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David in Islam

Dawud (Arabic: دَاوُوْد, romanizedDāwūd [daːwuːd]), or David, is considered a prophet and messenger of God (Allah) in Islam, as well as a righteous, divinely-anointed monarch of the United Kingdom of Israel.[1] Additionally, Muslims also honor David for having received the divine revelation of the Zabur (Psalms).[2][3]


Dāwūd
دَاوُود
David
Born10th century BCE
Died9th century BCE
Other namesHebrew: דָּוִד, romanizedDāwīḏ
romanized: Dāwīḏ Syriac: ܕܘܝܕ, romanizedDawīd
Koine Greek: Δαυίδ, romanizedDauíd
Known forDefeating Jalut; being the King of Israel; receiving the Zabur; prophesying to and warning Israel; being highly gifted musically and vocally
PredecessorTalut
SuccessorSulayman
ChildrenSulayman

Dawud is considered one of the most important people in Islam. Mentioned sixteen times in the Quran, David appears in the Islamic scripture as a link in the chain of prophets who preceded Muhammad.[4] Although he is not usually considered one of the "law-giving" prophets (ulū al-ʿazm), "he is far from a marginal figure"[according to whom?] in Islamic thought.[2] In later Islamic traditions, he is praised for his rigor in prayer and fasting. He is also presented as the prototypical just ruler and as a symbol of God's authority on earth, having been at once a king and a prophet.

David is particularly important to the religious architecture of Islamic Jerusalem.[1] Dawud is known as biblical David who was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah, reigning c. 1010–970 BCE.[citation needed]

Name

The Quranic Arabic form of David is Dāwud or Dāwūd, differing from Koine Greek: Δαυίδ and Syriac: ܕܘܝܕ, romanizedDawīd (which follow Hebrew: דָּוִד, romanizedDāwīd). These forms appear in the Quran sixteen times.[1]

Narrative in the Quran

David's narrative in the Quran, in many respects, parallels that given in the Bible. He is named a prophet (nabī) and also a messenger (rasūl), David is included in lists of those who received revelation (waḥy; Q4:163) or guidance (hudā; 6:84) from God. In both lists his name appears next to that of his son Solomon. Elsewhere, the Quran explains that God gave to both of them the gifts of "sound judgment" (ḥukm; 21:79) and "knowledge" (ʿilm; 21:79; 27:15). Yet the Quran also ascribes to David merits that distinguish him from Solomon: David killed Goliath (2:251) and received a divine revelation named "the Psalms"[5] (Quran 17:55 uses an indefinite form, while 21:105 uses the definite form al-Zabūr),[5] presumably a reference to the Psalms or the Psalter (the term Zabūr is perhaps related to the Hebrew term mizmōr or Syriac mazmūrā, "psalm"). The mountains and the birds praised God along with David (21:79; in 34:10 God commands them to do so; cfr. Psalm 148:7–10). God made David a "vicegerent" (khalīfa; 38:26), a title that the Quran otherwise gives only to Adam (2:30). This title suggests that, according to the Quran, David was something more than a messenger: he was a divinely guided leader who established God's rule on Earth.[1] This role is also suggested by 2:251: "God gave him authority (mulk) and wisdom (ḥikmah) and taught him what He willed. If God did not drive back some people by others, the earth would become corrupt."[2]

Among the things taught to David was the ability to make armour (21:80, 34:10–11), a suggestion that David's military exploits were the act of God. It is also important that the Quranic reference to David's "wisdom" was sometimes explained by the classical exegetes as the gift of prophecy.[6] The Quran also connects David and Jesus, by insisting that both cursed Jews against their prophecy who did not believe (5:78). Moreover, according to the Quran, David was given the ability to distinguish between truth and falsehood when dispensing justice (faṣl al-khiṭāb, 38:20). Furthermore, there is the allusion to a test David was put through, wherein he prayed and repented and God forgave him (38:24-5). Surat Sad (the 38th chapter of the Quran) is also called "the sūra of David"[7] Exegetes explain that since David prostrated when asking God to forgive him, Muhammad was ordered to imitate him and to perform a prostration when reading this chapter.[8]

Religious significance

David is one of the few Islamic Prophets who received Kingship as well. While other prophets preached during the reign of kings, David, in his time, was the king. Thus, he received an extremely large task, of making sure that the people of Israel were not only held in check spiritually but that the country itself remained strong as well. His place as both leader and prophet is revered by all Muslims as one of extremely high rank. The figure of David, together with that of his prophetic son, Solomon, are iconic of people who ruled justly over their land. God frequently mentions David's high rank as a prophet and messenger in the Quran. He is often mentioned alongside other prophets to emphasize how great he was. For example, God says:

And We gave him Isaac and Jacob and guided them, as We had guided Noah before them, and of his descendants, David and Solomon and Job and Joseph and Moses and Aaron. Thus We reward those who are upright and do good.

