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Historical reliability of the Quran

Historical reliability of the Quran concerns the question of the historicity of the described or claimed events in the Quran.

The Quran, in traditional Arabic text

The Quran is viewed to be the scriptural foundation of Islam and is believed by Muslims to have been sent down by Allah (God) and revealed to Muhammad by the angel Jibreel (Gabriel). Muslims have not used historical criticism in the study of the Quran, but they have used textual criticism in a similar way used by Christians and Jews.[1] It has been practiced primarily by secular, Western scholars such as John Wansbrough, Joseph Schacht, Patricia Crone, and Michael Cook, who set aside doctrines of the Quran's divinity, perfection, unchangeability, etc., accepted by Muslim scholars,[2] and instead investigate the Quran's origin, text, composition, and history.[2]

In the Muslim world, scholarly criticism of the Quran can be considered an apostasy. Scholarly criticism of the Quran, is thus, a nascent field of study in the Islamic world.[3][4]

Scholars have identified several pre-existing sources for some Quranic narratives.[5] The Quran assumes its readers' familiarity with the Christian Bible and there are many parallels between the Bible and the Quran. Aside from the Bible, the Quran includes legendary narratives about Dhu al-Qarnayn, apocryphal gospels,[6] and Jewish legends.

Textual history

 
Sanaʽa manuscript of the Quran.

Early manuscripts

In the 1970s, 14,000 fragments of Quran were discovered in the Great Mosque of Sana'a, the Sana'a manuscripts. About 12,000 fragments belonged to 926 copies of the Quran, the other 2,000 were loose fragments. The oldest known copy of the Quran so far belongs to this collection:According to Sadeghi and Bergmann, the results indicated that the parchment had a 68% (1σ) probability of belonging to the period between 614 CE to 656 CE. It had a 95% (2σ) probability of belonging to the period between 578 CE and 669 CE. The carbon dating was applicable to the lower text.But paleography suggest a date from mid to latter half of the 7th century CE.Upper text dated between end of 7CE and beginning of the 8CE.

The German scholar Gerd R. Puin has been investigating these Quran fragments for years. His research team made 35,000 microfilm photographs of the manuscripts, which he dated to early part of the 8th century. Puin has not published the entirety of his work, but noted unconventional verse orderings, minor textual variations, and rare styles of orthography. He also suggested that some of the parchments were palimpsests which had been reused. Puin believed that this implied an evolving text as opposed to a fixed one.[7]

In 2015, some of the earliest known Quranic fragments, dating from between approximately AD 568 and 645, were identified at the University of Birmingham.[8] Islamic scholar Joseph E. B. Lumbard of Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Qatar has written in the Huffington Post in support of the dates proposed by the Birmingham scholars. Professor Lumbard notes that the discovery of a Qur'anic text that may be confirmed by radiocarbon dating as having been written in the first decades of the Islamic era, and includes variations in the “under text.” recorded in the Islamic historiographical tradition .[9][unreliable source?]

Quran and History

Creation narrative

The Quran contains a creation narrative and may refer to the world being created in six days (yawm), although this is highly debatable. In Sūrah al-Anbiyāʼ, the Quran states that "the heavens and the earth were of one piece" before being parted.[10] God then created the landscape of the earth, placed the sky above it as a roof, and created the day and night cycles by appointing an orbit for both the sun and moon.[11] Some Muslim apologists, like Zakir Naik and Adnan Oktar advocate creationism and contemporary Islamic scholar Yasir Qadhi believes that the idea that humans evolved is against the Quran.[12] Most Muslims do not accept the theory of evolution, although there are substantial differences among countries (from <10% acceptance in Egypt to about 40% in Kazakhstan).[13] Some Muslims point to a verse in the Quran as evidence for Evolution “when He truly created you in stages ˹of development˺?” Verse 71:14. Evolution is taught in many Islamic countries, and some scholars have tried to reconcile the Quran and evolution.[14]

Samiri

Quran recounts a story of the golden calf, where it mentions that Samiri, a rebellious follower of Moses, created the calf while Moses was away for 40 days on Mount Sinai, receiving the Ten Commandments.[15] Due to the fact that as-Samiri can mean the Samaritan,[16] some believe that his character is a reference to the worship of the golden calves built by Jeroboam of Samaria, conflating the two idol-worshiping incidents into one.

