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The Quran: Heavenly or Human?
« on: November 15, 2011, 02:20:16 PM »
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  • http://3lotus.com/en/Islam/Quran-Not-a-Miracle.htm

    http://bibleprobe.com/muhammad.htm

    The Qur'an: Heavenly or Human?

    -Written by Harold C. Felder
    Introduction
    Orthodox Muslim View
         Revelation
         Transmission
         Manuscript Evidence
    Evidence Of Human Origin
         Transmission
              Missing Text
              Doctrine of Abrogation
              Textual Variants
              Sources
              Manuscripts
         Internal Critique of the Qur'an
              Literary Weaknesses
              Anachronisms
    Summary an Conclusion
    Notes

    Introduction
    Islam maintains that the Qur'an that we have is the unalterable word of God. It is now exactly what it has always been. Muslims use this as a proof that the Qur'an and the Qur'an alone is inspired and that only the Qur'an has been saved from human corruption. Allah personally preserved the text as his true, eternal, and perfect testimony. This article will demonstrate that the text of the Qur'an is neither true, eternal, nor perfect. Instead, it is a book of purely human origins, evolving over a period of time.

    Orthodox Muslim View
    There are various views on the origin of the Qur'an. Ahmad Von Denffer, in his work entitle Ulum al Qur'an is widely considered authoritative and orthodox within the Muslim community. In order to present the orthodox view, the Ulum al Qur'an will serve as the source for the traditional view of how the Qur'an came into existence.

    Revelation
    Ahmad Von Denffer defines the Qur'an as "The speech of Allah, sent down upon the last Prophet Muhammad, through the Angel Gabriel, in its precise meaning and precise wording, transmitted to us by numerous persons (tawatur), both verbally and in writing. Inimitable and unique, protected by God from corruption."(1) In the view of Von Denffer, this is "The most important distinction between the Qur'an and all other words or writings"(2)

    According to Von Denffer, Muhammad received his revelations from the Angel Gabriel, who received them from "the well preserved tablet" in heaven. These revelations were revealed to Muhammad over a period of twenty-three years. In the words of Von Denffer "Prophet Muhammad, the last of God's messengers, received the revelation of the Qur'an through a special messenger sent by God for this purpose: the Angel Gabriel, who recited to him God's words exactly."(3)

    If Von Denffer is correct, then there can be no room for error in the Qur'an. The writings as they exist today are exactly that given by God Himself and are therefore perfect in every respect. In fact, this is the accepted belief of Muslims world wide. Any defect revealed in the Koran undermines the very foundation of Islam.

    Transmission
    According to Von Denffer, whenever Muhammad received a revelation, he called for the scribe and dictated to him.(4) These revelations were memorized during the time of Muhammad by Muhammad himself as well as his companions. The Qur'an was not only transmitted orally by many Muslims who had learned parts or the whole of it, but that it was also written down during the lifetime of the Prophet.(5)

    Memorization was encouraged by Muhammad and he sent teachers to communities to instruct them in Islam.(6) In the words of Von Denffer "It is therefore certain that the Qur'an had been memorised by the Companions of the Prophet during his lifetime. This tradition continued among the Companions after the Prophet's death and, later, among the tabi'un and all generations of Muslims that have followed, until today."(7)

    Von Denffer further writes that it was Muhammad himself "who instructed his scribes as to where the different revealed verses should be placed, and thus determined the order and arrangement. This order and arrangement was well known to the Muslims and strictly observed by them. The Angel Gabriel went through all the revelation with Muhammad each year in Ramadan, and went through it twice in the year the Prophet died. There are numerous reports about the existence of the written Qur'an - in the form of a book or piece of writing (kitab) during the lifetime of the Prophet."(8)

    Within one to two years after Muhammad's death, the Caliphate Abu Bakr commissioned Zaid bin Thabit to compose the entire revelation of the Qur'an from its various sources. Zaid composed the revelations from both written and oral sources and put them into a written form which became known as the suhuf.(9) Abu Bakr made a single copy which later became the possession of Umar, the second Caliphate. It was then kept by Umar's daughter, Hafsa, after his death. When Uthman became Caliphate, serious differences arouse over the correct recitation of the Qur'an. In response, Uthman commissioned Zaid to make a number of fresh copies from the suhuf and have them sent to the various Muslim regions to replace other material in circulation. The suhuf was then returned to Hafsa and later destroyed "presumably fearing it might become the cause for new disputes."(10) The resulting text became know as the Uthman's collection and represents the consensus of all of the companions of Muhammad, "all of whom agreed that it contained what Muhammad had brought as revelation from Allah."(11)

    According to Von Denffer, a number of companions of Muhammad prepared their own written collections of the revelations. These produced various readings as well as varying orders of the suras. Von Denffer maintains that since these were only for personal use, there is no indictment against the Qur'an.

    Von Denffer defends the integrity of the Qur'an because of the method of transmission. It was sent directly from God through Gabriel to Muhammad making the Qur'an far superior to other holy text "It is obvious that the history of the Qur'anic text (Textgeschichte) cannot be compared with that of other Holy Scriptures. While the books of the Old and New Testaments, for example, were written, edited and compiled over long periods, sometimes centuries, the text of the Qur'an, once revelation had ceased, has remained the same to this day."(12)

    Manuscript Evidence
    In support of inimitability, Von Denffer appeals to the manuscript evidence. He claims that the Smarkand Manuscript is one "of the copies of the Qur'an which were originally prepared in the time of Caliph 'Uthman".(13) As such, it provides early manuscript evidence of the Qur'an.

