pronouncements of Christian religious leaders written centuries or millenia later.

The Hadiths are things Muhammad supposedly said, as passed on through oral accounts for generations before being written down. Only many of them contradict one another, as you might expect. So they are obviously unreliable, and many of them probably invented out of whole cloth.

The Sirah are like the Hadith, only referencing Muhammad’s actions. So they have all the same problems as the Hadith.

That leaves the Qur’an, which is largely accurate, but must be understood in the context of when each verse was revealed, and the cultural background of the society in which Muhammad lived. For example, some of the Quranic Surih that people feel upset about were in the context of a defensive war against particular Christian soldiers or Jewish tribes who were trying to destroy the Muslim Ummah (community). So, yes, those people who had sought to extirpate the followers of Muhammad were to be subdued and pacified. Not a surprise.
Is there any evidence that Jews and Christians were particularly come on and in the face warlike to Muhammad and his followers? I know he was very touchy about criticism - so it seems that his idea of ‘defensive war and oppression’ was more to do with ironing out wrinkles to his pride.

ps. The Qur’an(s) are largely accurate with regard to what? What Muhammad said? The old Qur’ans that still survive show many differences, and indeed in the Hadiths, numbers of Muhammad’s followers are said to comment on the differences, and on the huge amount of record that had already been lost one way or another.
To claim that the Qur’an is largely ‘accurate’ is stretching things I would suggest. - besides isn’t it supposed to be the entirely accurate and literal and eternal ‘word of Allah’?
 
Is there any evidence that Jews and Christians were particularly come on and in the face warlike to Muhammad and his followers? I know he was very touchy about criticism - so it seems that his idea of ‘defensive war and oppression’ was more to do with ironing out wrinkles to his pride.
I think that’s unfair. Muhammad’s movement was under direct military threat. It wasn’t just about pride.

However, Muhammad certainly did belong to a culture with a strong emphasis on honor, and Middle Eastern society continues to care much more about such things than Westerners generally do these days.

Edwin
 
Mount Carmel:
The old Qur’ans that still survive show many differences,
Can you show examples of important, meaningful differences between different pre-Uthman Qur’ans and the version that was canonized?

Also, as an aside, I find your username quite fascinating. Can you tell me why you selected it?
 
Mount Carmel:
besides isn’t it supposed to be the entirely accurate and literal and eternal ‘word of Allah’?
I would say it is almost entirely accurate to what Muhammad revealed, based on the findings of historic textural criticism and my own religious beliefs. I don’t hold scriptural literalism in high regard at all - for the Qur’an, New Testament, Torah, Tripitaka, Upanishads, Yasna, or any other religious tradition.

Muslims themselves vary on literal versus symbolic / esoteric interpretation of the Qur’an - from Salafism on the literalist side to Sufism from the mystical perspective.
 
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