Alexander the Great legends

 
Silver tetradrachm of Alexander the Great shown wearing the horns of the ram-god Zeus-Ammon.

Quran also employs popular legends about Alexander the Great called Dhul-Qarnayn ("he of the two horns") in the Quran. The story of Dhul-Qarnayn has its origins in legends of Alexander the Great current in the Middle East in the early years of the Christian era. According to these the Scythians, the descendants of Gog and Magog, once defeated one of Alexander's generals, upon which Alexander built a wall in the Caucasus mountains to keep them out of civilised lands (the basic elements are found in Flavius Josephus).

The reasons behind the name "Two-Horned" are somewhat obscure: the scholar al-Tabari (839–923 CE) held it was because he went from one extremity ("horn") of the world to the other,[17] but it may ultimately derive from the image of Alexander wearing the horns of the ram-god Zeus-Ammon, as popularised on coins throughout the Hellenistic Near East.[18] The wall Dhul-Qarnayn builds on his northern journey may have reflected a distant knowledge of the Great Wall of China (the 12th century scholar al-Idrisi drew a map for Roger of Sicily showing the "Land of Gog and Magog" in Mongolia), or of various Sassanid Persian walls built in the Caspian area against the northern barbarians, or a conflation of the two.[19]

Dhul-Qarneyn also journeys to the western and eastern extremities ("qarns", tips) of the Earth.[20] In the west he finds the sun setting in a "muddy spring", equivalent to the "poisonous sea" which Alexander found in the Syriac legend. [21] In the Syriac original Alexander tested the sea by sending condemned prisoners into it, but the Quran changes this into a general administration of justice.[21] In the east both the Syrian legend and the Quran have Alexander/Dhul-Qarneyn find a people who live so close to the rising sun that they have no protection from its heat.[21]

"Qarn" also means "period" or "century", and the name Dhul-Qarnayn therefore has a symbolic meaning as "He of the Two Ages", the first being the mythological time when the wall is built and the second the age of the end of the world when Allah's shariah, the divine law, is removed and Gog and Magog are to be set loose.[22] Modern Islamic apocalyptic writers, holding to a literal reading, put forward various explanations for the absence of the wall from the modern world, some saying that Gog and Magog were the Mongols and that the wall is now gone, others that both the wall and Gog and Magog are present but invisible.[23]

Death of Jesus

 
Papyrus of Irenaeus' Against Heresies, which describes early Gnostic beliefs about Jesus' death which influenced Islam.[24]

Quran maintains that Jesus was not actually crucified and did not die on the cross. The general Islamic view supporting the denial of crucifixion was probably influenced by Manichaenism (Docetism), which holds that someone else was crucified instead of Jesus, while concluding that Jesus will return during the end-times.[25]

That they said (in boast), "We killed Christ Jesus the son of Mary, the Messenger of Allah";- but they killed him not, nor crucified him, but so it was made to appear to them, and those who differ therein are full of doubts, with no (certain) knowledge, but only conjecture to follow, for of a surety they killed him not:-
Nay, Allah raised him up unto Himself; and Allah is Exalted in Power, Wise;-

— Qur'an, sura 4 (An-Nisa) ayat 157–158[26]

Despite these views, theologians maintain that the Crucifixion of Jesus is a fact of history.[27] The view that Jesus only appeared to be crucified and did not actually die predates Islam, and is found in several apocryphal gospels.[25]

Irenaeus in his book Against Heresies describes Gnostic beliefs that bear remarkable resemblance with the Islamic view:

He did not himself suffer death, but Simon, a certain man of Cyrene, being compelled, bore the cross in his stead; so that this latter being transfigured by him, that he might be thought to be Jesus, was crucified, through ignorance and error, while Jesus himself received the form of Simon, and, standing by, laughed at them. For since he was an incorporeal power, and the Nous (mind) of the unborn father, he transfigured himself as he pleased, and thus ascended to him who had sent him, deriding them, inasmuch as he could not be laid hold of, and was invisible to all.-

— Against Heresies, Book I, Chapter 24, Section 40

Irenaeus mentions this view again:

He appeared on earth as a man and performed miracles. Thus he himself did not suffer. Rather, a certain Simon of Cyrene was compelled to carry his cross for him. It was he who was ignorantly and erroneously crucified, being transfigured by him, so that he might be thought to be Jesus. Moreover, Jesus assumed the form of Simon, and stood by laughing at them.[28][29] Irenaeus, Against Heresies.[24]

Another Gnostic writing, found in the Nag Hammadi library, Second Treatise of the Great Seth has a similar view of Jesus' death:

I was not afflicted at all, yet I did not die in solid reality but in what appears, in order that I not be put to shame by them

and also:

Another, their father, was the one who drank the gall and the vinegar; it was not I. Another was the one who lifted up the cross on his shoulder, who was Simon. Another was the one on whom they put the crown of thorns. But I was rejoicing in the height over all the riches of the archons and the offspring of their error and their conceit, and I was laughing at their ignorance

Coptic Apocalypse of Peter, likewise, reveals the same views of Jesus' death:

I saw him (Jesus) seemingly being seized by them. And I said 'What do I see, O Lord? That it is you yourself whom they take, and that you are grasping me? Or who is this one, glad and laughing on the tree? And is it another one whose feet and hands they are striking?' The Savior said to me, 'He whom you saw on the tree, glad and laughing, this is the living Jesus. But this one into whose hands and feet they drive the nails is his fleshly part, which is the substitute being put to shame, the one who came into being in his likeness. But look at him and me.' But I, when I had looked, said 'Lord, no one is looking at you. Let us flee this place.' But he said to me, 'I have told you, 'Leave the blind alone!'. And you, see how they do not know what they are saying. For the son of their glory instead of my servant, they have put to shame.' And I saw someone about to approach us resembling him, even him who was laughing on the tree. And he was with a Holy Spirit, and he is the Savior. And there was a great, ineffable light around them, and the multitude of ineffable and invisible angels blessing them. And when I looked at him, the one who gives praise was revealed.

However, Islamic scholar Mahmoud M. Ayoub and historian of religion Gabriel Said Reynolds disagree with the mainstream interpretation of the Quranic narrative of Jesus' death, arguing that the Quran nowhere disputes that Jesus died.[30][31][further explanation needed]