    Evidence of Human Origin
    The doctrine of the inimitability of the Qur'an did not always exist. A major theological debate in fact arose within Islam in the late eighth century, pitting those who believed in the Qur'an as the "uncreated" and eternal Word of God against those who believed in it as created in time, like anything that isn't God himself. Under the Caliph al-Ma'mun (813-833) this latter view briefly became orthodox doctrine.(14) By the end of the end of the tenth century this view changed and the official doctrine became that of "inimitability."(15)

    What about the evidence? Does the evidence support the conclusion of Ahmad Von Denffer of inimitability? It does not. Until recently most scholars have simply accepted the position of Muslims concerning the genesis of the Qur'an. However, this is no longer the case. New discoveries have challenged age old beliefs and undermine the very foundation of Islam itself. This section will discuss evidence contrary to the views of orthodox Muslims and demonstrate that the Qur'an in existence today was the result of an evolutionary process.

    Transmission
    There is clear evidence within Islamic traditions themselves that contradict the claims of Von Denffer that the Qur'an was composed during the time of Muhammad. In the most respected tradition in Islam, Sahih Bukhari, we have the testimony of Muhammad's secretary Zaid bin Thabit:


    Narrated Zaid bin Thabit: Abu Bakr as-Siddiq sent for me when the people of Yamama had been killed. Then Abu Bakr said (to me): "You are a wise young man and we do not have any suspicion about you, and you used to write the Divine Inspiration for Allah's Apostle (saw). So you should search for (the fragmentary scripts of) the Qur'an and collect it (in one book)". By Allah! If they had ordered me to shift one of the mountains, it would not have been heavier for me than this ordering me to collect the Qur'an. Then I said to Abu Bakr, "How will you do something which Allah's Apostle (saw) did not do?" Abu Bakr replied "By Allah, it is a good project". (Sahih al-Bukhari, Vol. 6, p.477).

    This is a clear testimony to the fact that the Qur'an had not been compiled during the time of Mohammad. This tradition is in direct conflict with the earlier words of Von Denffer that the Qur'an existed "in the form of a book . . . during the lifetime of the Prophet."

    John Gilchrist makes a very good point, that if Muhammad had in fact bequeathed a complete, codified text of the Qur'an as is claimed by some Muslim writers there would have been no need for a collection or recension of the text after his death.(16) Once Muhammad had passed away, it would stand to reason that the existing text would have formulated the Qur'an. Furthermore, according to Von Deffner, Islamic tradition (Suyuti [Itqan 1, p. 124.]) mentions more than twenty well know persons who memorized the revelation, with Abu Bakr and Uthman listed among them.(17) This raises an interesting question. Why would both Abu Bakr and Uthman have to commission Zaid bin Thabit to compile the revelation of Muhammad if they had themselves memorized the text? Additionally, if this was know by Zaid, why would he consider the gathering and compiling the sources such a monumental task? The explanations must be that either Muhammad's companions did not memorize the text as stated or that their memory was faulty to the point that there must have been variations among the companions themselves; else Abu Bakr nor Uthman would have need of assistance from Zaid.

    In opposition to Von Denffer's implication that the Qur'an commissioned by Abu Bakr was immediately recognized, Gilchrist provides evidence that this simply was not the case. The traditions of Sahih al-Bukhari, tells of an incident that occurred about nineteen years after the death of Muhammad. A dispute broke out between two Muslim groups. One group used the codex of Abdullah ibn Mas'ud while the other group used the codex of Ubayy ibn Ka'b. In order to maintain peace, Uthman decided to standardize the text based on the version compiled by Zaid. This version was chosen not because it was the best, but because it had an official status.(18) Abu Bakr's version of the Qur'an was not some version of the Qur'an authorized by Muhammad. Instead it was the compilation of one man who had no idea that this would become the official codex for the whole Muslim community.

    Before this time, this text was the private text of Abu Bakr and unknown to the Muslim community and "cannot be regarded as having been more authentic than the others"(19) Abu Bakr never imposed his codex upon the Muslim community; that was done under Uthman. In conjunction with standardizing the codex of Zaid, Uthman ordered all other codexes burned. This included complete manuscripts of the Qur'an copied out by Muhammad's immediate companions. If there were no significant differences between the Uthman codex and those of Muhammad's companions, then why destroy what all Muslims believe to be the Word of God?

    After Zaid's codex was selected as the source, Uthman immediately ordered that the text undergo a recension. It was during this time that the text underwent changes. Evidence suggests that there was a general consultation with a number of other prominent Muslims in Medina on the recension of the Qur'an and a more general revision may well have taken place.(20) One of Islam's most trusted hadiths even states that there is nothing wrong with inventing information "Narrated Um Kulthum bint Uqba that she heard Allaha's Apostle say: "He who makes peace between the people by inventing good information or saying good things, is not a liar" (Hadith in Sahih Al-Bukhari book 3 No. 857). So here we see Muhammad himself has no problem with fabricating information. How much more can we expect from his followers?

