4,734
edits
[checked revision] | [checked revision] |
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
This is an old stub article, the main article has been moved to [Parallels Between the Qur'an and Late Antique Judeo-Christian Literature], please do not make any edits here. | This is an old stub article, the main article has been moved to [Parallels Between the Qur'an and Late Antique Judeo-Christian Literature], please do not make any edits here. | ||
For the full article with many more examples than are included in this series, see {{Main|Parallelism Between the Qur'an and Judeo-Christian Scriptures}} | '''For the full article with many more examples than are included in this series, see''' {{Main|Parallelism Between the Qur'an and Judeo-Christian Scriptures}} | ||
The similarities between the Qur'an and previous scriptures have been noted since the advent of Islam. The Judeo-Christian tales and their Qur'anic retellings, however, rarely match perfectly. A claim found in the Qur'an and other Islamic literature is that the Jews and Christians deliberately changed their scriptures to obscure the truth which is restored in the Qur'an. There is no documentary evidence in the textual traditions of those religions to support this claim, and since it would require a conspiracy of people across centuries and empires, speaking different languages and holding radically different beliefs, the claim itself is generally not taken seriously by modern scholars. | The similarities between the Qur'an and previous scriptures have been noted since the advent of Islam. The Judeo-Christian tales and their Qur'anic retellings, however, rarely match perfectly. A claim found in the Qur'an and other Islamic literature is that the Jews and Christians deliberately changed their scriptures to obscure the truth which is restored in the Qur'an. There is no documentary evidence in the textual traditions of those religions to support this claim, and since it would require a conspiracy of people across centuries and empires, speaking different languages and holding radically different beliefs, the claim itself is generally not taken seriously by modern scholars. |