See also

References

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ Religions of the world Lewis M. Hopfe – 1979 "Some Muslims have suggested and practiced textual criticism of the Quran in a manner similar to that practiced by Christians and Jews on their bibles. No one has yet suggested the higher criticism of the Quran."
  2. ^ a b LESTER, TOBY (January 1999). "What Is the Koran?". Atlantic. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  3. ^ Christian-Muslim relations: yesterday, today, tomorrow Munawar Ahmad Anees, Ziauddin Sardar, Syed Z. Abedin – 1991 For instance, a Christian critic engaging in textual criticism of the Quran from a biblical perspective will surely miss the essence of the quranic message. Just one example would clarify this point.
  4. ^ Studies on Islam Merlin L. Swartz – 1981 One will find a more complete bibliographical review of the recent studies of the textual criticism of the Quran in the valuable article by Jeffery, "The Present Status of Qur'anic Studies," Report on Current Research on the Middle East
  5. ^ Leirvik 2010, p. 33.
  6. ^ Leirvik 2010, pp. 33–34.
  7. ^ Lester, Toby (January 1999). "What Is the Koran?". The Atlantic. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  8. ^ Coughlan, Sean (22 July 2015). "'Oldest' Koran fragments found in Birmingham University". BBC News. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  9. ^ "New Light on the History of the Qur'anic Text?". The Huffington Post. 24 July 2015.
  10. ^ Quran 21:30
  11. ^ Quran 21:31–33
  12. ^ "Muslim thought on evolution takes a step forward | Salman Hameed". TheGuardian.com. 11 January 2013.
  13. ^ Hameed, Salman (2008-12-12). "Bracing for Islamic Creationism". Science. 322 (5908): 1637–1638. doi:10.1126/science.1163672. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 19074331. S2CID 206515329.
  14. ^ webmaster (6 December 2011). "Are evolution and religion compatible?". The Stream – Al Jazeera English.
  15. ^ The Qur'an, Surah Ta Ha, Ayah 85
  16. ^ Rubin, Uri. "Tradition in Transformation: the Ark of the Covenant and the Golden Calf in Biblical and Islamic Historiography," Oriens (Volume 36, 2001): 202.
  17. ^ Van Donzel & Schmidt 2010, p. 57 fn.3.
  18. ^ Pinault 1992, p. 181 fn.71.
  19. ^ Glassé & Smith 2003, p. 39.
  20. ^ Wheeler 2013, p. 96.
  21. ^ a b c Ernst 2011, p. 133.
  22. ^ Glassé & Smith 2003, p. 38.
  23. ^ Cook 2005, p. 205-206.
  24. ^ a b "Et gentibus ipsorum autem apparuisse eum in terra hominem, et virtutes perfecisse. Quapropter neque passsum eum, sed Simonem quendam Cyrenæum angariatum portasse crucem ejus pro eo: et hunc secundum ignorantiam et errorem crucifixum, transfiguratum ab eo, uti putaretur ipse esse Jesus: et ipsum autem Jesum Simonis accepisse formam, et stantem irrisisse eos." Book 1, Chapter 19
  25. ^ a b Joel L. Kraemer Israel Oriental Studies XII BRILL 1992 ISBN 9789004095847 p. 41
  26. ^ Lawson, Todd (1 March 2009). The Crucifixion and the Quran: A Study in the History of Muslim Thought. Oneworld Publications. p. 12. ISBN 978-1851686353.
  27. ^ Eddy, Paul Rhodes and Gregory A. Boyd (2007). The Jesus Legend: A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Jesus Tradition. Baker Academic. p. 172. ISBN 0801031141. ...if there is any fact of Jesus' life that has been established by a broad consensus, it is the fact of Jesus' crucifixion.
  28. ^ Haer. 1.24.4
  29. ^ Kelhoffer, James A. (2014). Conceptions of "Gospel" and Legitimacy in Early Christianity. Mohr Siebeck. p. 80. ISBN 9783161526367.
  30. ^ Ayoub, Mahmoud M. (1980). "Towards an Islamic Christology, II:The Death of Jesus, Reality or Delusion". The Muslim World. 70 (2): 91–121. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.1980.tb03405.x. ISSN 0027-4909.
  31. ^ Reynolds, Gabriel Said (May 2009). "The Muslim Jesus: Dead or Alive?" (PDF). Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 72 (2): 237–258. doi:10.1017/S0041977X09000500. JSTOR 40379003. S2CID 27268737. (PDF) from the original on 17 June 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2021.