    Research done by Crone and Cook provide an even stronger indictment against the integrity of the Qur'an. According to their findings "there is no indication of the existence of the Qur'an before the end of the seventh century."(21) Crone and Cook further maintain that under the governor Hajjaj of Iraq in 705 A.D. the Qur'an was first compiled as Muhammad's scripture. Hajjaj collected "all the old Hagarene writings and replaced them with others "according to his own taste, and disseminated them everywhere among [his] nation." The conclusion is that it was during this time that the Qur'an began its evolution unit it was finally canonized in the mid to late eighth century as the Qur'an of today.(22) This is consistent with the conclusion reached by Jay Smith that "the Qur'an underwent a transformation during the 100 years following the prophet's death."(23)

    Missing Text
    Further in conflict with Von Denffer's position of a divinely inspired book transmitted directly from heaven, is ample evidence that there are numerous passages missing from the current version of the Qur'an. According to Islamic tradition, many of the revelations of Muhammad perished in the battle of Yamama "Many (of the passages) of the Qur'an that were sent down were known by those who died on the day of Yamama ... but they were not known (by those who) survived them, nor were they written down, nor had Abu Bakr, Umar or Uthman (by that time) collected the Qur'an, nor were they found with even one (person) after them. (Ibn Abi Dawud, Kitab al-Masahif, p.23)."(24) The point here is clear. There were many passages that were lost forever and could not be recovered. It is evident that the revelation in today's Qur'an is not the complete revelation allegedly passed down by the Angle Gabriel.

    We find more evidence that support the fact that some of Muhammad's revelations may have been lost from one of the earliest works of the Hadith. In the words of Muhammad's wife Aisha: "Aishah said: A man got up (for prayer) at night, he read the Qur'an and raised his voice in reading. When morning came, the Apostle of Allah (saw) said: May Allah have mercy on so-and-so! Last night he reminded me a number of verses I was about to forget. (Sunan Abu Dawud, Vol. 3, p.1114)."(25) How should we expect that the companions of Muhammad would have a flawless memory when the "Apostle" himself was prone to lapses of memory? This is even more interesting considering the fact that according to tradition, Muhammad would have to recite the Qur'an to the Angle Gabriel at least once a year at which time Gabriel would authenticate the word for word revelation.

    Gilchrist presents a number of other examples of missing passages from the Qur'an. Abdullah ibn Umar, in the earliest days of Islam, was quite emphatic about the fact of missing Qur'anic text:


    It is reported from Ismail ibn Ibrahim from Ayyub from Naafi from Ibn Umar who said: "Let none of you say 'I have acquired the whole of the Qur'an'. How does he know what all of it is when much of the Qur'an has disappeared? Rather let him say 'I have acquired what has survived.'" (as-Suyuti, Al-Itqan fii Ulum al-Qur'an, p.524).(26)

    A further example of missing text from the Qur'an can be found in Sahih Muslim, Book 8, Number 3421 where Aisha says: "It had been revealed in the Qur'an that ten clear sucklings make the marriage unlawful, then it was abrogated (and substituted) by five sucklings and Allah's Apostle (peace_be_upon_him) died and it was before that time (found) in the Qur'an [emphasis added] (and recited by the Muslims)." However, this verse is found nowhere in the Qur'an of today.

    The evidence is clear that the Qur'an that Muslims have today cannot be an exact replica of the tables in heaven as Von Denffer would have us to believe. There were clearly variant reading which differ from quotes in the hadiths, which itself serves as a witness to the mutability of the Qur'an.

    Doctrine of Abrogation
    Muslims, when confronted with the evidence of missing passages in the Qur'an will often punt to the doctrine of abrogation. Under this doctrine Allah reserves the right to reverse himself under the banner of progressive revelation. This doctrine presents problems of its own. Christians believe in progressive revelation such as the Old Testament Law being replaced by New Testament Grace. However, this occurred over hundreds of years and was prophesized over the course of this time so that we see no arbitrary action in God.(27) This is completely different in the case of Qur'an where the revelation occurred over a period of only twenty years. In the words of Gerhard Nehls "we find it unacceptable that within a space of 20 years a need for change or correction can become necessary. This surely suggests that either God is not all-knowing or else the recorder made corrections."(28) Furthermore, since no one is aware of the chronology of the suras, there is no way to know for sure which revelations abrogate other revelations. As a result, we are left with a contradictory text that raises more questions than it gives answers. God is not a God of confusion. It simply does not make sense for God to go to the trouble of making His revelation know to man, only to have man confused by that very same revelation.

    Textual Variants
    During a restoration of the Great Mosque of Sanan'a in Yemen, laborers discovered a graveyard of Qur'anic text. It contained tens of thousands of fragments from close to a thousand different parchment codices of the Qur'an dating back to the seventh and eighth centuries A.D.(29)

    The first person to spend a considerable amount of time with the fragments was Gerd-R. Puin, a specialist in Arabic calligraphy and Qur'anic paleography based at Saarland University, in Saarbrucken, Germany.(30) He discovered that the fragments "revealed unconventional verse orderings, minor textual variations, and rare styles of orthography and artistic embellishment."(31) In the estimation of Puin, this evidence suggests "an evolving text rather than simply the Word of God as revealed in its entirety to the Prophet Muhammad in the seventh century A.D."(32) This conflicts with Von Denffer's position stated earlier that Muhammad "determined the order and arrangement" of the text and that "This order and arrangement was well known to the Muslims and strictly observed by them."

