Some transcription errors in the Qur’ān
WORKS IN THE HERITAGE tell us that when Muḥammad received the Revelation he asked one of the few who knew how…
Progressive, Enlightened Voices from the Arab World
THE STUDY OF the Qur’ān and the cultural constituents of the Ḥadīth and Sīra texts as historical documents – using modern approaches to historical analysis – is a relatively recent phenomenon. It has been promoted by historians, Muslim and non-Muslim, who have been fascinated by the questions of where and when the Text came into being.
The issue of the Text’s historical context is more than merely a dry academic concern, since the process of historical investigation itself has a liberating effect on the fabric and internal dynamism of religious belief. It does this by illustrating the doctrinal influences and points of continuity, and equally the points of originality, of the Prophetic message. On the other hand, Muslim scholars have noted how the doctrine of a Qur’ān lying ‘outside of history’ can only produce a host of problems and contradictions that trouble the faith of the believer. Historically it has had a stagnating effect on ethical development and the prospects of professing a progressive Islam in the contemporary world.
However, once the reticence to approach the Text as a document in history is removed, the essentially ‘dialogic’ approach of the Qur’ān to its environment becomes evident. Scholars see this accumulative dialogic relationship in the form of temporal and abrogating verses, a process by which the Qur’ān cancels out verses which are no longer considered appropriate to new developments, or which responded to priorities identified by the Companions themselves.
By validating this ‘dialogic’ approach of the emergence of the Qur’ān and the new faith within the human environment, and therefore as part of the historical legacy of Late Antiquity, the Qur’ān is understood as rooted within history, and thus a text that is framed to an audience whose education and culture was an integral part of the shared civilisation of Late Antiquity and in dialogue with it. In so doing, an argument is equally made for continuing this dialogue, for prising open the ‘official closed corpus’ of scripture and for licensing change on much broader and more penetrative levels.
It is of course important to make a separation between the arenas of historical research and transcendental faith. Contemporary historians certainly understand that the work of historical analysis and the faith-claims of the Islamic revelation exist on entirely different planes that do not intersect, since the supernatural is simply beyond the capacity of historical discourse to engage. The separation of the two arenas is not only historically, but religiously productive, in that it loosens the grip of morally limiting conservatism, and at the same time opens up the potential to accommodate modernity without a loss of the essentials of faith.
Most importantly, it serves to deconstruct the cultural and doctrinal ‘quarantine’ promoted by literalist interpreters who seek to present Islam as existing in some historical, ethical and epistemological isolation from the rest of the world.
WORKS IN THE HERITAGE tell us that when Muḥammad received the Revelation he asked one of the few who knew how…
WHEREAS IN VERSE 82 we have this passage: Thou wilt find the most vehement of mankind in hostility to those…
WHAT IS TRULY heartbreaking is that the major questions and problems related to our religion and our Holy Book often…
MUḤAMMAD REPEATEDLY STATED that ‘the book’ (the Qur’ān) is nothing but a confirmation of the previous books (the Torah and the Bible) to…
CHRISTIANITY, FOR EXAMPLE, is an extension of Judaism and the Old Testament (Jewish ‘Torah’) remains for Christians part of their…
CONFIRMING WHAT AL-KINDĪ said concerning the burning of the six recensions of the Qur’ān during the reign of ‘Abd al-Malik…
HE CONSIDERED THIS a Christian heresy and cast light on the nature of the relationship between Muḥammad and a certain…
THIS IS CONFIRMED by the work of scholars and researchers on the distortion of the Qur’ān, and it is from…
FIRST OF ALL, at the beginning of the verse the author of the Qur’ān describes Allah by saying: He it is…
JUST AS WITH the Biblical text, the Qur’ān includes many phrases such as ‘Praise be to God’, and supplications, poems,…