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historical, reliability, quran, concerns, question, historicity, described, claimed, events, quran, quran, traditional, arabic, text, quran, viewed, scriptural, foundation, islam, believed, muslims, have, been, sent, down, allah, revealed, muhammad, angel, jib. Historical reliability of the Quran concerns the question of the historicity of the described or claimed events in the Quran The Quran in traditional Arabic text The Quran is viewed to be the scriptural foundation of Islam and is believed by Muslims to have been sent down by Allah God and revealed to Muhammad by the angel Jibreel Gabriel Muslims have not used historical criticism in the study of the Quran but they have used textual criticism in a similar way used by Christians and Jews 1 It has been practiced primarily by secular Western scholars such as John Wansbrough Joseph Schacht Patricia Crone and Michael Cook who set aside doctrines of the Quran s divinity perfection unchangeability etc accepted by Muslim scholars 2 and instead investigate the Quran s origin text composition and history 2 In the Muslim world scholarly criticism of the Quran can be considered an apostasy Scholarly criticism of the Quran is thus a nascent field of study in the Islamic world 3 4 Scholars have identified several pre existing sources for some Quranic narratives 5 The Quran assumes its readers familiarity with the Christian Bible and there are many parallels between the Bible and the Quran Aside from the Bible the Quran includes legendary narratives about Dhu al Qarnayn apocryphal gospels 6 and Jewish legends Contents 1 Textual history 1 1 Early manuscripts 2 Quran and History 2 1 Creation narrative 2 2 Samiri 2 3 Alexander the Great legends 2 4 Death of Jesus 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Citations 4 3 BibliographyTextual history Edit Sanaʽa manuscript of the Quran Early manuscripts Edit In the 1970s 14 000 fragments of Quran were discovered in the Great Mosque of Sana a the Sana a manuscripts About 12 000 fragments belonged to 926 copies of the Quran the other 2 000 were loose fragments The oldest known copy of the Quran so far belongs to this collection According to Sadeghi and Bergmann the results indicated that the parchment had a 68 1s probability of belonging to the period between 614 CE to 656 CE It had a 95 2s probability of belonging to the period between 578 CE and 669 CE The carbon dating was applicable to the lower text But paleography suggest a date from mid to latter half of the 7th century CE Upper text dated between end of 7CE and beginning of the 8CE The German scholar Gerd R Puin has been investigating these Quran fragments for years His research team made 35 000 microfilm photographs of the manuscripts which he dated to early part of the 8th century Puin has not published the entirety of his work but noted unconventional verse orderings minor textual variations and rare styles of orthography He also suggested that some of the parchments were palimpsests which had been reused Puin believed that this implied an evolving text as opposed to a fixed one 7 In 2015 some of the earliest known Quranic fragments dating from between approximately AD 568 and 645 were identified at the University of Birmingham 8 Islamic scholar Joseph E B Lumbard of Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Qatar has written in the Huffington Post in support of the dates proposed by the Birmingham scholars Professor Lumbard notes that the discovery of a Qur anic text that may be confirmed by radiocarbon dating as having been written in the first decades of the Islamic era and includes variations in the under text recorded in the Islamic historiographical tradition 9 unreliable source Quran and History EditMain article Biblical and Quranic narratives Creation narrative Edit Main article Islamic views on evolution The Quran contains a creation narrative and may refer to the world being created in six days yawm although this is highly debatable In Surah al Anbiyaʼ the Quran states that the heavens and the earth were of one piece before being parted 10 God then created the landscape of the earth placed the sky above it as a roof and created the day and night cycles by appointing an orbit for both the sun and moon 11 Some Muslim apologists like Zakir Naik and Adnan Oktar advocate creationism and contemporary Islamic scholar Yasir Qadhi believes that the idea that humans evolved is against the Quran 12 Most Muslims do not accept the theory of evolution although there are substantial differences among countries from lt 10 acceptance in Egypt to about 40 in Kazakhstan 13 Some Muslims point to a verse in the Quran as evidence for Evolution when He truly created you in stages of development Verse 71 14 Evolution is taught in many Islamic countries and some scholars have tried to reconcile the Quran and evolution 14 Samiri Edit Quran recounts a story of the golden calf where it mentions that Samiri a rebellious follower of Moses created the calf while Moses was away for 40 days on Mount Sinai receiving the Ten Commandments 15 Due to the fact that as Samiri can mean