    As already noted, there were a number of competing versions of the Qur'an. According to Arthur Jeffery "the text 'canonized by Uthman was only one among several types of text in existence at the time"(33) W. Montgomery Watt in comparing just two of the codices-that of ibn Mas'ud of Rufa and ibn Ka'b of Syria writes "No copies exist of any of the early codices, but the list of variant readings from the two just mentioned is extensive, running to a thousand or more items in both cases."(34)

    Furthermore, not even all Muslims today accept one and the same version of the Qur'an. Sunite Muslims accept the Shih tradition of Masud. He was one of the few authorized teachers of the Qur'an by Muhammad. The "the Ibn Masud Codex of the Qur'an used by them has multitudinous variations from the Uthmanic recension. In the second sura alone there are nearly 150 variations."(35) We also have Shi'ite Muslims who claim that "Caliph Uthman intentionally eliminated many verses from the Qur'an that spoke of Ali."(36)

    The removal of the Satanic Verses is another illustration of change that has occurred in the Qur'an from the time the original text was compiled. These verses were supposedly revealed to Muhammad during his time in Mecca. These verses indicated that pagan gods could be used to intercede on behalf of people. Muhammad later received another revelation canceling these verses and replacing them with others.(37) And although both versions were recited publicly, Muhammad explained by saying that Satan had deceived him and inserting the verses without his knowledge.(38)

    According to Clakir-Tisdall, famous worker among Muslims, even today we find variations in the Qur'an:


    Among various readings may be mentioned: (1) in Surah XXVIII, 48, some read "sahirani" for "sihrani": (2) in Surah XXXII, 6, after "ummahatuhum" one reading adds the words "wa hua abun lahum": (3) in Surah XXXIV, 18, for "rabbana ba'id" some read "rabuna ba'ada": (4) in Surah XXXVIII, 22, for "tis'un" another reading is "tis'atun": (5) in Surah XIX, 35, for "tantaruna" some read "yamtaruna"(39)

    Although orthodox Muslims maintain that these were not variant text, but reading, this simply does not make sense since the earliest codex's did not even contain vowel points. Thus any differences in the recitation would not have appeared in the text. Yet it is clear that it was the competing text that was destroyed by Uthman during his purging of the text under the guise of standardization. We are left to come to the conclusion that the differences were in the text, not the readings.

    We find further evidence of an evolving Qur'an when we look outside the Qur'an to references to the Qur'an. We now have coins with supposed Qur'anic writing dating to 685 A.D. We also have the Qur'anic quotations on the Dome of the Rock sanctuary built by Abd al-Malik in 691 A.D. The quotations from both the coins and the Dome of Rock differ from the Qur'anic text today.(40) Two etymologists, Van Berchem and Grohmann have done extensive research on the Dome of the Rock inscriptions write "the earliest inscriptions contain 'variant verbal forms, extensive deviances, as well as omissions from the text which we have today.'"(41) This simply does not make sense if the Qur'an developed the way Von Denffer maintains. If these inscriptions had been derived from the Qur'an with these variants, then how could the Qur'an been canonized prior to this time?

    Sources
    It is obvious not only to scholars but to anyone willing to examine the evidence that there are clear examples of the Qur'an "borrowing" literature from neighboring lore. There are clear examples of Jєωιѕн apocryphal literature in the Qur'an. The stories of Cain and Abel, Abraham, Solomon and Sheba, all deviate from the Biblical record but are consistent with Jєωιѕн folklore. This is clearly evident in the Qur'an version of the story Cain and Abel. Not only does the storyline follow that of the Jєωιѕн тαℓмυd, but the "Rabbi's comments are repeated almost word-for-word in the Qur'an."(42) So, not only did the writers use the тαℓмυdic account, but they did not recognize the comments of the Rabbi as commentary and included it as part of the text.

    Jєωιѕн literature was not the only source the writers of the Qur'an used. A number of apocryphal Christian sources are also evident in the text. For instance, the Palm tree in the account of Mary after Jesus' birth (sura 19:22-26) comes from the Lost Books of the Bible. The account of the infant Jesus creating birds out of clay (sura 3:49) is found in the gospel of Thomas while the account of the baby Jesus talking (sura 19:29-33) can be traced to Arabic apocryphal fable.(43)

    So then are we to believe the heavenly tablets in heaven contained the commentary of a Rabbi? Are we also to believe that these tablets contained information from the Arabic apocryphal fables and clear myths? The answer should be evident to anyone looking at the evidence. Ali Dashti sums it up this way "The stories in it are taken in identical or slightly modified forms from the lore of the Jєωs and Christians, whose rabbis and monks Mohammad had met and consulted on his journeys to Syria, and from memories conserved by descendants of the peoples of Ad and Thamud."(44)

    Manuscripts
    It should first be noted that there seems to be an apparent contradiction on the part of Ahmad Von Denffer. He is quoted as saying "All old Qur'anic script is completely without any diacritical points or vowel signs as explained above. Also there are no headings or separations between the sSras [sic] nor any other kind of division, nor even any formal indication of the end of a verse."(45) This seems to already be at odds with Von Denffer's own statement that the text as it exists today is the way it has always existed. It is also contrary to the notion that it was Muhammad himself "who instructed his scribes as to where the different revealed verses should be placed, and thus determined the order and arrangement."(46) The manuscript evidence supports the fact that vowel points were added over a period of time. Hence, the text we have today was in no way static throughout history.

