The Bible must be understood in context and that requires some education.
The Bible has a context because it is written by humans, albeit under the guidance of God. It was written by humans with a human background with human intentions (still within God’s plans of course) for human audience with human background happening within human history. The Bible can be placed within the human story because it is written in a human context, through which we interpret God’s plans.
Reading from an non-Muslim scholarship perspective (and even with the eyes of a person of faith) the Quran is obviously existing within a human context. More so when some of the stories are paralleled with those in the Bible, and if those stories in the Bible have a human historical context, then at least that part of the Quran must have a human context.
The problem is that for Muslims, the Quran has no context. Since God in his timelessness wrote it then obviously it must have happened outside of human history. If so, there cannot be any questioning of the intention behind the writing of the Quran as that would be questioning why God wrote the Quran. And man, in his insignificance cannot question or seek to understand the mind of God.
That is why while Christians have Bible study where we learn (for instance) the frame of mind when Paul wrote 1Cor and the events in Corith at that time as well as the sociopolitical background in both the Church as well as in Greece at that time, there cannot be any similar studies on the Quran. Quran studies is limited to the study of 7th century Arabic together with the philology. Any study of the life in 7th century Arabic is limited only to the need to explain the meaning of words.
“It is not permissible for one who holds faith in Allah and the Day of Judgment to speak on the Quran without learning classical Arabic.” - Mujahid ibn Jabr
Tafsir (interpretation) in Islam does not involve full hermeunetics and exegesis like Biblical studies do.
Tafsir is very much a straight understanding what God means in the Quran and the words are taken in isolation from the human historical context at the time of writing - the only possible context is the broader context of the Quran and the better scholars would be able to read Quranic verses in conjunction with other verses and explain them together.
Interestingly, I was told that Muslim scholars in the Al-Azhar University Cairo often approach Jesuit Islamic scholars stationed there to help them perform some hermeneutical studies on specific passages in the Quran because they are not allowed to do it (presumably because it is counter to Islamic beliefs)
It is frustrating when discussing with non-scholars (and that includes most of those armed with Islamic studies certificates), is that they respond to a point I raise on one Quranic verse by just referring to another verse without dealing with the verse raised.
That is why it is difficult for someone like hasantas to understand what we mean by the context of a scripture and expect them to explain verses in a broader context, whether just the Quranic context or the historical context.