the Samaritan 16 some believe that his character is a reference to the worship of the golden calves built by Jeroboam of Samaria conflating the two idol worshiping incidents into one Alexander the Great legends Edit Silver tetradrachm of Alexander the Great shown wearing the horns of the ram god Zeus Ammon Main article Alexander the Great in the Quran Main article Dhul Qarnayn Quran also employs popular legends about Alexander the Great called Dhul Qarnayn he of the two horns in the Quran The story of Dhul Qarnayn has its origins in legends of Alexander the Great current in the Middle East in the early years of the Christian era According to these the Scythians the descendants of Gog and Magog once defeated one of Alexander s generals upon which Alexander built a wall in the Caucasus mountains to keep them out of civilised lands the basic elements are found in Flavius Josephus The reasons behind the name Two Horned are somewhat obscure the scholar al Tabari 839 923 CE held it was because he went from one extremity horn of the world to the other 17 but it may ultimately derive from the image of Alexander wearing the horns of the ram god Zeus Ammon as popularised on coins throughout the Hellenistic Near East 18 The wall Dhul Qarnayn builds on his northern journey may have reflected a distant knowledge of the Great Wall of China the 12th century scholar al Idrisi drew a map for Roger of Sicily showing the Land of Gog and Magog in Mongolia or of various Sassanid Persian walls built in the Caspian area against the northern barbarians or a conflation of the two 19 Dhul Qarneyn also journeys to the western and eastern extremities qarns tips of the Earth 20 In the west he finds the sun setting in a muddy spring equivalent to the poisonous sea which Alexander found in the Syriac legend 21 In the Syriac original Alexander tested the sea by sending condemned prisoners into it but the Quran changes this into a general administration of justice 21 In the east both the Syrian legend and the Quran have Alexander Dhul Qarneyn find a people who live so close to the rising sun that they have no protection from its heat 21 Qarn also means period or century and the name Dhul Qarnayn therefore has a symbolic meaning as He of the Two Ages the first being the mythological time when the wall is built and the second the age of the end of the world when Allah s shariah the divine law is removed and Gog and Magog are to be set loose 22 Modern Islamic apocalyptic writers holding to a literal reading put forward various explanations for the absence of the wall from the modern world some saying that Gog and Magog were the Mongols and that the wall is now gone others that both the wall and Gog and Magog are present but invisible 23 Death of Jesus Edit Papyrus of Irenaeus Against Heresies which describes early Gnostic beliefs about Jesus death which influenced Islam 24 Main article Islamic views on Jesus death Quran maintains that Jesus was not actually crucified and did not die on the cross The general Islamic view supporting the denial of crucifixion was probably influenced by Manichaenism Docetism which holds that someone else was crucified instead of Jesus while concluding that Jesus will return during the end times 25 That they said in boast We killed Christ Jesus the son of Mary the Messenger of Allah but they killed him not nor crucified him but so it was made to appear to them and those who differ therein are full of doubts with no certain knowledge but only conjecture to follow for of a surety they killed him not Nay Allah raised him up unto Himself and Allah is Exalted in Power Wise Qur an sura 4 An Nisa ayat 157 158 26 Despite these views theologians maintain that the Crucifixion of Jesus is a fact of history 27 The view that Jesus only appeared to be crucified and did not actually die predates Islam and is found in several apocryphal gospels 25 Irenaeus in his book Against Heresies describes Gnostic beliefs that bear remarkable resemblance with the Islamic view He did not himself suffer death but Simon a certain man of Cyrene being compelled bore the cross in his stead so that this latter being transfigured by him that he might be thought to be Jesus was crucified through ignorance and error while Jesus himself received the form of Simon and standing by laughed at them For since he was an incorporeal power and the Nous mind of the unborn father he transfigured himself as he pleased and thus ascended to him who had sent him deriding them inasmuch as he could not be laid hold of and was invisible to all Against Heresies Book I Chapter 24 Section 40 Irenaeus mentions this view again He appeared on earth as a man and performed miracles Thus he himself did not suffer Rather a certain Simon of Cyrene was compelled to carry his cross for him It was he who was ignorantly and erroneously crucified being transfigured by him so that he might be thought to be Jesus Moreover Jesus assumed the form of Simon and stood by laughing at them 28 29 Irenaeus Against Heresies 24 Another Gnostic writing found in the Nag Hammadi library Second Treatise of the Great Seth has a similar view of Jesus death I was not