How many Qur'ans?
When is a Qur’an not a Qur’an? When it’s the ahruf? Or a harf? (harf sing; ahruf pl.) Or one
of the qiraat? Or when it refers to one
of those suras Uthman decided shouldn’t
make the cut? Doesn’t matter, Muslims tell us, the Qur’an is still one perfectly
preserved book, in perfect Arabic, and not so much as a dot of it has been
changed!
Confused? Join a club that has billions of members. So before we get into the detail of
how many Qur’ans there are (and we still say there are 26), let’s
clarify what Muslims mean by these terms.
What are the ahruf?
The ahruf refer to
the 7 different ‘variant’ recitations that
Muhammad received from the angel Gabriel. Muslim scholars debate whether the
seven ahruf are different dialects,
different word orders or different synonymous readings; but according to Yasir Qadhi in his book, ‘An introduction to the Science of the
Qur’an,’ 'only 'Allah knows what they are’(p175). Whatever Allah
knows or not, the following hadith suggests that the differences in the
recitations were a big deal – big enough for Muhammad's companion Umar to want to strangle his
friend:
Did having seven different ahruf really
make life easy for Muhammad’s followers - by inciting them to violence? Umar and Hisham were both Qurayshi, and spoke the same
dialect anyway – so why was it necessary for the Suras to be revealed in different ways?
Notice the
effect of the different recitations on Ubayy ibn Kaab in Sahih Muslim 4:1787:
“… the
Apostle of Allah expressed approval of their affairs (their modes of
recitation). and there occurred in my mind a sort of denial which did not occur
even during the Days of Ignorance. When the Messenger of Allah saw how I was
affected (by a wrong idea), he struck my chest, whereupon I broke into
sweating … “
Interesting how Muhammad restores his friend’s spiritual
composure – by hitting him. Would mere differences in pronunciation lead to
such a crisis of faith? Or was it more likely that Muhammad had forgotten which
version was correct and used the ahruf
story to cover his tracks? The ahadith tells how Muhammad used to forget verses
sometimes (Sahih Bukhari 6:61:556, Sahih Muslim 4:1720)
In the end only one harf
survived, the Qur’an of Uthman,
after he ordered all variants be burnt (Sahih Bukhari 6:61:510). Why? Did he have prophetic authority to do
this? How was he or his scribes able to tell what was Allah’s speech and what
wasn’t, especially if there were 7 ahruf knocking around? And why were there non-canonical variants in the first place
if the oral transmission of the Qur’an is as failsafe as Muslims claim?
What are the qiraat?
The qiraat are the different ways in which the Qur’an is recited according to Islamic tradition. So for example the Hafs Qur’an (which most of the Muslim world recites) and the Warsh Qur’an (the prevalent reading in West and North Africa) are examples of two different qiraat.
The qiraat are the different ways in which the Qur’an is recited according to Islamic tradition. So for example the Hafs Qur’an (which most of the Muslim world recites) and the Warsh Qur’an (the prevalent reading in West and North Africa) are examples of two different qiraat.
Muslims maintain the qiraat differ in pronunciation only, so it’s (again!) not a big deal. Except this is not what the text tells us; we know there are over 1354 textual variants in the Arabic text just between the hafs and the warsh which affect the meaning. For example in Sura 2:251 hafs has daf’u meaning ‘repelling’ and warsh has difaa’u, meaning ‘he defends’. So in the hafs Qur’an the sentence reads:
“And were it not Allah’s repelling some men with others, the earth would certainly be in a
state of disorder”
and in the warsh:
“And were it not for
Allah’s defending some men with others, the earth would
certainly be in a state of disorder”
Is Allah involved in an offensive (‘repelling’) or defensive ('defending') conflict? We will write more on these variations in further blogs.
So how many qiraat are
there? The number of qiraat have
varied down the centuries. Islamic tradition tell us in 839AD there were 25 different Arabic qiraat; in 912AD there were 50 different
Arabic qiraat; by 935AD this was reduced to 7 qiraat but this increased again in 1397 to
10 different qiraat and further still
in 1705 to 14 qiraat. Notice the dates. Are any of these changes made during the
time of Muhammad or the rightly-guided Caliphs? In which case, who decided
which qiraat were legitimate or not
and on what authority? Allah's? The angel Gabriel's? Who did they use for a messenger given that Muhammad had been dead for at least 2 centuries?
Let’s do the maths. 7 ahruf – 1 harf + 25 qiraat +50 qirat - 7 qirat + 10 qirat +26 different Arabic Qur’ans = 1 perfectly
preserved Qur’an without so much as a dot changed, right? Right?
This issue is so important because unique preservation is a claim the Qur'an makes for itself in Sura 85:22, and therefore (according to Muslims) proves it must be divine in origin.
Christians have never claimed the Bible has been miraculously preserved. Let’s thank our Lord that our
faith doesn’t stand or fall on an eternal book, but a Person, Jesus Christ, the eternal Word of God (John 1:1). Muslims, stop May He be forever praised.
is this true?
ReplyDeleteHmm,you are the bigger pretender.You are the real enemy of jesus.you can see the refuting of this argument in here https://callingchristians.com/2015/07/27/a-response-to-smith-spencer-qureishi-and-others-on-birmingham-quran-manuscript-find/
DeleteScribal errors in the Qur'an
by P Newton
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The Qur'an: Grammatical Errors
M. Rafiqul-Haqq and P. Newton
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