When the Caliph 'Umar visited Jerusalem, the Patriarch Sophronius accompanied him on the Temple Mount, while he searched for the Mihrab Dawud (David's prayer-niche) to perform a prayer. Later commentators identified this site with the Tower of David. In a hadith, the prayer and fasting of David is mentioned to be dear to God.

Narrated Abdullah bin 'Amr bin Al-'As: The Apostle of Allah told me, "The most beloved prayer to Allah is that of David and the most beloved fasts to Allah are those of David. He used to sleep for half of the night and then pray for one third of the night and again sleep for its sixth part and used to fast on alternate days."

— Muhammad al-Bukhari, Sahih al-Bukhari[10]

The Book of David

The Zabur is the holy book attributed to David by God, just as Musa (Moses) received the Tawrat (Torah), Isa (Jesus) received the Injil (Gospel) and Muhammad received the Quran. In the current Hebrew Bible, the Zabur is known as the Psalms. However, like other scriptures of the past, the Psalms are believed to have been corrupted over time, with some of the original message now gone. Nonetheless, Muslims are told to treat the present Psalms with immense respect because, Muslims believe it was a book from God (Book of God). The Quran states:

Your Lord knows whoever is in the heavens and the earth. We exalted some of the prophets over the others; and to David We gave the Book of Psalms.

Bibliography

Primary

  • ʿAbdallāh b. al-Mubārak, Kitāb al-Zuhd, ed. Ḥ.R. al-Aʿẓamī, Beirut n.d., 161-4
  • Aḥmad b. Ḥanbal, al-Zuhd, Cairo 1987, 111–2, 114, 134
  • R.G. Khoury, Wahb b. Munabbih (Codices arabici antiqui i), Wiesbaden 1972 (with bibliography)
  • id., Les légendes prophétiques dans l'Islam depuis le Ier jusqu'au IIIe siècle de l'hégire (Codices arabici antiqui iii), Wiesbaden 1978, 157-74
  • Hibat Allāh b. Salāma, al-Nāsikh wa-l-mansūkh (in the margin of Wāḥidī, Asbāb), Cairo 1316/1898-9, 262
  • Ibn Qudāma al-Maqdisī, Kitāb al-Tawwābīn, ed. ʿA.Q. Arnāʾūṭ, Beirut 1974
  • Majlisī, Biḥār al-anwār, Beirut 1983, xiv, 1-64; lxxiv, 39-44
  • Muqātil, Tafsīr, i, 423; ii, 87–8, 639–43; iii, 87–8, 298–9, 525-6
  • Sibṭ Ibn al-Jawzī, Mirʾāt, i, 472-92
  • Suyūṭī, Durr, vii, 148-76
  • Ṭabarī, Tafsīr, v, 360-76
  • Ṭabarsī, Majmaʿ

Secondary

  • A. Geiger, Judaism and Islam, Madras 1898, 144-5
  • E. Margoliouth, The convicted in the Bible, cleared from guilt in the Talmud and Midrash (Hebrew), London 1949, 60-7
  • F.A. Mojtabāʾī, Dāwūd, in Encyclopædia Iranica, vii, 161-2
  • R. Paret, Dāwūd, in ei2, ii, 182
  • Y. Zakovitch, David. From shepherd to Messiah (Hebrew), Jerusalem 1995 (see especially Annex A by A. Shinʾan, 181–99)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Reynolds, Gabriel Said (2012). "David". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE. Vol. 3. Leiden: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_25921. ISBN 978-90-04-22545-9. ISSN 1873-9830.
  2. ^ a b c Hasson, Isaac (2006). "David". In McAuliffe, Jane Dammen (ed.). Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān. Vol. I. Leiden: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/1875-3922_q3_EQCOM_00047. ISBN 90-04-14743-8.
  3. ^ Quran 4:163; 17:55.
  4. ^ Quran 4:163; 6:84.
  5. ^ a b Reynolds, Gabriel Said (2020). "The Qur'an's Relationship to the Bible". Allah: God in the Qurʾān. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 36–37. doi:10.2307/j.ctvxkn7q4. ISBN 978-0-300-24658-2. JSTOR j.ctvxkn7q4. LCCN 2019947014. S2CID 226129509.
  6. ^ e.g. Ṭabarī, Taʾrīkh, i, 559
  7. ^ Hibat Allāh b. Salāma, al-Nāsikh wa-l-mansūkh (in the margin of Wāḥidī, Asbāb), Cairo 1316/1898-9, 262
  8. ^ Bukhārī, Ṣaḥīḥ, vi, 155
  9. ^ Quran 6:84
  10. ^ Sahih al-Bukhari,
  11. ^ Quran 17:55

