muslimapoclyptc
Senior Member
- Messages
- 90
- Reaction score
- 12
- Gender
- Male
- Religion
- Islam
Take the below verses and tell me that the Qu’ran is clear and unambiguous. . .
Qur'an 2:106: None of Our revelations do We abrogate or cause to be forgotten, but We substitute something better or similar: Knowest thou not that God Hath power over all things?
Qur'an 16:101: When We substitute one revelation for another,- and God knows best what He reveals,- they say, "Thou art but a forger": but most of them understand not.
How is it possible to substitute something with something else without abrogating the former? Is it good enough to say the words ‘None of Our revelations do We abrogate’ when substitution is de facto abrogation.
The Qur'an is not saying revelations aren't abrogated, it's saying that revelations aren't abrogated without being substituted with another one. Hence, whatever revelation is abrogated, another replaces it.
Next question is why does Mohammed need to iterate those verses and in fact do it twice (presuming there was a period of years between them)? In my opinion, because he was reciting a verse and someone who then pointed out to him that it contradicted an earlier verse! Now you say but things changed (albeit in an area and at a time when little changed for hundreds of years). Surely God (being a God) knows the future and knows how things will change and God (being a God) can not make a mistake but Mohammed being a man can!
The first verse is talking about all abrogated verses being substituted with something similar or better. The second verse is obviously refuting the disbelievers who try to say that the Qur'an is a forgery, because it uses abrogation. So, i'm not sure what you mean by iteration. Can you clarify?
muslimapoclyptc thank you for your posts,
I am not sure if I replied to this post
I asked . . . Why did Uthman destroy the original text after he 'codified' it?
You replied . . . To standardize the Qur'an in the Quraishi Arabic dialect. When Uthman got hold of all of the Qurans that were written in different dialects, and in some cases were altered to sound exactly like the other dialects, he ordered for them to get burnt because they did not use the proper Arabic that was revealed to Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), and in some cases their words were different because of this dialect difference. He then compiled all of the Noble Surahs (Chapters) of the Noble Quran that were already written during the time of Prophet Muhammad in the city of Medina and formed what we call today the one true copy of the "Noble Quran".
So why did he destroy the original text? You have Muslims today up in arms if anyone defaces a modern day copy of the Qu’ran and Uthman destroyed the original copy!!
He didn't destroy the original copy, he destroyed the ones in the other Arabic dialects, so as to standardize the Qurayshi dialect for the Qur'an, since it was the one that the Prophet himself spoke.
And, if it was, as you say, written in different dialects how can you claims that the Qu’ran you read today is the same as the original?
Because the dialect that was used the most and the one that the Prophet himself used, was the Qurayshi one. This is also the one that the Qur'an today is written in.
Plus, I can also say that the Qur'an is the same, since it was memorized, and often recited in its entirety.
Inscription + Memorization + Frequent recitation = 100% Preservation
I asked . . . And, where are the original copies that Uthman created and why can they not be examined?
You replied . . . There are many old copies of the Qur'an, that are purported to have been one of the 'Uthmanic copies, such as:
the one in Uzbekistan, the one in Turkey, and the one in Russia. You also have the one in Egypt, which is the perhaps the oldest one, and is either an 'Uthmanic copy, or an exact copy of the original. And obviously, you can see it, and look through it, as is apparent in the images.
None of these copies have been proven to be an original Uthman, some of them have been altered and why are the pages not photographed and published?
Isn’t it all just a little bit suspect?
Not really. Those manuscrips are obviously rare, old, and probably very delicate. But regardless, people can and do still look through them, so them being photographed and published isn't really necessary.
Plus, the one in Egypt is either an 'Uthmanic copy, or an exact copy of one.
Also, what exactly do you mean that they have been altered?