    The manuscript evidence does not help the Muslim view of the development of the Qur'an. In fact it is hostile to the notion that the current Qur'an is the exact Qur'an received by Muhammad. About the manuscript evidence, Jay Smith writes "our earliest manuscripts date from the ninth century. That leaves a gap of roughly 200 years between the life of the Prophet and our first indisputable evidence of a uniform, stabilized text of the Quran."(47) The missing manuscripts are huge embarrassment to Muslims. It simply does not make sense that there are not any earlier manuscripts. The New Testament writers wrote on papyrus, far less durable and robust than the parchment used for the Qur'an. Yet there are plenty of New Testament manuscripts that have been written on parchments that are in extremely good condition even though they predate the Qur'an by several centuries.48

    Interestingly, we have no copies of the Uthmanic text. If it is, as Muslims claim, to be the most important literature ever written, then why do we not have any early manuscripts? The fact is that "we have absolutely no evidence for the original Qur'anic text."49 Not only that, but there is also no evidence for the alleged four copies that were made and sent to the different regions. By the end of the seventh century Islam had expanded across North Africa and up into Spain. With the Qur'an being the centerpiece of their faith, surely there would be some manuscript evidence which still exists today. Yet there is nothing from that period at all.(50)

    This is in sharp contrast to Christianity which can claim more than 5,300 early manuscripts, most written between the 1st and 5th centuries, before the time of paper. Yet Islam cannot produce a single manuscript until well into the eighth century.(51) John Wansbrough, formerly of the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies, concluded that the reason that no Islamic source material from the first century or so of Islam has survived, is that it never existed.(52) In reply to the claim by Von Denffer that the Samarkand Manuscript is an authentic copy of the Qur'an from the time of Caliph Uthman, the evidence suggest otherwise. First of all it is not a complete codex. Of the 114 suras only parts of suras 2 to 43 are included. Some pages are neatly and uniformly copied out while others are quite untidy and imbalanced. The text on some of the pages where expansive while on other pages the text was cramped. These and other variations lead scriptologists to give the codex a ninth century origin,(53) long after the time of Uthman.

    Internal Critique of the Qur'an
    The internal structural weakness of the Qur'an betrays its man-made origins. Its literary weakness and defects points not to an absolute and perfect God as its author, but to very fallible men.

    Literary Weaknesses
    There are a number of problems with the position of Von Denffer that the Qur'an we have now is the "precise wording" passed down from God. First there is the obvious structural weakness of the text. Jay Smith writes "The Qur'an, on the other hand, reads more like a jumbled and confused collection of statements and ideas, many of which bear little relationship to preceding chapters and verses. Many scholars admit that the Qur'an is so haphazard in its make-up that it requires the utmost sense of duty for anyone to plough through it!"(54) His conclusion is supported by the German secular scholar Reinach in his harsh analysis states "From the literary point of view, the Koran has little merit. Declamation, repetition, puerility, a lack of logic and coherence strike the unprepared reader at every turn. It is humiliating to the human intellect to think that this mediocre literature has been the subject of innumerable commentaries, and that millions of men are still wasting time in absorbing it"(55) McClintock and Strong's encyclopedia agrees that the Qur'an is basically an incoherent composition "The matter of the [Koran] is exceedingly incoherent and sententious, the book evidently being without any logical order of thought either as a whole or in its parts. This agrees with the desultory and incidental manner in which it is said to have been delivered."(56) Dr. John Wansbrough adds ""the book is strikingly lacking in overall structure, frequently obscure and inconsequential in both language and content, perfunctory in its linking of disparate materials, and given to the repetition of whole passages in variant versions. On this basis it can plausibly be argued that the book is the product of the belated and imperfect editing of materials from a plurality of traditions."(57)

    Another problem we find is that of literary defects. The text is not chronological. It is difficult to know whether any statement in the Qur'an is early or late. The subject matter with individual chapters jumps from one topic to the next. The grammar, due to omission, is often left obscure and ambiguous. There are problems with the use of plural verbs with singular subjects. Many times the sentences leave verbs out completely.(58)

    Even the former Muslim scholar Dashit writes "Unfortunately the Qur'an was badly edited and its contents are very obtusely arranged."(59) Dashit also writes "To sum up, more than one hundred Qor'anic aberrations from the normal rules and structure of Arabic have been noted."(60) All of this leads to the conclusion made by Al-Kindi, a Christian polemicist circa 830 A.D. who writes

    The result of all of this [process by which the Qur'an came into being] is patent to you who have read the scriptures and see how, in your book, histories are all jumbled together and intermingled; an evidence that many different hands have been at work therein, and caused discrepancies, adding or cutting out whatever they liked or disliked. Are such, now, the conditions of a revelation sent down from heaven?(61)

    We also have clear examples of multiple authors. We find the same story mentioned in different passages in Qur'an. These stories contain variations of one another. When we compare these parallel versions, it is consistent with what we might expect from varying versions of oral traditions.(62) The evidence of multiple authors, haphazard editing, are all indications of an evolving text.

