The Qur'an on Scriptural Forgery: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
[checked revision][checked revision]
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{QualityScore|Lead=1|Structure=1|Content=1|Language=1|References=1}}
{{QualityScore|Lead=1|Structure=1|Content=1|Language=1|References=1}}
The Quran condemns people who write scriptures with their own hands and then claim it is from god. This is considered by some Islamic apologists as a reason to trust that the Quran is from god, because if Muhammad was the author of the Quran and he attributed the authorship to god, he would contradict his own teachings that are in his Quran.
The Quran condemns people who write scriptures with their own hands and then claim it is from god. Traditional Islamic scholarship has seen this as proof of the Quran's origin, however modern scholarship has questioned whether this could have been a rebuke of those who were doing such things at the time the material of the Qur'an was compiled, thus calling into question whether such forged material made its way into the Qur'an and whether this verse itself is a later forgery.  
==The Quran==
==The Quran==
{{Quote|{{Quran|2|79}}|
{{Quote|{{Quran|2|79}}|
Line 6: Line 6:
}}
}}
==Historical context==
==Historical context==
It was common in ancient times to make forgeries. Famous 2nd century physician Galen in his lifetime found a lot of forgeries written in his name on the market, which forced him to write a book about it named "On my own books". It was also not special for a forgery to include warning against forgeries. This was actually a method for raising credibility of the forgeries. So warning against forgeries is not something a forgery wouldn't say.
It was common in ancient times to make forgeries. The famous 2nd century physician Galen in his lifetime found a lot of forgeries written in his name on the market, which forced him to write a book about it named "On my own books". It was also not special for a forgery to include warning against forgeries. This was actually a method for raising credibility of the forgeries. So warning against forgeries is not something a forgery wouldn't say.


For example, there is a 4th century forgery named "Apostolic Constitutions" which pretended to be written by the 12 apostles of Jesus. It includes warnings against forgeries and condemns people who make them. It also talks about how the evil forgeries are widespread:
For example, there is a 4th century forgery named "Apostolic Constitutions" which pretended to be written by the 12 apostles of Jesus. It includes warnings against forgeries and condemns people who make them. It also talks about how the evil forgeries are widespread:
Editors, recentchangescleanup, Reviewers
4,682

edits