david, islam, dawud, arabic, او, romanized, dāwūd, daːwuːd, david, considered, prophet, messenger, allah, islam, well, righteous, divinely, anointed, monarch, united, kingdom, israel, additionally, muslims, also, honor, david, having, received, divine, revelat. Dawud Arabic د او و د romanized Dawud daːwuːd or David is considered a prophet and messenger of God Allah in Islam as well as a righteous divinely anointed monarch of the United Kingdom of Israel 1 Additionally Muslims also honor David for having received the divine revelation of the Zabur Psalms 2 3 ProphetDawudد او ودDavidBorn10th century BCEJerusalem Kingdom of IsraelDied9th century BCEJerusalem Kingdom of IsraelOther namesHebrew ד ו ד romanized Dawiḏ romanized Dawiḏ Syriac ܕܘܝܕ romanized Dawid Koine Greek Dayid romanized DauidKnown forDefeating Jalut being the King of Israel receiving the Zabur prophesying to and warning Israel being highly gifted musically and vocallyPredecessorTalutSuccessorSulaymanChildrenSulaymanDawud is considered one of the most important people in Islam Mentioned sixteen times in the Quran David appears in the Islamic scripture as a link in the chain of prophets who preceded Muhammad 4 Although he is not usually considered one of the law giving prophets ulu al ʿazm he is far from a marginal figure according to whom in Islamic thought 2 In later Islamic traditions he is praised for his rigor in prayer and fasting He is also presented as the prototypical just ruler and as a symbol of God s authority on earth having been at once a king and a prophet David is particularly important to the religious architecture of Islamic Jerusalem 1 Dawud is known as biblical David who was according to the Hebrew Bible the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah reigning c 1010 970 BCE citation needed Contents 1 Name 2 Narrative in the Quran 3 Religious significance 3 1 The Book of David 4 Bibliography 4 1 Primary 4 2 Secondary 5 See also 6 ReferencesNameThe Quranic Arabic form of David is Dawud or Dawud differing from Koine Greek Dayid and Syriac ܕܘܝܕ romanized Dawid which follow Hebrew ד ו ד romanized Dawid These forms appear in the Quran sixteen times 1 Narrative in the QuranDavid s narrative in the Quran in many respects parallels that given in the Bible He is named a prophet nabi and also a messenger rasul David is included in lists of those who received revelation waḥy Q4 163 or guidance huda 6 84 from God In both lists his name appears next to that of his son Solomon Elsewhere the Quran explains that God gave to both of them the gifts of sound judgment ḥukm 21 79 and knowledge ʿilm 21 79 27 15 Yet the Quran also ascribes to David merits that distinguish him from Solomon David killed Goliath 2 251 and received a divine revelation named the Psalms 5 Quran 17 55 uses an indefinite form while 21 105 uses the definite form al Zabur 5 presumably a reference to the Psalms or the Psalter the term Zabur is perhaps related to the Hebrew term mizmōr or Syriac mazmura psalm The mountains and the birds praised God along with David 21 79 in 34 10 God commands them to do so cfr Psalm 148 7 10 God made David a vicegerent khalifa 38 26 a title that the Quran otherwise gives only to Adam 2 30 This title suggests that according to the Quran David was something more than a messenger he was a divinely guided leader who established God s rule on Earth 1 This role is also suggested by 2 251 God gave him authority mulk and wisdom ḥikmah and taught him what He willed If God did not drive back some people by others the earth would become corrupt 2 Among the things taught to David was the ability to make armour 21 80 34 10 11 a suggestion that David s military exploits were the act of God It is also important that the Quranic reference to David s wisdom was sometimes explained by the classical exegetes as the gift of prophecy 6 The Quran also connects David and Jesus by insisting that both cursed Jews against their prophecy who did not believe 5 78 Moreover according to the Quran David was given the ability to distinguish between truth and falsehood when dispensing justice faṣl al khiṭab 38 20 Furthermore there is the allusion to a test David was put through wherein he prayed and repented and God forgave him 38 24 5 Surat Sad the 38th chapter of the Quran is also called the sura of David 7 Exegetes explain that since David prostrated when asking God to forgive him Muhammad was ordered to imitate him and to perform a prostration when reading this chapter 8 Religious significanceDavid is one of the few Islamic Prophets who received Kingship as well While other prophets