    What then are we to make of the Qur'an taking into account its structural and literary problems? Jay Smith sums it up this way "What then should we do with the internal problems which we find in the Qur'an? How are we to explain the structural and literary problems, as well as the spurious accounts and scientific peculiarities which have found their way into its pages? These difficulties do seem to point away from a divine authorship and point towards a more plausible scenario, that the Qur'an is nothing more than a collection of disparate sources borrowed from surrounding pieces of literature, folk tales, or oral traditions 'making the rounds' at that time, and accidently [sic] grafted in by unsuspecting later compilers."(63)

    Anachronisms
    The use of anachronisms in the Qur'an is another clear indication that text could not have possibly been the result of an all-knowing God. In sura 20:87,94, the Qur'an states that when the Israelites set up their idolatrous golden calf in Ex. 32, they did so at the suggestion of the Samaritans. However, according to Dr. Gleason Archer, "Samaritans did not come into being as a race until after the 6th century B.C., and so there could have been no Samaritan around as early as 1445 B.C.!"(64) Furthermore, we find in sura 7:124 that Pharaoh, in the story of Joseph, threatens the baker with crucifixion. However, according to Jay Smith "there were no crosses in those days (not to be confused with the Egyptian ankh which was an object for fertility and life, and not an instrument of death). Crucifixion was first practised [sic] by the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians and then borrowed extensively by the Romans close to the time of Christ, 1700 years after Pharaoh!"(65) It simply makes no sense that an omniscient God would make these mistakes.

    Could God be so careless? Could these possibly be the untainted words from the very throne of God? Of course not! If they were then God himself would not be perfect, nor would He be infallible or omniscient. This is clearly the work of imperfect and fallible men.

    Summary and Conclusion
    It is now evident that the position held by orthodox Muslims concerning the origin of the Qur'an is simply untenable in light of the clear evidence. The view echoed by Ahmad Von Denffer that what is in the Qur'an today is an exact duplicate of the God's tablets in heaven-transmitted to Muhammad via Gabriel is effectively contradicted by modern scholarship and common sense.

    The transmission of the Qur'an reveals that it did not exists in written form during the life of Muhammad. This is demonstrated by Muslim hadiths with indicate that the collection of revelation was a significant task, if not impossible. There is early evidence of competing version of the Qur'an which prompted Uthman to commission an official version, which was no more accurate than any of the existing competing versions. Among the casualties of this purging were manuscripts by Muhammad's companions who had supposedly memorized the text themselves. A further casualty was the suhuf itself, which was the source of the Uthman text. The only explanation for this wide scale purging is that the texts varied significantly from one another.

    These textual variations are evident in recent discoveries of old manuscripts which contain significant variations from the Qur'an today. These variations are also visible in early coins and the Dome of the Rock which bare Qur'anic scriptures that differ from today's text. The lack of early manuscripts strongly suggests that the Qur'an did not exist during the time of Muhammad. The evidence, and lack of evidence, indicates that the Qur'an developed over a period of one hundred years after the death of Muhammad. The use of Jєωιѕн and Christian apocryphal writings indicates multiple human authors with no divine origin. The obvious examples of "borrowing" and anachronisms destroy any notion that the God of heaven is the source of the Qur'an.

    The internal evidence is another indictment. The literary weaknesses expose writers who are not proficient with their own language. Claiming that God is the direct author of a docuмent with such inconsistent and incorrect use of grammar, is to directly impeach the perfection of God. Yet this must be the position of orthodox muslins since they contend that the Qur'an today is an exact word-for-word copy of God's revelation in heaven.

    In conclusion, the Qur'an is not divine. Its authors were mere fallible men, writing a mere fallible book, which evolved over a period of time into what we have today.