afflicted at all yet I did not die in solid reality but in what appears in order that I not be put to shame by them and also Another their father was the one who drank the gall and the vinegar it was not I Another was the one who lifted up the cross on his shoulder who was Simon Another was the one on whom they put the crown of thorns But I was rejoicing in the height over all the riches of the archons and the offspring of their error and their conceit and I was laughing at their ignorance Coptic Apocalypse of Peter likewise reveals the same views of Jesus death I saw him Jesus seemingly being seized by them And I said What do I see O Lord That it is you yourself whom they take and that you are grasping me Or who is this one glad and laughing on the tree And is it another one whose feet and hands they are striking The Savior said to me He whom you saw on the tree glad and laughing this is the living Jesus But this one into whose hands and feet they drive the nails is his fleshly part which is the substitute being put to shame the one who came into being in his likeness But look at him and me But I when I had looked said Lord no one is looking at you Let us flee this place But he said to me I have told you Leave the blind alone And you see how they do not know what they are saying For the son of their glory instead of my servant they have put to shame And I saw someone about to approach us resembling him even him who was laughing on the tree And he was with a Holy Spirit and he is the Savior And there was a great ineffable light around them and the multitude of ineffable and invisible angels blessing them And when I looked at him the one who gives praise was revealed However Islamic scholar Mahmoud M Ayoub and historian of religion Gabriel Said Reynolds disagree with the mainstream interpretation of the Quranic narrative of Jesus death arguing that the Quran nowhere disputes that Jesus died 30 31 further explanation needed See also EditHistoricity of the Bible Criticism of the Quran History of the Quran Corpus Coranicum Syriac Infancy Gospel Noah in IslamReferences EditNotes Edit Citations Edit Religions of the world Lewis M Hopfe 1979 Some Muslims have suggested and practiced textual criticism of the Quran in a manner similar to that practiced by Christians and Jews on their bibles No one has yet suggested the higher criticism of the Quran a b LESTER TOBY January 1999 What Is the Koran Atlantic Retrieved 8 April 2019 Christian Muslim relations yesterday today tomorrow Munawar Ahmad Anees Ziauddin Sardar Syed Z Abedin 1991 For instance a Christian critic engaging in textual criticism of the Quran from a biblical perspective will surely miss the essence of the quranic message Just one example would clarify this point Studies on Islam Merlin L Swartz 1981 One will find a more complete bibliographical review of the recent studies of the textual criticism of the Quran in the valuable article by Jeffery The Present Status of Qur anic Studies Report on Current Research on the Middle East Leirvik 2010 p 33 Leirvik 2010 pp 33 34 Lester Toby January 1999 What Is the Koran The Atlantic Retrieved 10 April 2019 Coughlan Sean 22 July 2015 Oldest Koran fragments found in Birmingham University BBC News Retrieved 10 April 2019 New Light on the History of the Qur anic Text The Huffington Post 24 July 2015 Quran 21 30 Quran 21 31 33 Muslim thought on evolution takes a step forward Salman Hameed TheGuardian com 11 January 2013 Hameed Salman 2008 12 12 Bracing for Islamic Creationism Science 322 5908 1637 1638 doi 10 1126 science 1163672 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 19074331 S2CID 206515329 webmaster 6 December 2011 Are evolution and religion compatible The Stream Al Jazeera English The Qur an Surah Ta Ha Ayah 85 Rubin Uri Tradition in Transformation the Ark of the Covenant and the Golden Calf in Biblical and Islamic Historiography Oriens Volume 36 2001 202 Van Donzel amp Schmidt 2010 p 57 fn 3 sfn error no target CITEREFVan DonzelSchmidt2010 help Pinault 1992 p 181 fn 71 sfn error no target CITEREFPinault1992 help Glasse amp Smith 2003 p 39 sfn error no target CITEREFGlasseSmith2003 help Wheeler 2013 p 96 sfn error no target CITEREFWheeler2013 help a b c Ernst 2011 p 133 sfn error no target CITEREFErnst2011 help Glasse amp Smith 2003 p 38 sfn error no target CITEREFGlasseSmith2003 help Cook 2005 p 205 206 sfn error no target CITEREFCook2005 help a b Et gentibus ipsorum autem apparuisse eum in terra hominem et virtutes perfecisse Quapropter neque passsum eum sed Simonem quendam Cyrenaeum angariatum portasse crucem ejus pro eo et hunc secundum ignorantiam et errorem crucifixum transfiguratum ab eo uti putaretur ipse esse Jesus et ipsum autem Jesum Simonis accepisse formam et stantem irrisisse eos Book 1 Chapter 19 a b Joel L Kraemer Israel Oriental Studies XII BRILL 1992 ISBN 9789004095847 p 41 Lawson Todd 1 March 2009 The Crucifixion and the Quran A Study in the History of Muslim Thought Oneworld Publications p 12 ISBN 978 1851686353 Eddy Paul Rhodes and Gregory A Boyd 2007 The Jesus Legend A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Jesus Tradition Baker