preached during the reign of kings David in his time was the king Thus he received an extremely large task of making sure that the people of Israel were not only held in check spiritually but that the country itself remained strong as well His place as both leader and prophet is revered by all Muslims as one of extremely high rank The figure of David together with that of his prophetic son Solomon are iconic of people who ruled justly over their land God frequently mentions David s high rank as a prophet and messenger in the Quran He is often mentioned alongside other prophets to emphasize how great he was For example God says And We gave him Isaac and Jacob and guided them as We had guided Noah before them and of his descendants David and Solomon and Job and Joseph and Moses and Aaron Thus We reward those who are upright and do good Quran 6 84 9 When the Caliph Umar visited Jerusalem the Patriarch Sophronius accompanied him on the Temple Mount while he searched for the Mihrab Dawud David s prayer niche to perform a prayer Later commentators identified this site with the Tower of David In a hadith the prayer and fasting of David is mentioned to be dear to God Narrated Abdullah bin Amr bin Al As The Apostle of Allah told me The most beloved prayer to Allah is that of David and the most beloved fasts to Allah are those of David He used to sleep for half of the night and then pray for one third of the night and again sleep for its sixth part and used to fast on alternate days Muhammad al Bukhari Sahih al Bukhari 10 The Book of David Main article Zabur The Zabur is the holy book attributed to David by God just as Musa Moses received the Tawrat Torah Isa Jesus received the Injil Gospel and Muhammad received the Quran In the current Hebrew Bible the Zabur is known as the Psalms However like other scriptures of the past the Psalms are believed to have been corrupted over time with some of the original message now gone Nonetheless Muslims are told to treat the present Psalms with immense respect because Muslims believe it was a book from God Book of God The Quran states Your Lord knows whoever is in the heavens and the earth We exalted some of the prophets over the others and to David We gave the Book of Psalms Quran 17 55 11 BibliographyPrimary ʿAbdallah b al Mubarak Kitab al Zuhd ed Ḥ R al Aʿẓami Beirut n d 161 4 Aḥmad b Ḥanbal al Zuhd Cairo 1987 111 2 114 134 R G Khoury Wahb b Munabbih Codices arabici antiqui i Wiesbaden 1972 with bibliography id Les legendes prophetiques dans l Islam depuis le Ier jusqu au IIIe siecle de l hegire Codices arabici antiqui iii Wiesbaden 1978 157 74 Hibat Allah b Salama al Nasikh wa l mansukh in the margin of Waḥidi Asbab Cairo 1316 1898 9 262 Ibn Qudama al Maqdisi Kitab al Tawwabin ed ʿA Q Arnaʾuṭ Beirut 1974 Majlisi Biḥar al anwar Beirut 1983 xiv 1 64 lxxiv 39 44 Muqatil Tafsir i 423 ii 87 8 639 43 iii 87 8 298 9 525 6 Sibṭ Ibn al Jawzi Mirʾat i 472 92 Suyuṭi Durr vii 148 76 Ṭabari Tafsir v 360 76 Ṭabarsi MajmaʿSecondary A Geiger Judaism and Islam Madras 1898 144 5 E Margoliouth The convicted in the Bible cleared from guilt in the Talmud and Midrash Hebrew London 1949 60 7 F A Mojtabaʾi Dawud in Encyclopaedia Iranica vii 161 2 R Paret Dawud in ei2 ii 182 Y Zakovitch David From shepherd to Messiah Hebrew Jerusalem 1995 see especially Annex A by A Shinʾan 181 99 See alsoAl Arḍ Al Muqaddasah The Holy Land Biblical and Quranic narratives Legends and the Quran Qisas Al Anbiyaʾ Stories of The Prophets Liwa Dawud Syrian rebel group named after DavidReferences a b c d Reynolds Gabriel Said 2012 David In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Vol 3 Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1573 3912 ei3 COM 25921 ISBN 978 90 04 22545 9 ISSN 1873 9830 a b c Hasson Isaac 2006 David In McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Vol I Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 3922 q3 EQCOM 00047 ISBN 90 04 14743 8 Quran 4 163 17 55 Quran 4 163 6 84 a b Reynolds Gabriel Said 2020 The Qur an s Relationship to the Bible Allah God in the Qurʾan New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 36 37 doi 10 2307 j ctvxkn7q4 ISBN 978 0 300 24658 2 JSTOR j ctvxkn7q4 LCCN 2019947014 S2CID 226129509 e g Ṭabari Taʾrikh i 559 Hibat Allah b Salama al Nasikh wa l mansukh in the margin of Waḥidi Asbab Cairo 1316 1898 9 262 Bukhari Ṣaḥiḥ vi 155 Quran 6 84 Sahih al Bukhari 2 21 231 Quran 17 55 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David in Islam amp oldid 1197576415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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