    Notes
    1. Ahmad Von Denffer, Ulum al Qur'an, < http://www.islamworld.net/UUQ/1-a.txt >.
    2. Ibid.
    3. Ibid.
    4. Ibid. < http://www.islamworld.net/UUQ/2.txt >.
    5. Ibid.
    6. Ibid.
    7. Ibid.
    8. Ibid.
    9. Ibid.
    10. Ibid.
    11. Ibid.
    12. Ibid.
    13. Ibid. < http://www.islamworld.net/UUQ/3.txt >.
    14. Toby Lester, "What Is the Koran?," The Atlantic Monthly 99.01: Jan. 1999, .
    15. Ibid. .
    16. John Gilchrist, 1989, Jam' Al-Qur'an, < http://answering-islam.org/Gilchrist/Jam/chap1.html >.
    17. Ahmad Von Denffer, Ulum al Qur'an, < http://www.islamworld.net/UUQ/2.txt >.
    18. Gilchrist, .
    19. Ibid.
    20. Ibid. .
    21. Patricia Crone and Michael Cook, Hagarism, (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1977), 18; quoted in Jay Smith, 1999, Is the Qur'an the Word of God, .
    22. Jay Smith, 1999, Is the Qur'an the Word of God, .
    23. Ibid.
    24. Gilchrist, Jam' Al-Qur'an, < http://answering-islam.org/Gilchrist/Jam/chap1.html >.
    25. Ibid.
    26. Ibid. < http://answering-islam.org/Gilchrist/Jam/chap4.html >.
    27. Gerhard Nehls, Christians Ask Muslims, 1987, < http://answering-islam.org.uk/Nehls/Ask/contra.html >.
    28. Ibid.
    29. Lester, < http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99jan/koran.htm >.
    30. Gerd-R. Puin; quoted in Toby Lester, "What Is the Koran?," The Atlantic Monthly 99.01: Jan. 1999, < http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99jan/koran.htm >.
    31. Ibid.
    32. Lester, < http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99jan/koran.htm >.
    33. Arthur Jeffery, Materials for the History of the Text of the Qur'an, (New York: AMS Press, Inc., 1975); quoted in, Norman L. Geisler and Abdul Saleeb, Answering Islam : The Crescent in Light of the Cross, 2nd ed., (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 2002), 197.
    34. Norman L. Geisler and Abdul Saleeb, Answering Islam : The Crescent in Light of the Cross, 2nd ed., (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 2002), 197.
    35. Ibid., 198.
    36. W. St. Clair Tisdall, A Manual of the Leading Muhammedan Objections to Christianity (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1904), 59; quoted in Norman L., and Abdul Saleeb, Answering Islam : The Crescent in Light of the Cross, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 2002), 199.
    37. Geisler,198.
    38. W. Montgomery Watt, Muhammad at Medina, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1956), 60-61; quoted in Norman L Geisler and Abdul Saleeb, Answering Islam : The Crescent in Light of the Cross, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 2002) 199.
    39. Tisdall, 60.
    40. Smith, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/part3.htm#D8 >.
    41. Crone and Cook, 167-168.
    42. Smith, .
    43. Ibid.
    44. Ali Dashti, Twenty Three Years: A Study of the Prophetic Career of Mohammad, trans. F.R.C Bagley (London :Gearge Allen & Unwin, 1985),53.
    45. Von Denffer, < http://www.islamworld.net/UUQ/3.txt >.
    46. Ibid. < http://www.islamworld.net/UUQ/2.txt >.
    47. Daniel Brown, A New Introduction to Islam, (Blackwell, 2004) 55.
    48. Isa Mashith, July 1998, Problems with the Qu'ran, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/isamasih/jul98/problems.htm >.
    49. Smith, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/debate.htm >
    50. Ibid.
    51. Ibid.
    52. Lester, < http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99jan/koran3.htm >.
    53. John Gilchrist, Jam' al-Qur'an (Mondeor: South Africa, MERCSA, 1989), 139,151,154; qutoed in Jay Smith, 1996, Is the Qur'an the Word of God, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/part1.htm#B >.
    54. Smith, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/debate.htm >.
    55. Salomon Reinach, Orpheus: A History of Religion, (New York: Liveright, Inc., 1932), 176; quoted in Jay Smith, 1999, Is the Qur'an the Word of God, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/debate.htm >.
    56. John McClintock and James Strong, Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature, (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1981), 151; quoted in Jay Smith, 1999, Is the Qur'an the Word of God, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/debate.htm >.
    57. Smith, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/part3.htm#D8 >.
    58. Ibid. < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/part2.htm#C1c >.
    59. Ibid.
    60. Dashti, 50.
    61. William Muir, The Apology of al-Kindi, written at the Court of al-Mamun (830 A.D.) in Defence of Christianity against Islam, (London: Smith, elder & Co., 1882), 18-19,28; quoted in 61 Jay Smith, 1999, Is the Qur'an the Word of God, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/part2.htm#C1c >.
    62. Smith, < http://debate.org.uk/topics/history/debate/debate.htm >.
    63. Ibid.
    64. Gleason Leonard Archer, A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, 3rd. ed. (Chicago: Moody Press, 1998), 552.
    My conscience compels me to make this disclaimer lest God judges me partly culpable for the errors and heresy promoted on this forum... For the record I support neither Sedevacantism or the SSPX.  I do not define myself as either a traditionalist or Novus


    Offline rowsofvoices9

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    The Quran: Heavenly or Human?
    « Reply #1 on: November 15, 2011, 02:21:12 PM »
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  • http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1450484/posts

    Mohammed was a Thug & Fraud - (must read! - one of the best, short, accurate biographies EVER!)
     ALAN BURKHART.COM ^ | JULY 25, 2005 | ALAN BURKHART

    Posted on Monday, July 25, 2005 11:07:19 PM by CHARLITE

    I recently set out to learn more about Islam. I had no agenda at the time except to broaden my knowledge on the subject. What I have learned sickened me. I had previously been accepting of the notion that Islam was a peaceful religion and that the Muslim terrorists who inflict so much pain and death around the world represented a fringe element outside of mainstream Islam. I was wrong.

    The Islamic deity, Allah, is a false god. While the term "Allah" does indeed carry the same meaning as "God," Mohammed's Allah is nothing more than a construct of a vile false prophet who sought to create an empire upon the rotting corpses of his enemies. Let's review some history...