Academic p 172 ISBN 0801031141 if there is any fact of Jesus life that has been established by a broad consensus it is the fact of Jesus crucifixion Haer 1 24 4 Kelhoffer James A 2014 Conceptions of Gospel and Legitimacy in Early Christianity Mohr Siebeck p 80 ISBN 9783161526367 Ayoub Mahmoud M 1980 Towards an Islamic Christology II The Death of Jesus Reality or Delusion The Muslim World 70 2 91 121 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1980 tb03405 x ISSN 0027 4909 Reynolds Gabriel Said May 2009 The Muslim Jesus Dead or Alive PDF Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London Cambridge Cambridge University Press 72 2 237 258 doi 10 1017 S0041977X09000500 JSTOR 40379003 S2CID 27268737 Archived PDF from the original on 17 June 2012 Retrieved 17 January 2021 Bibliography Edit Roslan Abdul Rahim December 2017 Demythologizing the Qur an Rethinking Revelation Through Naskh al Qur an PDF Global Journal Al Thaqafah 7 2 51 78 doi 10 7187 GJAT122017 2 ISSN 2232 0474 Retrieved 26 February 2019 Bannister Andrew G Retelling the Tale A Computerised Oral Formulaic Analysis of the Qur an Presented at the 2014 International Qur an Studies Association Meeting in San Diego academia edu Retrieved 20 May 2019 Burton John 1990 The Sources of Islamic Law Islamic Theories of Abrogation PDF Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0108 2 Retrieved 21 July 2018 Cook Michael 2000 The Koran A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 0192853449 Crone Patricia 1987 Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam PDF Princeton University Press Crone Patricia Cook Michael 1977 HAGARISM THE MAKING OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD PDF Cambridge University Press Retrieved 18 March 2020 Dashti Ali 1994 Twenty Three Years A Study of the Prophetic Career of Mohammad PDF Retrieved 10 April 2019 Donner Fred M 2008 The Quran in Recent Scholarship In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 29 50 Dundes Alan 2003 Fables of the Ancients Folklore in the Qur an Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 9780585466774 Retrieved 2 May 2019 Gibb H A R 1953 1949 Mohammedanism An Historical Survey 2nd ed Oxford University Press Guillaume Alfred 1978 1954 Islam Penguin books Hawting G R 2000 16 John Wansbrough Islam and Monotheism The Quest for the Historical Muhammad New York Prometheus Books pp 489 509 Holland Tom 2012 In the Shadow of the Sword UK Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 53135 1 Retrieved 29 August 2019 Ibn Warraq ed 2000 2 Origins of Islam A Critical Look at the Sources The Quest for the Historical Muhammad Prometheus pp 89 124 Ibn Warraq ed 2000 1 Studies on Muhammad and the Rise of Islam The Quest for the Historical Muhammad Prometheus pp 15 88 lt ref gt Ibn Warraq 2002 Ibn Warraq ed What the Koran Really Says Language Text amp Commentary Translated by Ibn Warraq New York Prometheus pp 23 106 ISBN 157392945X Retrieved 9 April 2019 Ibn Warraq 1995 Why I Am Not a Muslim PDF Prometheus Books Retrieved 25 April 2019 Leirvik Oddbjorn 27 May 2010 Images of Jesus Christ in Islam 2nd ed New York Bloomsbury Academic 2nd edition pp 33 66 ISBN 978 1441181602 Lippman Thomas W 1982 Understanding Islam An Introduction to the Moslem World New American Library Luling Gunter 1981 A Challenge to Islam for Reformation Die Wiederentdeckung des Propheten Muhammad eine Kritik am christlichen Abendland Erlangen Luling lt ref gt Reynolds Gabriel Said ed 2008 The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge Reynolds Gabriel Said 2008 Introduction Quranic studies and its controversies In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 1 26 Donner Fred M 2008 The Quran in Recent Scholarship In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 29 50 van Bladel Kevin 2008 The Alexander Legend in the Qur an 18 83 102 In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 175 203 Saadi Abdul Massih 2008 Nascent Islam in the Seventh Century Syriac Sources In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 217 222 Bowering Gerhard 2008 Recent Research on the Construction of the Quran In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 70 87 Gillot Claude 2008 Reconsidering the Authorship of the Quran Is the Quran party the fruit of a progressive and collective work In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge pp 88 108 Rodinson Maxime 2002 Muhammad London Tauris Parke ISBN 1 86064 827 4 Said Edward 1978 Orientalism Vintage Retrieved 12 April 2019 Wansbrough John 2004 Quranic Studies Sources and Methods of Scriptural Interpretation PDF Foreword Translations and Expanded Notes by Andrew Rippin Amherst New York Prometheus ISBN 1 59102 201 0 Retrieved 29 February 2020 Weiss Bernard April June 1993 Reviewed Work The Sources of Islamic Law Islamic Theories of Abrogation by John Burton Journal of the American Oriental Society 113 2 304 306 doi 10 2307 603054 JSTOR 603054 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Historical reliability of the Quran amp oldid 1120560017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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