    In 621 A.D. Mohammed was in Mecca preaching to any who would listen that he alone was the Divine Prophet of the One God, Allah. Meccans eventually grew tired of his ranting and demanded that he cease and desist. With a tiny band of followers, Mohammed sneaked out of Mecca in the dead of night and traveled to the Jєωιѕн city of Medina. He and his followers were sick, tired, and hungry and the Jєωs there took them in and nursed them to good health.

    Unfortunately Mohammed was consumed with rage over his being booted out of Mecca and began plotting his revenge. It was this plan that became the basis for the religion of Islam. In January of 623 A.D. Mohammed ordered his band of thugs to attack four unarmed merchants who were transporting their wares to Mecca. All four were brutally murdered and their merchandise (raisins, animal skins, and honey) was stolen. Claiming a Divine Right, Mohammed received one fifth of the take.

    Mohammed began to preach to his followers that it was mandated by Allah that nonbelievers (like his perceived enemies in Mecca) were "the worst kind of beasts" and that they must be slain. This cruel rhetoric attracted the sort of people who enjoy such depraved activities and soon Mohammed had an army numbering in the hundreds. Rape, robbery, and murder were all sanctioned as being the Divine Will of Allah, and Mohammed reaped a fortune as his growing army raged across ancient Arabia.

    Poets and politicians alike who spoke out against him were tortured and murdered. Even the Jєωs of Medina, who had shown him such kindness, were eventually driven from their homes while Mohammed's Muslim band pillaged the city. With each new raid, Mohammed would claim to have had yet another "revelation" from Allah that justified their actions. In short, Mohammed led a tribe of barbarians who truly believed that they were doing Allah's will by destroying pre-Islamic Arabia. In all, Mohammed would order 86 raids upon the innocent, 26 of which he led himself. In 630 A.D. Mohammed marched triumphantly into Mecca with 40,000 followers. His revenge was complete, but the horrors of Islam had only begun.

    Mohammed's sole purpose in everything he did was to feed his enormous ego and satisfy his perverse sɛҳuąƖ needs. In all, Mohammed had eleven wives, nine of them simultaneously, with the youngest being only ten years old. Eye-witness accounts claim that Aisha brought her toys with her when she was delivered to the Prophet of Allah.

    Mohammed regarded women as nothing more than sɛҳuąƖ toys and servants, and of course justified his actions by proclaiming that it was Allah's will that women always be subjugated to men. Seeing him as their spiritual guide and role model, other Muslim men treated their women accordingly. A cycle of abuse that still endures today in many parts of the world had thus begun.

    By the time Mohammed died at age 63, the face of the Middle East had changed from a civilized and prosperous world to one of fear, poverty, and deprivation. Gone was any semblance of free expression or religious freedom. Mohammed and his followers had turned the known world upside down.

    The Twelfth-Century Crusades were in fact a response by England, France and Germany to the growing Muslim violence against Christians. It is quite appropriate to state that the Crusades against "Mohammedism" constituted the first War on Terror. A coalition of like-minded nations, setting aside their political differences for a time, engaging a barbaric and bloodthirsty Muslim enemy on its own soil. Sound familiar?

    As time passed, the Crusades came to an end due as much to internal bickering as success. The beast that is Islam had been diminished but not defeated. As the years rolled by Islam once again spread its leathery wings to darken the civilized world. Through violence and deception Islam has spread to virtually every nation on Earth.

    In current times, Islam still commits acts of unthinkable barbarism against the innocent. With videos of beheadings transmitted all over the world, the devastating attack in New York on September 11, 2001, the recent bombings in Madrid and London… haven't we had enough? Isn't it time that we recognize that Islam is not a religion, but rather a means of world conquest? It doesn't matter if people like Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein actually believe in Allah. In truth I doubt that Mohammed believed. Mohammed saw an opportunity to become a world power and twisted the minds of men to serve his evil purposes. He was a fraud and I find it incredible that 1400 years after his death, that fraud is still being inflicted upon the world.

    The time has come to cease being tolerant of Islam. It is a false religion, based upon a false god and the teachings of a false prophet. We absolutely must see Islam for what it is: The Enemy of All Humanity.

    Allah's Apostle said, "The blood of a Muslim who confesses that none has the right to be worshipped but Allah and that I (Mohammed) am His Apostle, cannot be shed except in three cases: In Qisas for murder, a married person who commits illegal sɛҳuąƖ intercourse and the one who reverts from Islam (apostate) and leaves the Muslims."
     The Qur'an, Volume 9, Book 83, Number 17

    My conscience compels me to make this disclaimer lest God judges me partly culpable for the errors and heresy promoted on this forum... For the record I support neither Sedevacantism or the SSPX.  I do not define myself as either a traditionalist or Novus


    Offline rowsofvoices9

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    The Quran: Heavenly or Human?
    « Reply #2 on: November 15, 2011, 02:36:47 PM »
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  • http://www.trosch.org/bks/mohammed.html

    The Great and Enduring Heresy of Mohammed – by Hilaire Belloc

    My conscience compels me to make this disclaimer lest God judges me partly culpable for the errors and heresy promoted on this forum... For the record I support neither Sedevacantism or the SSPX.  I do not define myself as either a traditionalist or Novus